Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Philip G. Terrie
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Total Pages 252
Release 1999
Genre History
ISBN 9780815605706

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This work shows how expectations about land use, combined with interactions with nature have defined the Adirondacks. Outlining the disputes for the control of the land, the author introduces the key players from the residents, landholders, to preservationists and developers.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Philip G. Terrie
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Total Pages 292
Release 2008-06-27
Genre History
ISBN 9780815609049

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Contested Terrain explores the competing understandings of how best to manage this spectacular natural resource. Terrie introduces the key players and events that have shaped the region and its use, from early settlers and loggers to preservationists, year-round residents, and developers. This new edition includes a comprehensive account of the Pataki years, an era of stunning conservation triumphs combined with unprecedented pressures on the region’s ecological integrity.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Richards Edwards
Publisher Basic Books
Total Pages 272
Release 1980-07-06
Genre Social Science
ISBN 9780465014132

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The controversial study by a young radical economist of the transformation of the workplace-- where today impersonal bureaucracies legitimate hierarchies and enhance the employer's control over the worker.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Steven Ratuva
Publisher ANU Press
Total Pages 305
Release 2019-09-10
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1760463205

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Contested Terrain provides a cutting-edge, comprehensive and innovative approach to critically analysing the multidimensional and contested nature of security narratives, justified by different ideological, political, cultural and economic rationales. This is important in a complex and ever-changing situation involving a dynamic interplay between local, regional and global factors. Security narratives are constructed in multiple ways and are used to frame our responses to the challenges and threats to our sense of safety, wellbeing, identity and survival but how the narratives are constructed is a matter of intellectual and political contestation. Using three case studies from the Pacific (Fiji, Tonga and Solomon Islands), Contested Terrain shows the different security challenges facing each country, which result from their unique historical, political and socio-cultural circumstances. Contrary to the view that the Pacific is a generic entity with common security issues, this book argues for more localised and nuanced approaches to security framing and analysis.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Beverly A. Bunch-Lyons
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 181
Release 2014-04-08
Genre History
ISBN 1135322686

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This in-depth study focuses on black women migrants to the North and in doing so examines the interaction of race, class, regionalism, and gender during the early years of the 20th century.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author D. A. Gray
Publisher Futurecycle Press
Total Pages 100
Release 2017-10
Genre Poetry
ISBN 9781942371380

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CONTESTED TERRAIN captures the myriad identities inside a veteran shaped by birth, geography and, later, a set of experiences that belie any hand-me-down wisdom. ¿Cave Country¿ sees the green, fertile surface give way as the illusion collapses beneath the speaker¿s feet; in ¿Desert Skies,¿ a barrage of war images hit faster than the speaker can process them; and ¿Returning to the Hill Country¿ shows the altered landscape, both physical and mental, that awaits his return. The final section, ¿A Handful of Dust¿ shifts from the individual to the culture of fear that has become a new, uncomfortable normal. Gray¿s speakers still believe that beauty exists¿often in an uneasy coexistence with tension, hypervigilance, and an ever-changing consciousness.

Contested Terrain

Contested Terrain
Title Contested Terrain PDF eBook
Author Sally L Kitch
Publisher University of Illinois Press
Total Pages 281
Release 2014-10-30
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0252096649

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Sally L. Kitch explores the crisis in contemporary Afghan women’s lives by focusing on two remarkable Afghan professional women working on behalf of their Afghan sisters. Kitch's compelling narrative follows the stories of Judge Marzia Basel and Jamila Afghani from 2005 through 2013, providing an oft-ignored perspective on the personal and professional lives of Afghanistan's women. Contending with the complex dynamics of a society both undergoing and resisting change, Basel and Afghani speak candidly--and critically--of matters like international intervention and patriarchal Afghan culture, capturing the ways in which immense possibility alternates and vies with utter hopelessness. Strongly rooted in feminist theory and interdisciplinary historical and geopolitical analysis, Contested Terrain sheds new light on the struggle against the powerful forces that affect Afghan women's education, health, political participation, livelihoods, and quality of life. The book also suggests how a new dialogue might be started--in which women from across geopolitical boundaries might find common cause for change and rewrite their collective stories.