Tag: Culturally

Teaching Cross-Culturally An Incarnational Model for Learning and Teaching


Free Download Sherwood Lingenfelter, "Teaching Cross-Culturally: An Incarnational Model for Learning and Teaching"
English | 2003 | ISBN: 0801026202 | EPUB | pages: 134 | 0.5 mb
Teaching Cross-Culturally is a challenging consideration of what it means to be a Christian educator in a culture other than your own. Chapters include discussions about how to uncover cultural biases, how to address intelligence and learning styles, and teaching for biblical transformation.

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Koro Clinical and Historical Developments of the Culturally Defined Genital Retraction Disorder


Free Download Arabinda Narayan Chowdhury, "Koro: Clinical and Historical Developments of the Culturally Defined Genital Retraction Disorder"
English | ISBN: 3030879615 | 2021 | 547 pages | PDF | 6 MB
This book provides a definitive account of koro, a topic of long-standing interest in the field of cultural psychiatry in which the patient displays a fear of the genitals shrinking and retracting. Written by Professor A.N. Chowdhury, a leading expert in the field, it provides a comprehensive overview of the cultural, historical and clinical significance of the condition that includes both cutting-edge critique and an analysis of research and accounts from the previous 120 years published literature.

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Forging Military Identity in Culturally Pluralistic Societies Quasi-Ethnicity


Free Download Daniel Zirker, "Forging Military Identity in Culturally Pluralistic Societies: Quasi-Ethnicity"
English | ISBN: 1498507433 | 2015 | 154 pages | EPUB | 994 KB
Ethno-politics has become a major force in the post-Cold War era. The fundamental challenge to military establishments in deeply plural societies is the formation of institutional unity from diverse ethnic groups. This edited volume examines seven case studies of countries that have attempted, with varying degrees of success, to develop, or to begin to develop, within their military establishments a single "quasi-ethnic" military identity to effect unity within their ranks and attenuate the deep and often violent ethnic divisions that otherwise would pertain. The volume compares contrasting outcomes in two African regions: West Africa with the contrasting cases of Guinea and Nigeria and East Africa with the cases of Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya. It also examines the very different cases of Algeria and Suriname. In most of these cases, the emergence of a single, unified, quasi-ethnic identity is in its earliest stages, although rapid global change points to the likelihood that this pattern will prevail.

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