Pedagogy of Global Events


Book Description

Pedagogy of Global Events explores a relatively new phenomenon of cultural events—concerts, media experiences, and film series—designed to bring attention to global problems and spark action. This case-based analysis addresses a range of events to consider questions about what it means to educate the wider public about significant global challenges, the meaning and limits of these efforts, and how media refracts these experiences. The analyses are informed by data collected from organizers of special events, participants in attendance, those viewing online or after-the-fact through media representations, as well as through a careful analysis of web artifacts created by and in response to the events. By offering rare empirical analyses of global events, this book is valuable reading for organizers and attendees alike.




U.S. Response to the African Famine 1984-1986. Volume 1 - an Evaluation of the Emergency Food Assistance Program: Synthesis Report


Book Description

The principal objectives of the evaluation were as follows: Assess the timeliness, appropriateness, and impact of emergency food aid programs in Africa and suggest ways they can be improved; Assist USAID Missions, private voluntary organizations (PVOs), host governments, and other donors in the programming of future emergency, rehabilitation, and disaster prevention activities; Provide AID and the donor community with lessons learned regarding the planning, design, implementation, and evaluation of emergency aid programs, with emphasis on how they can more effectively foster long-term development initiatives and contribute to increased food security.




The International Organization of Hunger


Book Description

First Published in 1993, this is part of the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva series.This study which looks at whether scholars of international politics attempt to understand cooperative behavior in the light of the theories developed by the observers of both conflict and of cooperation. This volume expands the short list of such works and does so with insight, a wide range of scholarship and a willingness to test particular cases against existing theory. The author has written a book which expands the knowledge of, but also a thoughtful improvement of existing theoretical approaches. Uvin's universe of enquiry excludes military power and its application. It concentrates on the long-term, complex organization of cooperative transnational behavior and its rationale. Its focusses on functional issues involving world hunger, a haunting background and result, and perhaps even one cause, of the dreadful violence that characterizes our world even as the threat of catastrophic nuclear warfare has declined.