...It is also considered as the sub-range of the Himalaya mountain range. It is located between the borders of two Muslim countries Pakistan and Afghanistan and is also considered to be the geographic center of population of the world. Tirich Mir, Noshes, and Istoro Nal, the highest peaks in the Hindu Kush are located in Chitral District of Northern Pakistan. Its eastern side range is also known as the High Hindu Kush range which is located in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Chitral is considered to be the pinnacle of the Hindu Kush region. The highest peaks, as well as countless passes and massive glaciers, are located in this region. The Chiantar, Kurambar, and Terich glaciers are amongst the most extensive in the Hindu Kush and the melt water from these glaciers form the Kunar River, which eventually flows south into Afghanistan and joins the Bashgal, Panjsher, and eventually the much smaller Kabul River. The jazz musician Katie Melua wrote a song called "Halfway Up the Hindu Kush", probably because in the 1960s and 70s Afghanistan was depicted in the media as the romantic haven of nomads and a resort for hashish-smoking hippies. Hindu Kush Hindu Kush a high mountain system, extending c.500 mi (800 km) W from the Pamir Knot, N Pakistan, into NE Afghanistan; rising to 25,236 ft (7,692 m) in Tirich Mir, on the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Glaciated and receiving heavy snowfall, the mountains have permanently snow-covered peaks and little vegetation. Meltwater feeds...
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...response. |Question |Response | |Look in recent news or in historical |The conflict in Syria is a big driver for migration. There is also the ongoing violence in | |context for one ethnic, racial, or |Iraq and Afghanistan, the poverty in Kosovo, and abuses in Eritrea that are also leading people| |religious population that was motivated to|to migrate and look to build their lives somewhere safer. In Syria, more than 250,000 Syrians | |migrate due to conflict. |have lost their lives in four and a half year of armed conflict. This begin with | | |anti-government protests which then escalated into a civil war. More than 11 million have been| | |forced from their homes as forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad and those that oppose him,| | |battle each other. To add to all of this conflict, there are also the jihadist militants that | | |are also battling them as well. The ongoing violence in Iraq and Afghanistan has resulted in | | |approximately 210,000 civilian deaths. Civilian deaths have also resulted from the military | | |operations in Yemen that began in 2002...
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...Afghan music culture after the communist coup of 1978, Baily first offers a description of Afghan music as it was before the 23 years’ war, and describes trends between music and migration. He describes three categories of music in Afghanistan and focuses on the latter two: regional folk songs, which are characteristic of various regions and ethnic groups; popular music that was created and promoted by Afghanistan’s only radio station, called Radio Afghanistan; and art music that was created in the musician’s quarter of the old city in Kabul (Kabul’s Kucheh Kharabat). Baily also notes an important social distinction between professional (kesbi) musicians for whom a musical profession is hereditary, and amateur (shauqi) musicians who were typically from educated middle-class or even upper-class families and whose attitudes toward music were more liberal. Hereditary professional musicians tended to regard playing music as an occupation that was in their own tradition and right. Knowledge of Indian music theory and specific performance techniques that are associated with certain instruments were considered exclusively their domain, and something that amateur, self-taught musicians lacked. Music practiced by Afghan refugees who fled to Peshawar was similar in style and sound to the traditional music of Afghanistan. Peshawar is closely located to Kabul, and offers a similar cultural climate. For many...
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...urbanization as well as conflicts and climate events that force displacement. By looking at these examples it will be assessed the manner in which these situations contribute the issue of slums across the world. Furthermore, the observations will be used to suggest what may be done to prevent or minimize the effect that they have in creating and worsening slum conditions. Slums tend to form when there is a demand for housing or infrastructure that is not sufficiently being addressed by whatever authorities or government controls an area. The problem of slum formation is complex; addressing land policies, housing prices, provision of adequate infrastructure and public services. The problem is especially exacerbated by large displacement or migration that can have a number of catalysts. Acioli states that the issue of reducing the growing slum population is a two-pronged challenge. The first is a ‘…focus on slum upgrading, infrastructure, improvement and regularization of informal settlements, coupled with measures that can actually improve living conditions and the quality of life in the existing settlements.’ This report focuses on the later challenge: using preventative policy and offering a...
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...In recent years many refugees have fled Afghanistan to safety in the UK. Examine the factors that can lead to refugee migration. [15 marks] A refugee is a person who, owing to a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside of his or her nationality and is unable to return for fear of persecution. Some may define refugee by what they are not (internally displaced persons and forced migrants from natural disasters). In recent years Syria has become a more and more dangerous place to live due to civil war and conflict that originally occurred due to political unrest. 12 million Syrians have fled their homes, half of them are children. They fear for their lives and long for a life free from danger and to protect their families. Also when in an area of conflict the likely hood of becoming malnourished, abused and diseased and exploited are much higher giving them even more reason to move in order to have a better quality of life where they can live in peace and create a new life for their families and generations to come. 4 million Syrians are refugees, and most of them flee to Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan. Another factor that can lead to refugee migration is being forced by religious belief. Between the years of 1933 and 1945 the Holocaust took place in Nazi Germany. The Holocaust involved Hitler and his Nazi party killing hundreds of Jewish for no other reason other than the...
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...四五正. Yon-gosei, or fourth-fifth generation, shows how I trace my origins to Japan. Although my family migrated to the islands of Hawaiʻi quite some time ago, our connection to the motherland remain strong. Like many Japanese-American households, my family prefers to eat white rice instead of potatoes with our meals and leave shoes outside before entering the house. Susan Ossman conducts three interviews in her book, Moving Matters: Paths of Serial Migration, in order to understand the thriving cosmopolitan and its connection to a future society on a global scale. The interviewees share their migration stories as individuals and with their families. However, despite an increase in the frequency of world-traveling serial migrants in the 21st century, this paper argues that the conception of a global citizenship strays further from fruition. Although new experiences and perspectives accumulate while living abroad in other countries, the community of origin is the foundation of one’s paradigm. Helene, a native of Paris, uses the concept of a Parisienne in order to distance...
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...has also obviously been influenced this from a young age, like when she said “You squishy lumps of camel snot, give us our ball back”. She has obviously been told stories about her mother’s ancestors, which it seems as though she has developed her personality from a lot. Having ancestors that are desert warriors has inspired them to be live up to the stories. Though, personal experiences can help to develop personalities as well. Jamal, having not much to do in Afghanistan, plays soccer to pass the time. He dreams of winning the soccer world cup, and as much as that seems impossible for an eleven year old boy, Jamal is unaware of this and strives to do it. Which helps him to keep going, on the tough trip to get to Australia, which Morris Gleitzman puts into the book to influence readers and develop them into powerful people who may one day help with the ongoing struggles in Afghanistan. Bibi, having to grow up during a rough time, will grow up to be a thick skinned, stubborn, tough woman. Like with her ‘Bird Migration Project’ when she tried to take an entire wing of a fighter plane. Bibi and Jamal are mostly influenced by their mother’s ancestors, the Desert Warriors. And though, not as much, the baker helps them out too. As well as their own personal hopes and dreams allow them to never give up on getting to Australia. Which in the end, they couldn't, as a navy boat picked them up, but they were fine, and got to stay on one of the pacific islands....
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...Along with highlighting key moments that would lead to the building of the wall, author Buckley would highlight events that would begin the Cold War, as well as events such as Russia’s financial issues due to its heavy defensive spending and occupation of Afghanistan that would help bring the conflict to an end. Author Buckley throughout the book was able to discuss key political figures, both NATO and Warsaw Pact members, and explain their roles during this conflict between West and East, such as Mikhail Gorbachev’s agreement to sign the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty with President Ronald Reagan, one step in many that would help bring the Cold War to an end. Author Buckley was also able to offer the reader insight into how the building of the Berlin Wall affected the lives of those...
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...Development Worldwide of the Emancipation Laws in the Nineteenth Century Nannette Porter HIWD – 370: Comparative Civilization Instructor Katie Stewart October 13, 2015 Slavery had been a part of civilization since villages, and small communities began to form. The topic of slavery is an important part of our heritage, knowing how it began and what humanity has done to control it. It is interesting to see how Christianity can change the heart of one person, who can affect the change in a country. One small adjustment, thousands of miles abroad, can affect any civilization and history of many countries. During the 19th century many countries developed laws to gradually or immediately shift civilization away from slavery. This paper explores the religious influences motivating this shift in the legal system as well as the consequences of these laws on work civilization. Slavery was found worldwide and came in many different forms. The most common was the Slave, treated as chattels and wild animals, having no rights and endured harsh physical abuse. The Slave was known more and referred to as the ‘Western Slave’ more commonly found in America. Serfdom, a Russian repression, was a different form of slavery. Serfs were not a legal person, had no property rights, no right to credit transactions and not protected by custom. However, a serf had his own land and property, unlike in slavery. Serfdom was found in China, Japan, India and elsewhere...
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...Expanding Horizons and Forging Cooperation in a Resurgent Asia SAARC 2015 The New Delhi Statement on SAARC 2015 and Asian Resurgence © Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, March 2007 Published by: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung India Office K-70B, Hauz Khas Enclave New Delhi Email: fes@fesindia.org Edited by: Kant K. Bhargava and Mahendra P. Lama Designed and printed by: New Concept Information Systems Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi ISBN 81-7440-065-6 Contents Foreword Preface Background Paper Inaugural Address by I.K. Gujral Group Reports New Delhi Statement Annexures: (i) Programme (ii) List of Participants & Special Invitees (iii) List of Written Papers and Presentations Related Publications iv vi 1 17 23 45 56 71 Foreword As part of its programme for the promotion of regional cooperation in South Asia, the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung organised the Conference on SAARC 2015: Expanding Horizons and Forging Cooperation in a Resurgent Asia in February 2007 in New Delhi in collaboration with Ambassador Kant K. Bhargava, former Secretary-General of SAARC, and Prof. Mahendra Lama, Chairman, Centre for South, Central, South East Asian and South West Pacific Studies, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. The main thrust of the Conference was that the SAARC as an entity and its member states must prepare themselves well for leveraging the opportunities arising from the current resurgence in Asia. The Background Paper for the Conference was prepared...
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...On September 11th, 2001, the world seemed to stop as the result of the World Trade Center collapsing. This catastrophic event started the on-going war with the International Security Alliance Federation in coalition with Afghanistan against Al-Qaeda. The combat and brutality in Afghanistan have left native Afghans in thrall of Al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups such as the Taliban and Isis. The fighting, bombings, and randomized killing of civilians has rendered the idea to thousands of Afghans to seek refuge in a country that they do not call home. These refugees have experienced traumatic events such as but not limited to losing loved ones, going through human trafficking rings, and seeing explosions and exchanges in military combat. (Nordland)...
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...QUALITY OF LIFE ASSESSMENT PROGRAM Juanita Hatcher February 2015 Overview • What is AKDN and what are the goals • What does Quality of Life mean • Quality of Life Assessments AKDN • Group of 11 development organizations with diverse development mandates • Primarily works in the poorest parts of South and Central Asia, East and West Africa (30 countries) • Adopts a Multi-Input Area Development (MIAD) approach in selected areas • Seeks to improve the Quality of Life of people living in program areas • Long-term perspective and commitment 3 Multi-Input Area Development • Initiated in 2007, the QoL assessment program includes subnational regions in six countries where AKDN takes a Multi-Input Area Development (MIAD) approach • MIAD: multi-input with enough strategic investment to address key determinants of QoL • MIAD should improve development of an area the economic, social and cultural • AKDN’s multi-sectoral capabilities and long term engagement make this a viable strategy • Key question: Are the pooled efforts of agencies, working with partners, influencing positive changes in the QoL of a given area’s population? The Overall Goal • • Going beyond material standards of living, health and education • Including positive values and norms in the organization of society – pluralism and cultural tolerance – gender and social equity – civil society organization and good governance • AKF aims to improve...
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...1. Introduction More than 100,000 years ago the first modern humans left Africa and began to colonize the world. Since then human history is also a history of migration. Migration has always been a strong impetus towards human development, these days however migration is often seen as problem or threat. Migration is defined as the permanent change of residence of a person or group. It is a natural social phenomenon. Humans have colonized the entire world and penetrated its remotest areas. Migration is taking place within very different contexts: f.e. military conquest, refugees, expulsion or enslavement. But migrants have also traveled in search of economic opportunities, new settlement areas or trade routes. Currently approximately 216,000,000 people are living away from their place of birth. This number equals about 3% of the world population. Analyzing the reasons for migration one distinguishes between push and pull factors - often both appear together. Push factors are circumstances in the country of origin that lead people to emigrate, for example poverty, war or environmental disasters. Pull factors are conditions in the destination country that make immigration attractive such as economic opportunity and political freedom. Overall trends By far the most immigrants live in the United States followed by Russia and Germany. The main countries of origin are Mexico, India, China and Russia. In proportion to the population Persian Gulf countries host the largest share...
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...for better education e.g. Cambridge, Harvard, Oxford University Large influx of Asian student to Australia. * Must have money in order to voluntarily migrate. * Resettlement migration = International migration. * Contract migrationMigrating to another countryUsually for work * Guest workLiving/Working in another country because there is a shortage of workers in that country for that workAustralian teachers and nurses moving to Internal: * Rural-Urban Migration: * Leaving a countrymoving to a city * ChallengeCan infrastructure handle current rural influx? And who is growing crops? * Push factor out of rural environment (Negative)Sever drought, unemployment, natural disasters etc. * Pull Factors to move to the city (Positive)Employment, Education, Medical etc. * Bright Lights Big City PhenomenonYoung people’s view of being in the city. * Counter-urbanization: * Leaving the citymoving to the country * Life style choice living life at a slower pace * Often associated with retirees Young couples living big life who have children. * Sea change Tree Change Refugee movement/forced: * ForcedNo choice to leave e.g. war, fear of life etc. * People seeking Asylumseeking safetynot being granted Refugee status. * People in Afghanistan and Iraqpeople will come via...
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...My name is Najeeba Wazefadost, and 12 years ago I risked my life on a dangerous journey. I escaped my country Afghanistan and came to Australia by boat. I know that there are no words to comfort those who have lost their loved ones in the recent boat tragedies. But also devastating is the fact that over the past decade, we have only heard politicians endlessly scare-mongering about the number of boat arrivals and how we can decrease these numbers, or deter asylum seekers altogether. Over time, the real human faces of the vulnerable have been turned into statistics about the number of boat arrivals. We have forgotten the devastating circumstances from which asylum seekers come. Afghanistan has been in a state of war for many decades, a war that has left little evidence of justice, humanity and peace for its people. Even now, villages are frequently attacked and there is continuous persecution of minorities. The Afghan Hazaras are not safe in Afghanistan, and are not even safe in neighbouring countries like Pakistan. These are people whose only choice is to seek refuge and security in any way possible. For my family and me, we could not wait for someone to come and rescue us because we could have been dead by then. Coming by boat was the only choice we had. Even though we knew we were at risk of drowning in the daunting waters of the Pacific, we preferred taking that risk over brutal killing at the hands of the Taliban. It hurts me to hear politicians claim that the best way to...
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