Goodbye Saudi Arabia

Goodbye Saudi Arabia
Author: George Francis Collins
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2003
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1553952774

The book describes the good, bad, and ugly about an American's experiences living with his family in Saudi Arabia. Prince Sultan wanted to save money at the Jubail Project. Personnel were asked to reuse the morning tea bags again in the afternoon. Here are 5 short statements about events in the book: 1. After three months in jail, a lenient religious judge sentenced a male British secretary, caught jogging home from a wine tasting party, to a public whipping of 72 lashes at the busiest intersection in Al Khobar. 2. An ARAMCO executive's wife, caught at Dhahran Airport with her baby's mattress filled with marijuana, was given 48 hours to leave Saudi Arabia with her family. This was considered a very light sentence. 3. American companies sent borderline alcoholics to Saudi Arabia to dry out. Wow! What a mistake. 4. The religious police, mutawain, whipped Saudi women in public if they were not properly covered, and they threw paint on foreign women if their arms or legs were not fully covered. 5. The Saudi National Guardsman leaned into our car window and said, "If I had my way, I would throw all you Americans into the sea."

Reflective Planning Practice

Reflective Planning Practice
Author: Richard Willson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2020-10-19
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1000200140

Reflective Planning Practice: Theory, Cases, and Methods uses structured, first-person reflection to reveal the artistry of planning practice. The value of professional reflection is widely recognized, but there is a difference between acknowledging it and doing it. This book takes up that challenge, providing planners’ reflections on past practice as well as prompts for reflecting in the midst of planning episodes. It explains a reflection framework and employs it in seven case studies written by planning educators who also practice. The cases reveal practical judgments made during the planning episode and takeaways for practice, as the planners used logic and emotion, and applied convention and invention. The practical judgments are explained from the perspective of the authors’ personal experiences, purposes, and professional style, and their interpretation of the rich context that underpins the cases including theories, sociopolitical aspects, workplace setting, and roles. The book seeks to awaken students and practitioners to the opportunities of a pragmatic, reflective approach to planning practice.