أرشيف التصنيف: بلوق

Summer infant baby monitor for new mothers

Vacation season or summer season is termed as family season.  Commonly   families and relatives  go for  day out  and  few  go at  seashore. Spending  holidays  with your  school, colleges and universities along with their families  is a great fun  to enjoy.

Misfortune unexpectedly happens with  every person .  Some families with small babies  who are at the  point  of crawling or loves to run and walk freely then this situation is known for you that your baby walks away somewhere and you are rushing every where to find your baby.

But now many families have adopted an advance technology and bring a beautiful safe device for their babies called baby monitor.

Summer <a href=’http://www.safebabymonitors.info’>infant baby monitor</a> is cheap and best for all those mothers who can’t afford baby sitter or they are responsible to manage their homes and for this they go out with their babies and began to shop necessary goods like provisions and groceries and sometime their cloths.

If you have a problem that your child walks away every time or your schedule is so busy that taking care of you baby becomes difficult then digital baby monitor is best for you. You just need to fit on the clothes of your baby. It contains a camera which transmits result on another device on your hand and has a clear bright monitor and from this you can easily locate your child.

Summer infant baby monitor is safe for your kids and user friendly. It came with variety of designs. For a quick review, you can search online or visit <a href=’http://www.safebabymonitors.info’>www.safebabymonitors.info</a> for latest designs and models.

Resettlement

Hi my dear group i am cal hamdi madi am student of refugee camp i live in zone 5.student in kakuma they can’t get schooler especialy chance to learn universty most of Ethiopian student that chased from cupsy or college just they west their time without learn

health

i am very glad to talk about life in camp where people living in bad mood sun is shining on them no water even to get food is hard they even die because of lack of water you know that water becomes other issues because one person get 12l per day and it is not suffient for daily activity because we need to wash , to cook , to have bath and washing even home materials so we are requesting all the body to help refugee to over come this problem because this can leads to high mortality

computer training

first and foremost, i would like to introduce my self to the world ,am by the name called abdiqadir and i live in kakuma refugee camp and am so glade to be a member of this group .and at the same time am doing a computer training in a camp.

Call for Papers – The Oxford Monitor of Forced Migration, Student Publication – Deadline: 24th October 2010

As the most recent graduates of the MSc of Forced Migration program at the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford, we are excited to announce the launch of our free electronic publication The Oxford Monitor of Forced Migration (OxMo) written, reviewed and edited by students. OxMo aims to engage with issues of forced migration within the broader context of human rights through monitoring political, legal and social developments that pertain to displacement, asylum and return. We set no geographic limitations. Ultimately, we endeavour to contribute to strengthening the human rights of forced migrants by bringing attention to the many difficulties they face as well as positive developments taking shape. In addition to this, having identified that the student community remains a highly valuable yet under-tapped intellectual resource, we hope to establish a forum in which students may contribute meaningfully to the wider academic discourse and to participate in transnational dialogues with like-minded others.

Our biannual publication will place great emphasis on: presenting critical analyses of forced migration issues, projects and policies in relation to international organizations and the work of NGOs and national governments; highlighting innovative practices and developments geared towards countering forced migration predicaments; reporting best practices, examining local/grass roots developments, and fostering a space for students, who themselves have been or are currently forcibly displaced, to present their perspectives on current situations. OxMo will be divided into five sections:

  1. Policy
  2. Law
  3. Field Monitor
  4. First Hand Experiences (restricted to those who have first hand experienced of forced displacement), and
  5. Academic Articles. 

We anticipate that as well as our student-based readership practitioners, academics, NGOs, government representatives, general interest readers and forced migrants alike will find our analyses insightful and critically engaging.

To this end, the editorial team would like to invite current students, including recent graduates, undergraduates and those on vocational programs to get involved by submitting short articles of no more than 1000-1500 words in length (for the sections of policy, law, field monitor or first hand) or academic articles of no more than 6000 words in length (inlcuding bibliography) on an issue that relates to any of the topics and areas mentioned above. Please indicate the section under which your submission should be considered. We encourage astute, critical, thought provoking pieces! (Don’t be shy if you haven’t published before or if English is not your first language!)

 

The submission deadline for our first issue is October 24th, 2010.

We invite all of you to take part in this exciting venture and to encourage other students who are working on issues of forced migration, wherever in the world they may be, to get involved and help promote greater understanding of the plight of millions of forced migrants.

 

Kind regards,

Clara Straimer (Co-Editor of First Hand Experiences)


Please send submissions and any questions to oxmofm@googlemail.com and a member of the editorial board will get in touch with you as soon as possible.

Creative Commons, Open Access and the RRN

At the bottom of every page on the RRN website you’ll now see something slightly different. Instead of the usual “Copyright 2009, All Right Reserved” is a notice that the original content of the RRN website is released for copying under a Creative CommonsAttribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike” license. This is an opening of the RRN site’s copyright restrictions, that now allow anyone to copy material from the site as long as:

  • The original author and source of the work is maintained
  • The material cannot be resold for commercial gain
  • Any modifications to the original must be freely shared and marked

These changes are open for public discussion; we’d like to hear from people who contribute to the RRN site or are planning to. It is the author’s right to define the way their work is re-distributed; any author can choose an approach different from the site-wide proposed RRN policy. For more information on alternate distribution licenses please see the excellent Creative Commons explanation and tools. Or feel free to contact me for for any specific questions.

– Evan