Academic literature on the topic 'Resettle'

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Journal articles on the topic "Resettle"

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Shangguan, Ziheng, Jianping Liu, Mark Yaolin Wang, Shaojun Chen, and Ruilian Zhang. "Have Water Conservancy Project Resettlers in Contemporary China Really Been Lifted Out of Poverty? Re-Measurement Based on Relative Poverty and Consumption Poverty." Land 12, no. 1 (January 4, 2023): 169. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land12010169.

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Those who have been forced to resettle by water conservancy projects (WCP) have always been a group that is characterised by high poverty and livelihood vulnerability, mainly due to insufficient compensation and the fragmentation of their social networks. In 2020, the Chinese government announced that China had achieved comprehensive poverty alleviation, implying that all WCP-induced resettlers, have been lifted out of poverty. However, China’s current poverty line is based on the minimum subsistence standard, namely the absolute poverty line, which fails to objectively reflect China’s uneven development and individuals’ actual consumption needs. Therefore, in order to comprehensively analyse the poverty status of WCP-induced resettlers in contemporary China, this paper reassessed the poverty status of contemporary WCP-induced resettlers from the perspective of development-based poverty and consumption-based poverty. Based on survey data from over 1000 households who were forced to resettle due to China’s ‘Yangtze River to Huai River Inter-basin Water Diversion’ project, this paper concludes that: (1) China’s current absolute poverty line is outdated for contemporary WCP-induced resettlers, due to the fact they had basically been lifted out of absolute poverty by 2018, and those who remain poor need to be addressed through the bottom line guarantee of local governments; (2) the role of land as a form of basic insurance can alleviate income inequality and mitigate the risk of force majeure. Therefore, those resettled from rural areas have stronger income stability and greater resilience to risks; (3) the poverty status of contemporary WCP-induced resettlers is mainly consumption-based, and it is worse for resettlers from urban areas. Based on these conclusions, we suggest that the government should try to avoid large-scale relocation of WCP-induced resettlers to urban areas, and try to provide more insurances to them, such as providing arable land and sharing the benefits of water conservancy projects with the resettlers.
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Jiang, Tianhe, Mark Wang, Yingnan Zhang, Guoqing Shi, and Dengcai Yan. "What about the “Stayers”? Examining China’s Resettlement Induced by Large Reservoir Projects." Land 10, no. 2 (February 6, 2021): 166. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land10020166.

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Large reservoir projects typically occupy vast lots of rural land and trigger resettlement on a massive scale. In China’s reservoir context, increasing concerns have arisen regarding distant-resettlees (those who are resettled outside the reservoir area), while fewer studies have examined the nearby-resettlees (those who are resettled near the original area) and the non-movers (those who do not resettle). The significance of these two groups has been downplayed and their populations are in the millions (or more) in China. How and why they are impacted is under-researched and their relative position and intergroup nexus with the distant-resettlees remains unclear in the existing literature. To address this research gap, this paper incorporates the differences between nearby-resettlees and non-movers and collectively refers to them as the “stayers” as they are left behind in reservoir areas. Based on the background of reservoir-induced resettlement in present-day China, and a review of the project-induced impacts, we use Danjiangkou Reservoir as a case study. The findings indicate that the stayers are largely disadvantaged in terms of land assets, housing conditions, finance, infrastructure, industrialisation, livelihood strategies, and emotional impact, while many distant-resettlees are less affected or positively impacted in these aspects. Through the lens of the political nature of reservoir-induced resettlements, we interpret the gaps between the distant-resettlees and stayers. Finally, domestic and global policy implications and further comments are presented.
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Bellamy, Kim, Remo Ostini, Nataly Martini, and Therese Kairuz. "Insights from the coalface: barriers to accessing medicines and pharmacy services for resettled refugees from Africa." Australian Journal of Primary Health 25, no. 2 (2019): 118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/py18092.

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Resettled refugees in Australia have been shown to exhibit a high prevalence of limited health literacy and are at greater risk of mismanaging their medication and not being able to access the healthcare services they need. The aim of the current study is to explore the barriers to accessing medicines and pharmacy services in Queensland, Australia, among resettled refugees from Africa; this research was conducted from the perspectives of healthcare professionals and people who help the refugees to resettle in their adopted country (resettlement workers). A ‘generic qualitative’ approach was used in this study. In-depth interviews were conducted among healthcare professionals (two GPs, nine pharmacists and three nurse practitioners) and resettlement workers. Participants were recruited via a purposive snowball sampling method in the cities of Brisbane and Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Twenty-four in-depth interviews were conducted; 14 with healthcare professionals. Three key themes emerged from the data: (1) Communication Barriers; (2) Navigating the Health System; and (3) Belief Systems and Culture. Perceptions of those ‘at the coalface’ – healthcare professionals and people who are responsible for assisting refugees to resettle in Australia – provide insight into the language and cultural challenges experienced by resettled refugees from Africa regarding access to the Australian health system, including medicines and pharmacy services.
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Albright, David, and Kevin O'Neill. "Iraq: Resettle the scientists." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 54, no. 1 (January 1998): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00963402.1998.11456802.

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Cohen, Flora, Sarah R. Meyer, Ilana Seff, Cyril Bennouna, Carine Allaf, and Lindsay Stark. "Intersectionality: Experiences of Gender Socialization and Racialization for Iraqi Students Resettled in the United States." Journal on Education in Emergencies 8, no. 2 (2022): 111. http://dx.doi.org/10.33682/1xf5-ef54.

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Individuals from conflict-affected countries, such as Iraq, face formidable challenges when they resettle in the United States. Drawing from intersectionality theory, we explore the lived experiences of adolescent boys and girls from Iraq who have resettled in Texas and Virginia. In this qualitative study, we focus on the school as an institution that is positioned to enforce, or to combat, systemic and interpersonal inequalities among young refugees, especially in terms of gender and race. Our thematic analysis identifies the ways their interactions with teachers, peers, and family in the school context have shaped the socialization of these adolescent boys and girls from Iraq. The study findings reflect the importance of understanding how education settings can affect the intersectional experiences of conflict-affected youth who have resettled in the United States.
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Kontorovich, Vladimir. "Can Russia Resettle the Far East?" Post-Communist Economies 12, no. 3 (September 2000): 365–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14631370050173441.

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Kirkland, Chelsey, Na’Tasha Evans, Kamesha Spates, and Cedric Mubikayi Kabasele. "Perceptions of Resettled Refugee Congolese Women: Maintaining Cultural Traditions during Resettlement." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 24 (December 13, 2022): 16714. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192416714.

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Conflict-displaced refugees have increased significantly globally. The Democratic Republic of Congo is the leading country with refugees in the United States, where many resettle in Ohio. Women refugees are highly vulnerable, yet little literature has focused on them. Furthermore, maintaining cultural traditions can provide comfort during the tumultuous resettlement process. Therefore, this study used mixed methods to understand the perceptions of Congolese refugee women on maintaining cultural traditions during resettlement in Ohio. Translator-assisted, orally administered demographic survey and face-to-face interviews were conducted among resettled Congolese refugee women (n = 20) 18 and older, who arrived in the United States from 2011 to 2018, and were currently receiving Ohio resettlement agency assistance. Researchers applied descriptive coding and thematic analysis to identify themes and subthemes. Three themes were identified among the resettled Congolese refugee women regarding maintaining cultural traditions in the United States. The three themes comprised (1) clothing and dressing, (2) food, and (3) parenting style. Our work examined resettled refugee Congolese women’s perceptions of maintaining their culture after resettling in Ohio. These study findings could assist community engagers with insights and practical recommendations on supportive services for resettled Congolese women and a deeper understanding of complex acculturative situations facing them during resettlement.
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Dovi, Efami. "African-Americans, in reverse migration, resettle in Africa." Africa Renewal 29, no. 1 (April 30, 2016): 22–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.18356/3e9d05aa-en.

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Simpson, Fiona. "Councils assemble vital support for Afghan children and families." Children and Young People Now 2021, no. 10 (October 2, 2021): 8–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/cypn.2021.10.8.

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Local authorities and charities have responded to calls to resettle thousands of people evacuated from Afghanistan, but while some have developed specialist reception services others are in the dark over the scale of support needed
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Steele, Abbey. "IDP resettlement and collective targeting during civil wars." Journal of Peace Research 55, no. 6 (April 25, 2018): 810–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022343318763706.

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Refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) are not always safe where they resettle in ethnic civil wars, in which civilians’ identities overlap with the ethnic profile of armed combatants. This article argues that IDPs are also vulnerable in non-ethnic civil wars, through two related mechanisms that indicate civilians’ loyalties: (1) where the displaced are from and when they left; and (2) resettlement patterns. The first can suggest loyalties when the displacement is associated with territorial conquest and expulsion of suspected sympathizers. In turn, the displaced would be considered disloyal by the armed group responsible for the expulsion, and could be subject to further violence where they resettle. The second mechanism relates to the first: if displaced civilians are considered disloyal, then resettling with other, similarly stigmatized civilians can improve their security by reducing the household’s risk of discovery. However, clustering together with other IDPs can have a perverse effect: even though living in an enclave may reduce a particular household’s likelihood of suffering violence, the group itself is endangered because it is more easily detected. Armed groups can collectively target IDPs who resettle in clusters, either for strategic or retributive reasons. Implications of the argument are tested with detailed subnational panel data on IDP arrivals and massacres in Colombia, and the analyses provide support for the argument. The findings indicate that collective targeting of IDPs occurs even in civil wars without an ethnic cleavage, following voluntary resettlement patterns, and reinforces IDP security as a policy priority.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Resettle"

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Pahud, Marie-Thérèse. "The coping processes of adult refugees resettled in New Zealand." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Health Sciences Centre, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2513.

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A significant proportion of worldwide research concerning adult refugees has investigated clinical perspectives and emphasised the impact of pre and post-migration experiences as key factors affecting their mental health status. Nevertheless, a clear understanding of their mental health problems and psychiatric morbidity is difficult to obtain due to major prevalence variations and discrepancies between studies. Further, recent studies in New Zealand have underlined the limitation of health providers' abilities to meet refugees' mental health needs. On the other hand, despite the acknowledgment of refugees' endurance abilities to overcome traumatic events during both their pre-migration flight and in their first asylum countries, relatively less is known about their capacities to show positive adaptation to life's tasks in the course of resettlement in a final host country and how this impacts on preventing mental health problems. The current study, therefore, was undertaken to develop a theoretical understanding to describe and explain adult refugees' coping processes in overcoming resettlement difficulties and adjusting to life in New Zealand. This was achieved by using the grounded theory methodology where qualitative data were collected from twenty-six former refugees coming from war torn countries namely Afghanistan, Burma (Myanmar), Ethiopia, Kurdistan region and Somalia who are now living in Christchurch and Nelson. Participants described the basic social process of obtaining a social position as being the main goal which motivated them to develop their coping skills and behaviour. They explained that this was underpinned by the inter-relationship of their personal resources and gradual personal achievements which were influenced by encouraging external support from resettlement services providers and "caring" New Zealanders. Data collected during this study suggest that this dynamic process, in which personality and environmental factors interacted in a reciprocal and transactional relationship, appeared to be the condition sine qua non to negotiate and manage resettlement challenges. Indeed, participants frequently emphasised that if this interaction was not activated they faced greater difficulties in coming to terms with their new environment and in their adjustment to life in New Zealand, thus leading potentially to adverse mental health outcomes. Additionally, quantitative socio-economic data were collected so as to describe participants' characteristics. The study’s findings underline the complexity of adult refugees’ coping processes as well as some of the institutional constraints hindering their adaptation progress which can result in mental distress. These issues require responses which are beyond the health sector on its own. The implications of supporting the development of personal abilities so as to guide pragmatic support and encourage multisectoral collaboration are outlined and discussed. Areas for further research are highlighted as well as strategic issues which need to be addressed for improving the current situation of refugees resettled in New Zealand.
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White, Allen. "Legal spaces: resettled places : geographies of asylum in the UK." Thesis, Nottingham Trent University, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.312263.

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Mumtaz, Mehr. "Resettled: How Refugees Experience Employment and Unemployment in the U.S." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2020. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1707322/.

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Research on immigration in the United States has commonly studied the employment experiences of refugees. Few studies on refugees have focused on both, refugees' employment and unemployment experiences in the United States. This article draws on twenty in-depth interviews with refugees, along with ethnographic observation at a local refugee resettlement agency, to investigate how refugees make sense of their employment and unemployment experiences in the United States. I find that refugee men and women experience different employment trajectories in the United States, which are shaped by gender inequality in the public and domestic spheres. I further find that refugees' navigation with work in the United Stated influences their unemployment experiences and work in the informal sector. My study extends previous literature on refugee incorporation by conceptualizing refugees' employment as a gendered process, which includes periods of formal paid work, informal paid work, and unemployment in the United States.
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Søndergaard, Hans Peter. "Post-traumatic stress disorder and life events among recently resettled refugees /." Stockholm, 2002. http://diss.kib.ki.se/2002/91-7349-318-x/.

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Li, Siqian Carol, and 李思茜. "Reenergize the living space of resettled riverine communities on the Mekong." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/207150.

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The Mekong River, an important transnational river in Southeast Asia, passes through six counties including China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. About 70 million people live in the Mekong Basin, and the basin provides many resources of people to make a living, and help to sustain the daily life routines of local community. The development of mainstream dams on the Mekong River is a potential major trans-boundary geopolitical issue for the Mekong countries, placing at risk millions of people who are closely linked to the Mekong and the resource it supports. The riverbank gardens and forests are going to be inundated, facing the situation of waterfront change and the land use competition, thus communities are under threats of food security and livelihood. This project is going to explore ways to sustain food security and to enhance the livelihood of local community, to adopt the potential changes raised by the Mekong dams as an opportunity rather than constraints, to improve the food security and enhance the benefit to local communities in terms of their livelihood by taking advantage of the water change to reorganize the riverside community, provide them space and guide the productive activities of local villagers, thus to increase the environmental and social benefit of the whole river system in a regional scale of the Mekong. Through this project a balance will be maintained in terms of the performance of river system and the livelihoods for local community.
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Architecture
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Master of Landscape Architecture
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Beattie, William. "Rare cell separation using resettable cell traps." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44907.

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Techniques for the separation of cells from heterogeneous samples that do not rely on biological labels are important in applications where specific labels are unknown or unavailable. However, limitations of existing label-free separation techniques have prevented their widespread adoption. Those techniques that separate based on cell size typically offer high throughput but lack specificity. Those that separate based on a combination of cell size and deformability have superior selectivity, but are slow and prone to clogging. This work reports a microfluidic device that employs novel resettable cell traps to separate cells based on size and deformability. The resettable cell trap is a microchannel with controllable cross-section, featuring recesses to temporarily store captured cells. Larger and less deformable cells flowing through a cell trap with constricted cross-section will be selectively captured due to size restriction, and can be released back into the flow for collection by enlarging the channel cross-section. Smaller and more deformable cells will simply pass through the constricted channel. The ability to enlarge the trap and purge it of captured cells enables long term operation without clogging. The cell separation device presented is able to separate UM-UC13 cancer cells from human leukocytes with high enrichment (~100x), retention (~90%) and throughput (450,000 cells/hour). Serial separation using this mechanism provides extremely high enrichment (~2500x) without sacrificing retention. The mechanism is also shown to resolve size differences of 1 µm between polystyrene microspheres. The resettable cell trap is an improvement upon existing technology, providing greater enrichment than possible through size-based techniques while improving throughput and eliminating problems caused by clogging that are typical of filtration based techniques.
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Ghazinour, Mehdi. "Trauma and resiliency : a study of refugees from Iran resettled in Sweden." Doctoral thesis, Umeå : Univ, 2003. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-139.

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Booher, Laura Elizabeth. "From Burma to Dallas: The Experience of Resettled Emerging Adult Karen Refugees." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1363190792.

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Raje, Gauri. "Remembering displacement : hunger and marginalisation in three resettled villages of south Gujarat." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2005. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/1194/.

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Dams have had significant impact on the hinterlands of the regions in which they are built. Since the 1980s, there has been a growing body of empirical literature that has critiqued the fallout of dams on populations residing in the catchment areas and face uncertain futures due to inadequate or lack of rehabilitation policies that do not consider the long-term impact of the displacement on the economic, social and political lives of the affected population. Due to such encompassing effects, dams have long been the points of critique for environmentalists and social activists in the countries of the South. In south Asia, the Narmada dam controversy raised questions of displacement and water politics in the decade of the 1990s specifically but raised larger questions on the nature of adivasi relations with the Indian state, and the nature of development and paradigms of progress in the region. However, there are few studies in the field of anthropology or displacement studies that have examined the relationship between development projects and how these are remembered among those adversely affected by them. Based on fieldwork over 8 months, this thesis seeks to explore the different ways in which displacement due to the Ukai dam in the south Gujarat region of India is remembered by a group of 3 adivasi villages. It focuses specifically on the perception of the displaced adivasis and contexts and creation of the varying memories of displacement across social status, gender and generations in these three villages. In remembering the processes of disempowerment among displaced groups, the different groups of adivasis articulate the hunger and marginalisation that pervades their everyday lives. This thesis attempts to look at this fibre of social suffering and how this is experienced and lived out by the displaced villagers 30 years after the event of being displaced due to the dam. Through the focus on remembering displacement, the thesis attempts to examine the process through which pre-existing hierarchies are strengthened in the postdisplacement period and the disempowerment experienced by some of those already living on the margins in the pre-dam socio-economic and political structures. By focusing on the different memories and experiences of disempowerment from a long-term perspective, the thesis calls into question the singularity of an `impoverished community' and the role of development projects in exacerbating pre-existing hierarchies rather than transforming them.
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Stokes, Hannah. "Conceptualizing and Measuring Food Security Among Resettled Refugees Living in the United States." ScholarWorks @ UVM, 2017. http://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/819.

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Food security research with resettled refugees in the United States and other Global North countries has found alarmingly high rates of food insecurity, up to 85% of surveyed households. This is well above the current US average of 12.7%. However, the most common survey tool used to measure food security status in the US, the US Household Food Security Survey Module (HFSSM), has not been sufficiently validated for resettled refugee populations, leading to the risk that the HFSSM may actually be underestimating the prevalence of food insecurity among resettled refugees in the US. Though research has attempted to establish validity of the HFSSM for resettled refugees through statistical associations with other risk factors for food insecurity, no efforts have been made to first explore and establish the content validity of the HFSSM for measuring food security among resettled refugees. Content validity is an essential component of construct validity. It first requires a qualitative theoretical foundation for demonstrating the relationships of the test contents to the underlying construct (ie food security) that the test intends to measure. Our research explores these theoretical relationships through a qualitative grounded study of food insecurity and food management experiences described by resettled refugees living in Vermont. Dr. Linda Berlin and I conducted 5 semi-structured focus groups in the summer and fall of 2015 with Bhutanese (2 groups), Somali Bantu (1 group), and Iraqi (2 groups) resettled refugees. During the focus groups, we inquired about food management practices under typical circumstances and under circumstances of limited household resources, as well as difficulties participants have faced in these processes. Additionally, I conducted 18 semi-structured interviews and 1 focus group in the same time frame with service providers who have worked with resettled refugees in capacities primarily related to food, health, and household resources. These interviews provided additional data about context, household food management practices among clients, and triangulating data for the focus groups. A Grounded Theory analysis of the focus group data yielded 5 major emergent themes: 1) Past food insecurity experiences of resettled refugee participants exerted significant influence on the subjective perception of current food insecurity. 2) Barriers other than just financial resources restricted participants’ food security, especially for recently resettled refugees. 3) Preferred foods differed significantly between generations within households. 4) Common elements of quality and quantity included in the definition and measurement of food security did not translate into the languages or experiences of food insecurity among participants. 5) Strategic and adaptive food management practices prevailed among participants, highlighting the temporality and ambiguity of food security concepts. These themes present potential problems of content validity for every HFSSM question. They also reveal the importance of food security concepts that are not covered by the HFSSM, including elements of nutritional adequacy of food, food safety, social acceptability of food and of means of acquiring food, short and long term certainty of food access, and food utilization. I conclude by discussing implications of our findings for service providers and local governments in Vermont who seek to better serve resettled refugee and other New American populations.
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Books on the topic "Resettle"

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Masalha, Nur. Israeli plans to resettle the Palestinian refugees, 1948-1972. Jerusalem: Palestinian Diaspora & Refugee Centre (SHAML), 1996.

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Dansby, Robert E. Solix resettles Blue Mountain. Matawan, N.J: Edgenics Media, 2006.

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McConalogue, Jim. The British Constitution Resettled. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8.

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Grandinetti, Ralph. Madagascar, Hitler's final solution, 1933-1945: How the Jewish boycott and "Declaration of War" against Germany forced Berlin to fight back and abandon plans to resettle European Jews in Madagascar as the "final solution". Hinsdale, NH: Metro Enterprises, 1998.

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Taylor, Becky, Karen Akoka, Marcel Berlinghoff, and Shira Havkin, eds. When Boat People were Resettled, 1975–1983. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64224-2.

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Walden, Scott. Places lost: In search of Newfoundland's resettled communities. Toronto: Lynx Images, 2003.

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Watanabe, Keiko. Keiraku rinpa massāji: Karada resetto book. Tōkyō: Takahashi Shoten, 2005.

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Phan, Tâm Thanh. How Western culture has affected the Vietnamese people who have resettled in America. [Texas]: T.T. Phan, 1988.

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Sallinen-Gimpl, Pirkko. Siirtokarjalainen identiteetti ja kulttuurien kohtaaminen =: Cultural identity and cultural clash : the resettled Karelians in Finland. Helsinki: Suomen Muinaismuistoyhdistys, 1994.

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Benucci, Antonella, Giulia I. Grosso, and Viola Monaci. Linguistica Educativa e contesti migratori. Venice: Fondazione Università Ca’ Foscari, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-570-4.

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The volume, produced within the framework of the COMMIT project “Fostering the Integration of Resettled Refugees in Croatia, Italy, Portugal and Spain”, concerns the current European situation, and in particular the teaching of L2 in its relations and interdisciplinary exchanges with other scientific fields dealing with migratory phenomena; therefore, starting from the COMMIT experience, it offers a wide perspective, going beyond the borders of the countries involved in the project and identifying good practices that can be replicated in different territorial and social contexts to ensure successful social inclusion of newly arrived citizens. COMMIT is a project funded by the European Commission (DG HOME), co-financed by the Ministry of Interior and the Project Partners and managed by the Mediterranean Coordination Office of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), in Italy. The project was implemented in collaboration with the IOM Missions in Croatia, Portugal and Spain, together with the Communitas Consortium, the Adecco Foundation for Equal Opportunities and the University for Foreigners of Siena (UNISTRASI). The project activities were implemented from 1 January 2019 to 30 April 2021. The project, based on the idea that successful integration of resettled refugees occurs both by putting in place certain structural conditions and by promoting mutual exchange between resettled refugees and their host communities, aimed to support their integration into their new communities, with a special focus on women and young refugees as particularly vulnerable groups. A secure humanitarian migration route to the European Union launched in 2013 is targeted at refugees who are beneficiaries of resettlement. Several Member States, including Croatia, Italy, Portugal and Spain, have therefore established or strengthened their national resettlement and humanitarian admission programmes for resettled refugees of Syrian, Eritrean, Ethiopian or Sudanese origin. In preparation for resettlement, beneficiaries participate in a series of pre-departure cultural orientation activities. Among them, training in L2 language and culture plays a crucial role. The book hence tries to offer answers to the many challenges that characterise the field of language education in contexts marked by the presence of migrants from an interdisciplinary perspective. It provides for effective solutions for an inclusive language education, attentive to ‘vulnerable’ subjects, paying attention to the interweaving of complex individual, social, cultural and economic contexts, such as school and university training courses and reception and resettlement programmes in host societies. In particular, the current situation in Italy, regarding both teaching L2 in a school context and teaching modern languages to adult foreigners, is still lacking in interdisciplinary relations and exchanges between language teaching and other scientific fields dealing with migratory phenomena. However, in recent years a particular sensitivity and empathy towards linguistic and cultural contact have developed.
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Book chapters on the topic "Resettle"

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Roy, Anjali Gera. "Resettled homes 1." In Memories and Postmemories of the Partition of India, 153–78. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2019. | Series: Routledge studies in South Asian history; volume 20: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429507458-8.

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McConalogue, Jim. "The Impact of EU Membership on UK Government and Parliament’s Sovereignty." In The British Constitution Resettled, 1–32. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_1.

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McConalogue, Jim. "Making Sense of Sovereignty, Parliamentary Sovereignty and the ‘Rule of the Recognised Helm’." In The British Constitution Resettled, 33–62. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_2.

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McConalogue, Jim. "Eight Historical Constitutional Forms: Defining the Rule of the Present Day ‘Recognised Helm’." In The British Constitution Resettled, 63–112. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_3.

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McConalogue, Jim. "Parliamentary Sovereignty, the Precedent of the Mixed Constitutional Model and the UK’s Membership of the EU." In The British Constitution Resettled, 113–49. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_4.

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McConalogue, Jim. "Parliamentary Sovereignty, Collective Representation and EU Membership." In The British Constitution Resettled, 151–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_5.

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McConalogue, Jim. "Parliamentary Sovereignty, the EU Free Movement of Persons and the Precedent of Fundamental Rights Provision." In The British Constitution Resettled, 189–231. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_6.

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McConalogue, Jim. "A Great Resettlement? Parliamentary Sovereignty After Brexit." In The British Constitution Resettled, 233–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25290-8_7.

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Li, Lingxu, Zongheng Xu, and Minchang Ma. "Study on Location Planning and Countermeasures to Resettle Residents in Poor Areas - Taking Anle Village, Yunxian County, Yunnan Province as an Example." In Application of Intelligent Systems in Multi-modal Information Analytics, 1502–7. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15740-1_195.

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Powers, Meredith C. F., and Christian Zik Nsonwu. "Environmental Injustices Faced by Resettled Refugees." In Community Practice and Social Development in Social Work, 385–99. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-6969-8_20.

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Conference papers on the topic "Resettle"

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Vereschagina, A. B., and E. S. Gandrabur. "Development parameters of spring and summer morphs of Metopolophium dirhodum Walk. (Hemiptera, Sternorrhyncha, Aphididae) during seasonal change of hosts in plant communities." In Problems of studying the vegetation cover of Siberia. TSU Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-94621-927-3-2020-8.

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Some developmental parameters were determined of the spring (fundatrix and emigrants) and summer (wingless virginoparas) morphs of Metopolophium dirhodum Walk., damaging plants of Rosa and Poaceae. Diagnosis of clones representing the aphid population found in northwestern Russia has been performed. It has been shown that morph adaptations of various clones include variability in the rate of development, fertility, and ability to resettle.
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Zhao, Danning. "How to Resettle EDPs From Disappearing Lands Due to Global Warming." In 2020 4th International Seminar on Education, Management and Social Sciences (ISEMSS 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.200826.259.

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Luchnikova, E. M., V. B. Ilyashenko, N. S. Teplova, A. V. Kovalevskiy, and K. S. Zubko. "IMPACT OF AGROCENOSES ON THE POPULATIONS OF SMALL MAMMALS OF RECREATIONAL PINE FORESTS IN THE TOM RIVER VALLEY." In STATE AND DEVELOPMENT PROSPECTS OF AGRIBUSINESS. DSTU-PRINT, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23947/interagro.2020.1.688-692.

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The paper is devoted to studying the influence of agricultural lands on the formation of small mammal communities in the pine forests of the Tom River Valley. For the analysis, we took sites of natural and artificial pine forests of different areas experiencing various anthropogenic pressures. A relationship was found between the size of the pine forest and its resistance to invasive species. The creation of artificial pine forests in the forest-steppe does not lead to the formation of typical forest communities of small mammals, due to their limited ability to resettle.
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Saleh, Muftah, Ramin Sedaghati, and Rama Bhat. "Crashworthiness Study of Helicopter Skid Landing Gear System Equipped With a Magnetorheological Energy Absorber." In ASME 2017 Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/smasis2017-3755.

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The present study concerns with the performance of a skid landing gear (SLG) system of a rotorcraft impacting the ground at a vertical sink rate of 5.0 m/s. The impact attitude is per chapter 527 of the Airworthiness Manual (AWM) of Transport Canada Civil Aviation and FAR Part 27 of the U.S. Federal Aviation Regulation. A single degree of freedom helicopter model is investigated under two rotor lift factors 0.67 and 1.0. Three Configurations are evaluated: a) A conventional SLG; b) SLG equipped with a passive viscous damper and c) SLG incorporated with a magnetorheological energy absorber. The non-dimensional solutions of the helicopter model show that the passive damper system could reduce the maximum acceleration experienced by the helicopter occupants by 21% and 19.8% in comparison to the undamped system for the above rotor lift factors, respectively. However, the passive damper fails to constrain the non-dimensional energy absorption stroke of the damper within the given 18 cm maximum stroke and a bottoming out of the damper piston was noticed. Therefore, the alternative and successful choice was to employ a magnetorheological energy absorber (MREA). To improve the MREA controllability and to resettle the payload with no oscillations, i.e. in one cycle, two different Bingham numbers for compression stroke and rebound stroke were defined in the non-dimensional solution. Several simulations were conducted for different values of Bingham numbers. Among these numerical simulation results, the solution that implemented the optimum Bingham numbers was found to be the only one feasible solution. In this case the MREA with optimum Bingham number for compression could utilize the full energy absorption stroke to attain soft landing. In the rebound stroke, the generated optimal on-state damping force successfully controls the bounce of the payload until the payload settles down to its original equilibrium position with no oscillations.
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Arora, Anish, Sandeep Kulkarni, and Murat Demirbas. "Resettable vector clocks." In the nineteenth annual ACM symposium. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/343477.343628.

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Kosuke Iwai, Wei-Heong Tan, and Shoji Takeuchi. "A resettable dynamic microfluidic device." In 2008 IEEE 21st International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems. IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/memsys.2008.4443740.

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Matsumoto, Katsuyoshi, Minoru Uehara, and Hideki Mori. "Evaluations of Resettable Stateful NMR." In 2011 IEEE Workshops of International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications (WAINA). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/waina.2011.18.

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Canetti, Ran, Oded Goldreich, Shafi Goldwasser, and Silvio Micali. "Resettable zero-knowledge (extended abstract)." In the thirty-second annual ACM symposium. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/335305.335334.

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Younes, Georges, Paulo Sérgio Almeida, and Carlos Baquero. "Compact Resettable Counters through Causal Stability." In EuroSys '17: Twelfth EuroSys Conference 2017. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3064889.3064892.

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Seunggyun Cheong. "Unfalsified adaptive control for resettable systems." In 2013 American Control Conference (ACC). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/acc.2013.6580634.

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Reports on the topic "Resettle"

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Baldoumas, Abigael, Evelien van Roemburg, and Mathew Truscott. Welcome, Support, Pledge, Resettle: Responsibility sharing in the Global Compact on Refugees. Oxfam, December 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2019.5402.

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Chung, Kai-Min, Rafael Pass, and Karn Seth. Non-Black-Box Simulation from One-Way Functions and Applications to Resettable Security. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada582583.

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Ayallo, Irene. Thesis Review: Gender, Migration and Communication Networks. Unitec ePress, October 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.34074/thes.revw3478.

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In this thesis, reviewed by Irene Ayallo, ‘the author investigates the role of communication networks in the pre-and post-migration process of Latin American women resettled in New Zealand. This well-researched and skillfully written thesis begin from the premise that while the process of migration and resettlement is complex and challenging for all migrants, it is more demanding for women.
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Aiyar, Swaminathan S. Anklesaria, and Neeraj Kaushal. Are Resettled Oustees from the Sardar Sarovar Dam Project Better off Today than their Former Neighbors who were not Ousted? Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, March 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w24423.

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Böhm, Franziska, Ingrid Jerve Ramsøy, and Brigitte Suter. Norms and Values in Refugee Resettlement: A Literature Review of Resettlement to the EU. Malmö University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24834/isbn.9789178771776.

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As a result of the refugee reception crisis in 2015 the advocacy for increasing resettlement numbers in the overall refugee protection framework has gained momentum, as has research on resettlement to the EU. While the UNHCR purports resettlement as a durable solution for the international protection of refugees, resettlement programmes to the European Union are seen as a pillar of the external dimension of the EU’s asylum and migration policies and management. This paper presents and discusses the literature regarding the value transmissions taking place within these programmes. It reviews literature on the European resettlement process – ranging from the selection of refugees to be resettled, the information and training they receive prior to travelling to their new country of residence, their reception upon arrival, their placement and dispersal in the receiving state, as well as programs of private and community sponsorship. The literature shows that even if resettlement can be considered an external dimension of European migration policy, this process does not end at the border. Rather, resettlement entails particular forms of reception, placement and dispersal as well as integration practices that refugees are confronted with once they arrive in their resettlement country. These practices should thus be understood in the context of the resettlement regime as a whole. In this paper we map out where and how values (here understood as ideas about how something should be) and norms (expectations or rules that are socially enforced) are transmitted within this regime. ‘Value transmission’ is here understood in a broad sense, taking into account the values that are directly transmitted through information and education programmes, as well as those informing practices and actors’ decisions. Identifying how norms and values figure in the resettlement regime aid us in further understanding decision making processes, policy making, and the on-the-ground work of practitioners that influence refugees’ lives. An important finding in this literature review is that vulnerability is a central notion in international refugee protection, and even more so in resettlement. Ideas and practices regarding vulnerability are, throughout the resettlement regime, in continuous tension with those of security, integration, and of refugees’ own agency. The literature review and our discussion serve as a point of departure for developing further investigations into the external dimension of value transmission, which in turn can add insights into the role of norms and values in the making and un-making of (external) boundaries/borders.
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Sheridan, Anne. Annual report on migration and asylum 2016: Ireland. ESRI, November 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.26504/sustat65.

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The Annual Report on Migration and Asylum 2016 provides an overview of trends, policy developments and significant debates in the area of asylum and migration during 2016 in Ireland. Some important developments in 2016 included: The International Protection Act 2015 was commenced throughout 2016. The single application procedure under the Act came into operation from 31 December 2016. The International Protection Office (IPO) replaced the Office of the Refugee Applications Commissioner (ORAC) from 31 December 2016. The first instance appeals body, the International Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT), replacing the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (RAT), was established on 31 December 2016. An online appointments system for all registrations at the Registration Office in Dublin was introduced. An electronic Employment Permits Online System (EPOS) was introduced. The Irish Short Stay Visa Waiver Programme was extended for a further five years to October 2021. The Second National Action Plan to Prevent and Combat Human Trafficking was published. 2016 was the first full year of implementation of the Irish Refugee Protection Programme (IRPP). A total of 240 persons were relocated to Ireland from Greece under the relocation strand of the programme and 356 persons were resettled to Ireland. Following an Oireachtas motion, the Government agreed to allocate up to 200 places to unaccompanied minors who had been living in the former migrant camp in Calais and who expressed a wish to come to Ireland. This figure is included in the overall total under the IRPP. Ireland and Jordan were appointed as co-facilitators in February 2016 to conduct preparatory negotiations for the UN high level Summit for Refugees and Migrants. The New York Declaration, of September 2016, sets out plans to start negotiations for a global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration and a global compact for refugees to be adopted in 2018. Key figures for 2016: There were approximately 115,000 non-EEA nationals with permission to remain in Ireland in 2016 compared to 114,000 at the end of 2015. Net inward migration for non-EU nationals is estimated to be 15,700. The number of newly arriving immigrants increased year-on-year to 84,600 at April 2017 from 82,300 at end April 2016. Non-EU nationals represented 34.8 per cent of this total at end April 2017. A total of 104,572 visas, both long stay and short stay, were issued in 2016. Approximately 4,127 persons were refused entry to Ireland at the external borders. Of these, 396 were subsequently admitted to pursue a protection application. 428 persons were returned from Ireland as part of forced return measures, with 187 availing of voluntary return, of which 143 were assisted by the International Organization for Migration Assisted Voluntary Return Programme. There were 532 permissions of leave to remain granted under section 3 of the Immigration Act 1999 during 2016. A total of 2,244 applications for refugee status were received in 2016, a drop of 32 per cent from 2015 (3,276). 641 subsidiary protection cases were processed and 431 new applications for subsidiary protection were submitted. 358 applications for family reunification in respect of recognised refugees were received. A total of 95 alleged trafficking victims were identified, compared with 78 in 2015.
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Massachusetts drill foreman dies in fall when portion of offshore marine rockdrilling rig resettles in ocean floor. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, September 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.26616/nioshsface92ma015.

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