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Showing posts with label Minority. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minority. Show all posts
Friday, 8 February 2013

postheadericon Model Minority - Documentary Promo

Model Minority - Documentary Promo Video Clips. Duration : 8.67 Mins.


Slated to air on PBS in May, 2013. Stay tuned! Model Minority: Do the Math reveals the impact of the model minority myth on the experiences and perspectives of Asian American (AA) college students. The myth is a complex and contradictory stereotype of AAs as academic over-achievers. While many believe the stereotype is positive, it causes many problems. Asian Americans are overlooked for affirmative action and academic assistance. Tracked by parents, counselors, and social expectations to excel in math-intensive fields, despite their preferences, they struggle to balance personal goals and mental health. The myth diverts attention from systematic structural racism by emphasizing individualism, and pitting AAs against other groups. Viewed as too competitive and taking over colleges, AAs face racial resentment, discrimination, and hate crimes. Model Minority overcomes misconceptions of AA students. Model Minority timely coincides with national priorities and debates on how to increase educational performance and economic participation. It engages school reform, equal opportunity, multiculturalism, race, parenting, and democracy. We will compare the experiences and perspectives of AA college students, faculty, and staff of various ethnic backgrounds in Boston, Chicago, Berkeley and Oakland. In Chicago and Boston, AA students and communities are less numerous, and less integrated into campus curriculum and life than in Berkeley and Oakland. The narrator will reveal ...

Sunday, 6 January 2013

postheadericon Myanmar Embassy Protest, New Delhi; SIO demands justice for Rohingyas Minority

Myanmar Embassy Protest, New Delhi; SIO demands justice for Rohingyas Minority Video Clips. Duration : 5.62 Mins.


New Delhi(26th July, 2012): "The violence and ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Burma has reached its peaks. It has never been experienced in any regime that couples have to pay taxes for marriage and for giving birth to their children. SIO demands to Myanmar government to put an end to all kinds of atrocities and persecution of Rohingya Muslims and give them back their citizenship", these thoughts were expressed by Mohd. Azharuddin, National President, Students Islamic Organisation of India (SIO). He was addressing a protest against genocide of Rohingya Muslims at Myanmar Embassy, New Delhi. He questioned the silence of Nobel Laureate for Peace Suu Kyi, "It is agony and surprising that Suu Kyi got Noble Prize for Peace but didn't speak out for peace in her own country". Anguish and emotions in high spirits were demonstrated during the protest meeting called by various political and social organizations in front of the Myanmar embassy. Leaders of various organizations, while addressing the meeting asked the Myanmar military junta to put immediate end to all kinds of racial apartheid and genocide being perpetrated against minority Rohingya Muslims in Arakkan region and elsewhere. The discrimination and violence against Rohingya people in force for many decades got worse and took an ugly turn this June and has taken the life of thousands, millions have gone missing and many are now displaced, living in inhuman conditions on boats or at no man's land at the border with ...

Thursday, 20 December 2012

postheadericon Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century)

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Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century)


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Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century)

$59.95

Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century)

Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century)



Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan: The Transformative Power of Informal Networks (National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century) Overviews

The collapse of the Soviet Union suddenly rendered ethnic Russians living in non-Russian successor states like Latvia and Kyrgyzstan new minorities subject to dramatic political, economic, and social upheaval. As elites in these new states implemented formal policies and condoned informal practices that privileged non-Russians, ethnic Russians had to react. In Russian Minority Politics in Post-Soviet Latvia and Kyrgyzstan, Michele E. Commercio draws on extensive field research, including hundreds of personal interviews, to analyze the responses of minority Russians to such policies and practices. In particular, she focuses on the role played by formal and informal institutions in the crystallization of Russian attitudes, preferences, and behaviors in these states.

Commercio asks why there is more out-migration and less political mobilization among Russians in Kyrgyzstan, a state that adopts policies that placate both Kyrgyz and Russians, and less out-migration and more political mobilization among Russians in Latvia, a state that adopts policies that favor Latvians at the expense of Russians. Challenging current thinking, she suggests that the answer to this question lies in the power of informal networks.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, the Communist party, Komsomol youth organization, and KGB networks were transformed into informal networks. Russians in Kyrgyzstan were for various reasons isolated from such networks, and this isolation restricted their access to the country's private sector, making it difficult for them to create effective associations capable of representing their interests. This resulted in a high level of Russian exit and the silencing of Russian voices. In contrast, Russians in Latvia were well connected to such networks, which provided them with access to the country's private sector and facilitated the establishment of political parties and nongovernmental organizations that represented their interests. This led to a low level of Russian exit and high level of Russian voice. Commercio concludes that informal networks have a stronger influence on minority politics than formal institutions.





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