Growing directly out of the experiences of a team of historians at Washington State University who designed a new foundational course for WSU's common requirements, the Roots of Contemporary Issues series is built on the premise that students will be better at facing current and future challenges, no matter their major or career path, if they are capable of addressing controversial and pressing issues in mature, reasoned ways using evidence, critical thinking, and clear written and oral communication skills. To help students achieve these goals, each title in the Roots of Contemporary Issues series argues that we need both a historical understanding and an appreciation of the ways in which humans have been interconnected with places around the world for decades and even centuries.
Much of the world's politics revolves around questions about refugees and other migrating peoples, including debating the scope and limits of humanitarianism; the relevance of national borders in a globalized world; racist rhetoric and policies; global economic inequalities; and worldwide environmental disasters. There are no easy answers to these questions, but the decisions that all of us make about them will have tremendous consequences for individuals and for the planet in the future.
Ruptured Lives works from the premise that studying the history of refugee crises can help us make those decisions more responsibly. Examining conflicts--in Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Africa--that have produced migrations of people fleeing dangers or persecution, it aims to provide an intellectual framework for understanding how to think about the conflicts that produce refugees and the effects that refugee crises have on individuals and societies.
This was a really insightful revaluation on contemporary issues that are occurring across the world and provide an excellent background on those issues. When tackling this book ideas and background on global conflicts are expanded on revealing the complicated troubles that plague them. Issues on immigration and how it affects current geopolitics are developed in a way that resembles nothing that I’ve read before. For understanding current immigration issue politics occurring across the world this is a good read.
Refugees in crisis is heartbreaking,but because world events still create large masses of people who are displaced it is important to understand why they are being forced out. I believe the question the author asks is who is supposed to live where. It’s a complicated question-yet it is continually presented-with compelling arguments.
10/10 introductory text on the structure and development of migrant crises through history. Excellent argumentation throughout, and the author is both precise and poignant.
Finished today for my History 305 class at WSU. It talks about the origins of the Palestine-Israel conflict, which is really helping me understand current news.