My Voice: Rosel Siev Laura HubnerRosel's book is part of the My Voice Project, a collection of firsthand accounts of Holocaust survivors and refugees from Nazi persecution who settled in the UK. Rosel experienced Kristallnacht in Frankfurt, Germany, following which she came to the UK in 1938 aged 17. She moved to Manchester and trained as a nurse, and later lived in Dublin.
Hierarchies and exclusion in humanitarianism analyses – through diverse disciplinary perspectives and methods - how hierarchies
committing instead to explore the shocking resurgences of life that break through grief
both literally and figuratively
or a two-tiered security order
promises and contradictions of populism as also its backgrounds and causes
It provides a comprehensive and critical account of Chávez’s emergence
is decanted through the dictatorship of language into a miraculous
as well as serving the interests of those students studying law or criminology in other configurations
Film on the Faultline explores the fractious relationship between cinema and seismic experience and addresses the important role that cinema can play in the wake of such events
Sodom and Gomorrah is a story of love
The Global Road Movie looks at the road movie genre from a wider perspective
Scotland is closely tied to climate change and fossil capitalism