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Practicing Oral History Among Refugees and Host Communities

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"Hoffman’s applied oral history books are marvelously accessible and adaptable to a wide variety of audiences and uses. In an oral history theory and methods course, my students used Practicing Oral History to Improve Public Policies and Programs with great success to collect interviews about the history of homelessness advocacy in the state of Minnesota. I look forward to using Hoffman’s volume on refugees and host communities with colleagues and students alike."

Amy Sullivan, Macalester College, USA

"Marella Hoffman’s book is an invaluable resource and a must read for anyone interested in applied oral history and/or refugee studies. It offers an excellent series of case studies of oral history refugee projects reflecting the different stages of the refugee journey flooded up with an extremely useful ‘how to’ design and conduct an applied oral history project with refugee and host communities. Hoffman gives an insightful overview of the numbers and distribution of the world’s displaced communities, pointing out that, despite prevalent messages in the western media, 85% of displaced peoples live in developing countries and that a third of all displaced peoples are Palestinian. Moreover, she highlights that the biggest threat of future refugee crises will come from climate change and the displacement of peoples as a result of rising sea levels. Hoffman uses the term ‘applied oral history’ to refer to a more strategic approach to the collection of oral histories in which refugees take a lead role and in which there are clear goals relating to improved service delivery, awareness raising, improving relations with host communities are used to drive the project. These objectives have implications for the design and development of the project which are discussed towards the end of the book. The choice of narrators (the author is at pains to stress the importance of working with host communities, including those opposed to refugee settlement, as well as refugee communities), the types of questions to ask, the fraught ethical issues associated with such projects and the potentially innovative forms of dissemination (including theatre, comedy, graphic novels, music as well as more traditional reports/publications) are all discussed and are shown to follow from the intended purpose of the project. The book provides examples of oral histories that will be of interest to lawyers seeking legal prosecution for war crimes, health professionals, geographers interested in mapping refugee journeys, therapists and social scientists. Equally importantly, it is aimed at individuals who feel overwhelmed by current global developments but are hoping to make a difference at a local level. The book concludes with an excellent set of templates which will be of use to those thinking of undertaking an oral history project with refugees and/or host communities and a very useful bibliography for those who wish to learn more about the projects and ideas summarized in Marella Hoffman’s highly recommended book."

Professor John Gabriel, London Metropolitan University, Chair Oral History Society, UK

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This book provides a comprehensive and practical guide to applied oral history with refugees, teaching the reader how to use applied, contemporary oral history to help provide solutions to the ‘mega-problem’ that is the worldwide refugee crisis. Les mer

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This book provides a comprehensive and practical guide to applied oral history with refugees, teaching the reader how to use applied, contemporary oral history to help provide solutions to the ‘mega-problem’ that is the worldwide refugee crisis. It is ideal for oral historians and those working with refugees or host communities.

Detaljer

Forlag
Routledge
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
214
ISBN
9781138541306
Utgivelsesår
2019
Format
23 x 16 cm

Anmeldelser

«

"Hoffman’s applied oral history books are marvelously accessible and adaptable to a wide variety of audiences and uses. In an oral history theory and methods course, my students used Practicing Oral History to Improve Public Policies and Programs with great success to collect interviews about the history of homelessness advocacy in the state of Minnesota. I look forward to using Hoffman’s volume on refugees and host communities with colleagues and students alike."

Amy Sullivan, Macalester College, USA

"Marella Hoffman’s book is an invaluable resource and a must read for anyone interested in applied oral history and/or refugee studies. It offers an excellent series of case studies of oral history refugee projects reflecting the different stages of the refugee journey flooded up with an extremely useful ‘how to’ design and conduct an applied oral history project with refugee and host communities. Hoffman gives an insightful overview of the numbers and distribution of the world’s displaced communities, pointing out that, despite prevalent messages in the western media, 85% of displaced peoples live in developing countries and that a third of all displaced peoples are Palestinian. Moreover, she highlights that the biggest threat of future refugee crises will come from climate change and the displacement of peoples as a result of rising sea levels. Hoffman uses the term ‘applied oral history’ to refer to a more strategic approach to the collection of oral histories in which refugees take a lead role and in which there are clear goals relating to improved service delivery, awareness raising, improving relations with host communities are used to drive the project. These objectives have implications for the design and development of the project which are discussed towards the end of the book. The choice of narrators (the author is at pains to stress the importance of working with host communities, including those opposed to refugee settlement, as well as refugee communities), the types of questions to ask, the fraught ethical issues associated with such projects and the potentially innovative forms of dissemination (including theatre, comedy, graphic novels, music as well as more traditional reports/publications) are all discussed and are shown to follow from the intended purpose of the project. The book provides examples of oral histories that will be of interest to lawyers seeking legal prosecution for war crimes, health professionals, geographers interested in mapping refugee journeys, therapists and social scientists. Equally importantly, it is aimed at individuals who feel overwhelmed by current global developments but are hoping to make a difference at a local level. The book concludes with an excellent set of templates which will be of use to those thinking of undertaking an oral history project with refugees and/or host communities and a very useful bibliography for those who wish to learn more about the projects and ideas summarized in Marella Hoffman’s highly recommended book."

Professor John Gabriel, London Metropolitan University, Chair Oral History Society, UK

»

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