Global Studies- Links to External sources

 

global studies

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Firstly please answer two of the following questions. Secondly please do not use outside sources and links only use the source that is provided down below. Thirdly your answers should be typed, double-spaced 12 point (Times New Roman or similar sized font) with 1 inch margins, the pages should be numbered, and the final document should consist of both answers together in one file, saved as a .doc, .docx or pdf, or if you really have to, as .pages. Please do NOT include the question at the start of or before the answer.  Question themes: 1. How can we situate trauma, PTSD and street children and the impact of neoliberal policies on public health across the region, especially Egypt and Lebanon? 2. How do we understand and deploy intersectionality in the context of the MENA and the Global ME more broadly? 3.

With reference to Kanaaneh’s book and other writings on women and public health, how can we understand the role of women and gender, and especially women’s reproductive lives and health vis-a-vis various national(ist) imaginaries, identities and discourses, both in sovereign Arab/Muslim countries (e.g., Egypt, Morocco, Iran) and Israel and the Occupied Territories. 4. Explore how examples of literature we’ve read — Frankenstein in Baghdad and Lissa in particular — can be used as sources for documenting and understanding issues related to public health in the GME. 5. How do we situate CoVid with ongoing experiences of underdevelopment and the ways previous pandemics have impacted efforts towards modernization across the GME           Omar Dewachi, “Iraqibacter and the Pathologies of Intervention,” available here

Links to an external site.

Hannah Emerson, “When International Psychiatric Aid Gets it Wrong: Street Children in Cairo,” available here  (Links to an external site.)  (summary of Sweis article).   Goldstein & Braunschweiger, “When Health Care Is Decimated By War: COVID-19 in the Middle East and North Africa,” available here  (Links to an external site.) .   Bowleg, “The Problem With the Phrase Women and Minorities: Intersectionality—an Important Theoretical Framework for Public Health,” available here  (Links to an external site.) . Hina Naveed, “An Introduction to Women’s Health in the Middle East,” available here  (Links to an external site.) . Farzaneh Roudi-Fahimi, “Women’s Reproductive Health in the MENA,” available here  (Links to an external site.) .

De Jong & Khoury, “Reproductive Health of Arab Young People,” available here  (Links to an external site.) . Pinar Likkaracan, “Commentary: Sexual health and human rights in the Middle East and North Africa. Also progress or backlash?” available here  (Links to an external site.) . “Sexual Violence as a Weapon of War: The Case of ISIS in Iraq and Syria,” available here  (Links to an external site.) . UN Human Rights Council, ““They came to destroy”: ISIS Crimes Against the Yazidis,” available here  (Links to an external site.) .   Saad, “Disability in the Arab World: A Comparative Analysis Within Cultures,” available here  (Links to an external site.) .

Human Rights Watch, “Iran: People with Disabilities Face Discrimination and Abuse,” available here  (Links to an external site.) . Sherine Hamdy et al, Lissa: A Story About Medical Promise, Friendship and Revolution. Please order either paper or e-version at amazon.com or whatever site you use. Visit the website here  (Links to an external site.) . Finally watch the video here  (Links to an external site.) .

 

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