Dreams Deported

Dreams Deported
Author: Kent Wong
Publisher:
Total Pages: 95
Release: 2015
Genre: Illegal aliens
ISBN: 9780983628958

Dreams Deported: Immigrant Youth and Families Resist Deportation is a UCLA student publication featuring stories of deportation and of the courageous immigrant youth and families who have led the national campaign against deportations and successfully challenged the president of the United States to act.This is the third book on this topic published by the UCLA Center for Labor Research and Education. The first book, Underground Undergrads: UCLA Undocumented Immigrant Students Speak Out, was the first in the country written by and about undocumented immigrant youth. The second book, Undocumented and Unafraid: Tam Tran, Cinthya Felix, and the Immigrant Youth Movement, is a tribute to Tam and Cinthya and captures the voices of a new generation who are coming out of the shadows, making history, and changing our country.

Dreamers

Dreamers
Author: Snigda Poonam
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages:
Release: 2018-03-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1787381552

Simulated Dreams

Simulated Dreams
Author: Haim Hazan
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2001
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 9781571813251

Examines Israeli youth culture in terms of tribal and global elements. Ch. 2 (pp. 35-55), "Revisiting the Holocaust: The Historical Discourse, " focuses on youth delegations or "pilgrimages" to Holocaust sites in Poland. Analyzes values conveyed in the approaches of three types of Israeli schools (state secular, kibbutz, and state religious) to preparing students for the trip. Concludes that these embody three competing narratives of the Holocaust.

Nurturing Different Dreams

Nurturing Different Dreams
Author: Katherine Turpin
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2014-10-09
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1625640099

Increasingly, adolescents and young adults in the United States are racially and socioeconomically diverse, while the teaching population remains predominantly white and middle class. Many youth ministry programs that utilize volunteer mentors recruit adults who are ill-equipped to bridge cultural differences and effectively build sustainable relationships with adolescents who come from different backgrounds than their own. College and university campus ministries that are historically white struggle to provide adequate support and mentoring for students who have traditionally not been represented in the college population. Often, mentoring relationships break down over cultural misunderstandings. As educators who come from backgrounds marked by privilege, Katherine Turpin and Anne Carter Walker draw from their experiences in an intentionally culturally diverse youth ministry program to name the challenges and inadequacies of ministry with young people from marginalized communities. Through engaging case studies and vignettes, the authors re-examine the assumptions about youth agency, vocational development, educational practice, and mentoring. Offering concrete guidelines and practices for working effectively across lines of difference, Nurturing Different Dreams invites readers to consider their own cultural assumptions and practices for mentoring adolescents, and assists readers in analyzing and transforming their practices of mentoring young people who come from different communities than their own.

Dreams and Nightmares

Dreams and Nightmares
Author: Marjorie S. Zatz
Publisher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2015-05-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0520283066

Dreams and Nightmares takes a critical look at the challenges and dilemmas of immigration policy and practice in the absence of comprehensive immigration reform. The experiences of children and youth provide a prism through which the interwoven dynamics and consequences of immigration policy become apparent. Using a unique sociolegal perspective, authors Zatz and Rodriguez examine the mechanisms by which immigration policies and practices mitigate or exacerbate harm to vulnerable youth. They pay particular attention to prosecutorial discretion, assessing its potential and limitations for resolving issues involving parental detention and deportation, unaccompanied minors, and Dreamers who came to the United States as young children. The book demonstrates how these policies and practices offer a means of prioritizing immigration enforcement in ways that alleviate harm to children, and why they remain controversial and vulnerable to political challenges.

Dream

Dream
Author: Susan V. Bosak
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2004
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781896232041

Illustrated text urges the reader to nurture his or her dreams and work to make them a reality.