What We Are Reading Today: ‘Class Dismissed’ by Anthony Abraham Jack

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Class Dismissed’ by Anthony Abraham Jack
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Updated 10 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Class Dismissed’ by Anthony Abraham Jack

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Class Dismissed’ by Anthony Abraham Jack

Elite colleges are boasting unprecedented numbers with respect to diversity, with some schools admitting their first majority-minority classes.

But when the twin pandemics of COVID-19 and racial unrest gripped the world, schools scrambled to figure out what to do with the diversity they so fervently recruited. And disadvantaged students suffered.

“Class Dismissed” exposes how woefully unprepared colleges were to support these students and shares their stories of how they were left to weather the storm alone and unprotected.


What We Are Reading Today: The South China Sea

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Updated 28 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: The South China Sea

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  • Through lively stories of individuals who have shaped current conflicts — businessmen, scientists, shippers, archaeologists, soldiers, and diplomats — Hayton narrates the complex history and contemporary reality of the South China Sea

Author: Bill Hayton

China’s rise has upset the global balance of power, and the first place to feel the strain is Beijing’s back in the South China Sea.
In this book, Bill Hayton lays out the daunting obstacles that stand in the way of peaceful resolution over the territory.
Through lively stories of individuals who have shaped current conflicts — businessmen, scientists, shippers, archaeologists, soldiers, and diplomats — Hayton narrates the complex history and contemporary reality of the South China Sea.
He underscores its crucial importance as the passageway for half the world’s merchant shipping and one-third of its oil and gas.
Whoever controls these waters controls the access between Europe, the Middle East, South Asia, and the Pacific.
The author discusses what might be the future of this clamorous region of international rivalry.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Ungrateful Refugee

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Updated 28 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: The Ungrateful Refugee

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Author: Dina Nayeri

The question of what it is like to be a refugee is what many of us do not give much thought to, and yet there are more than 25 million refugees in the world.
To be a refugee is to grapple with your place in society, attempting to reconcile the life you have known with a new, unfamiliar home.  In this book, the writer weaves her own vivid story with the narratives of other refugees in recent years, taking us through the different stages of their journeys, from escape to asylum to resettlement.
“The Ungrateful Refugee” recalibrates the conversation around the refugee experience, according to a review on goodreads.com.

 


What We Are Reading Today: Inequality and Globalization

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Updated 26 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: Inequality and Globalization

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  • Drawing on extensive data from fieldwork in Thailand, Paweenawat and Townsend show how consistent integrated financial accounts at the individual household and small enterprise level can be created using household and firm survey data

Authors: Archawa Paweenawat and Robert M. Townsend

Increasing inequality, the impact of globalization, and the disparate effects of financial regulation and innovation are extraordinarily important topics that fuel spirited policy debates. And yet the facts underlying these debates are of doubtful accuracy.
In reality, as Archawa Paweenawat and Robert Townsend show in Inequality and Globalization, there is a large gap between micro household surveys, which measure key outcomes such as inequality, and aggregated financial accounts, which measure macroeconomic totals and growth.

Paweenawat and Townsend propose a remedy: Integrated financial accounts, in which the flows in income statements, including saving and investment, are consistent with the changes in financial assets and liabilities in the balance sheet at micro and macro levels. None of the leading US micro household surveys or macro accounts meets this criterion.

Drawing on extensive data from fieldwork in Thailand, Paweenawat and Townsend show how consistent integrated financial accounts at the individual household and small enterprise level can be created using household and firm survey data.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Waiting for The Barbarians’

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Updated 26 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Waiting for The Barbarians’

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J. M. Coetzee’s award-winning 1980 novel “Waiting for The Barbarians” is set in a remote outpost on the frontier of an unnamed empire, where the protagonist, a magistrate, grapples with moral dilemmas as he witnesses the brutal treatment of indigenous people at the hands of imperial forces.

Through the magistrate’s inner turmoil and resistance to the violence perpetrated by his people, the novel explores themes of power, colonialism, torture, and morality.

One of the central themes is the dehumanizing nature of colonialism, and the brutality that often accompanies the exercise of power over others.

As the magistrate witnesses the harsh treatment of the barbarians at the hands of the imperial forces, he begins to question the morality of the empire’s actions and to confront his role in upholding the oppressive system.

The novel’s exploration of the nature of power and violence is both timely and timeless, as it raises questions about how individuals and societies justify and perpetuate acts of cruelty and oppression.

“Waiting for The Barbarians” won several prestigious awards, including the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction in 1980 and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize in the same year.

The novel also won the South African CNA Prize, now known as the Sunday Times Literary Award, for the best work of fiction in 1980.

Coetzee was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2003 for his notable contributions to the world of literature.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Africa’s Struggle for Its Art’ by Benedicte Savoy

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Africa’s Struggle for Its Art’ by Benedicte Savoy
Updated 25 July 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Africa’s Struggle for Its Art’ by Benedicte Savoy

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Africa’s Struggle for Its Art’ by Benedicte Savoy

For decades, African nations have fought for the return of countless works of art stolen during the colonial era and placed in Western museums. In “Africa’s Struggle for Its Art,” Benedicte Savoy brings to light this largely unknown but deeply important history. One of the world’s foremost experts on restitution and cultural heritage, Savoy investigates extensive, previously unpublished sources to reveal that the roots of the struggle extend much further back than prominent recent debates indicate, and that these efforts were covered up by myriad opponents.