Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7

Missed a Few Months...How....

Wow. I have never missed two months of blogging since I started this blog a few years ago. It is not that I don't have things to blog about, it is about the time factor.  Now that I am in the workforce full-time again, I have a position of management, I continue to write my thesis (despite sacrifices of my recreation time and other life activities), and I moved to a new adult, grown-up, professional apartment. All of this means less time to sit and write creatively for this online space. I don't want to be the type of person that abandons one's blog so I will quickly add this update and a photo from my new balcony and say that after I defend my thesis this Fall (cross my fingers and get to work), I shall be back to blog on a regular basis.

Thanks to my mum, Aunt Arta and others who may read, I do enjoy writing this blog so I shall be back. In the interim, I shall be staring out at this view and I sit and complete my fourth rewrite for my final thesis document.



Thanks to Photosynth, I can give you an almost 180 degree view of what I see every morning and night. Lucky me!

A bien tôt!

Thursday, May 30

Life Update

I can't believe where the past few months have gone.  Crazy busy plus I just got back from a trip to visit family and friends in Calgary.  The purpose of the trip was to begin taking my belongings back to Calgary as I am near graduation, only having had two work related interviews, and no job offers.  My winter gear and all other assorted accoutrements were pack to drive back to Calgary and I received a phone call asking me to come to a job offer meeting.  Yep.  A job offer and I am not finished my degree yet.  This has never happened to me before.  All those hours of volunteering, spent typing at my computer, meeting and greeting people in a new province paid off and I was being offered a job.

When I went to the interview I was ready to negotiate but the organization that wanted to hire me was not.  They had pulled out of their budget what they could and it was a take it or leave it option.  The pay is not great, in fact at my yearly review next summer I will be asking for a big raise, but the opportunity to lead this recreation organization in Manitoba will be phenomenal.  I am excited and surprised, intimidated and in awe of full-time employment.  For the record, this will be the first time in ten years I have to work over the summer.  (No sympathy from you nine readers eh?)

Wish me luck and skill and I venture forward and finish my thesis at the same time!

Cheers!

Wednesday, January 9

Financial Irony and Toolkits

This week I received mail from my Member of Parliament (MP) Joyce Bateman.  She is letting me know that the "our government wants to strengthen financial literacy across the country".  This sudden need for the population of Canada to become more financially literate is in part due to the increasingly large individual non-mortgage related debt load we are accruing each year.  So there is this new nifty website that you and I can use to assess our financial literacy and then decrease our individual debt load.  It appears to be well organized and have some sound advice and fun ways to determine the users financial literacy.

May I suggest an additional step to decrease the debt load for some Canadians would be for the government to offer more grants and scholarships (not based on GPA as a mark of those who are deserving), rather than hand me out more students loans (which I do appreciate), then charge me interest (which is hogwash).  Not sure how me paying interest back to the government on student loans is helpful for recent post-secondary grads and our financial debt load, but at least my financial literacy will increase in having to adjust my payments for such financial intricacies.   But, as usual, I digress.

Here is the website and I will look it over to see if my financial literacy is high enough to get out from under the load of debt I have accrued doing my master's degree:


In other, but related news, the federal government has hired a private company to help them increase their financial literacy.  The company has been hired by the federal government to find ways for the government to decrease its spending and save money, and for these services the company is being paid $90,000 per day, $20 million in total for the entire contract.  In response I just want to say...let me introduce you to a little tool kit of which I am aware ;)......


Here is Rick Mercer's response:

Saturday, October 6

Dark Star Safari


Dark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape TownDark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape Town by Paul Theroux
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A marvellous read and moving read.  Theroux, having lived in many of the countries along the east coast of Africa, returns to them to find many of them worse of economically, socially and developmentally than they were in the 1960's.  His message appears to be that the aid dollars given to African nations may be helping in little ways here and there, but these efforts are not helping with the overall improvement of the human and economic conditions in many of the countries he visited.  While help from other nations is important, Theroux repeatedly stresses that African countries must help themselves deal with their own troubles and difficulties.  I have only ever been to one African country so I am not familiar with the complexities of many of the issues.  This book shed some light on these issues, and I will watch and learn more about these nations and their work to become more stable environments for their people.


View all my reviews

Wednesday, June 27

Travel As A Political Act: Part 2

As I really did enjoy this book, I was even more impressed that a travel novel, written by an approachable individual with accessible language, finally presented many of the difficult topics that have been debated within the academic and practical spaces of tourism for decades.  One of the first papers I wrote for an basic introduction to travel class concerned the sex trade and the use of young girls in countries as captured sex slaves for the purposes of pleasing middle and upper class Canadian, American and European travelers in order to draw and increase tourism.  I believe my professor handed me back my paper and said, 'interesting topic'.  That was it.  I think he was surprised about the topic and the criticisms that were evident in the paper.  I wish I still had it, I would give it another read, redo and update as sixteen years later, these countries continue to enslave young girls, boys, women and sometimes men as sex slaves but now have begun to reward them and provide them with an understanding that they are contributing greatly to their country's economy in the best way they possibly could (even scarier really).  Well, in my opinion this is crap and the institutionalization of the poor and down-trodded through ideologies of slavery, misogyny and seeing women/people as sex objects, but I digress...again...

Rick Steves within the last chapter of his book Travel As A Political Act shares with following idea with the reader then proceeds to share a list of books he has read that has influence his opinions about the economics of poverty and the politics of power and corporations.  I am sure he would be OK with me sharing this quote and list (even though I don't know him at all personally) and I have added to each book title a link to the book, a related website, or the authors webpage.  Voila!:

"Read books that explain the economic and political basis of issues you've stubbled onto in your travels.  A basic understanding of the economics of poverty, the politics of the empire, and the power of corporations are life skills that give you a foundation to better understand what you experience in your travels.  Information that mainstream media considers "subversive" won't come to you.  You need to reach out for it.  The following are a few of the books that have shaped and inspired my thinking over the years" (p. 203):

Arthur Simon

Food First: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity

The Origins of Totalitarianism

Future in Our Hands

Manufacturing Consent

War Against the Poor: Low-Intensity Conflict and Christian Faith

Unexpected News: Reading the Bible with Third World Eyes

The United States of Europe

The European Dream 

The End of Poverty

Several of these shall be added to my reading list as I have only read the last one while I was living in London.  Off I go...

Tuesday, June 26

Travel As A Political Act


Travel as a Political ActTravel as a Political Act by Rick Steves
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

As Rick Steves is one of the most seasoned travellers of which I am aware, I had high expectations of this piece of writing, in particular because it branches off from his repeated pattern of reporting on the good, bad and challenges of a particular place or city.  This book appeared to meander into the more tempestuous waters of the politics of travel, which, as a travel and tourism graduate student, I have been researching for two years.

Each chapter presents a country (or city) and a specific topic (i.e. after war, taxes, soft drugs, etc.) through which Steves shares his experiences, opinions and political ideologies about what he has learned from each of the places with regards to the people and their lives in relation to that topic.  There is a mixture of positive, negative, warnings, messages, ideas, and comparisons throughout the book always directed at his largest market, the American people.  This book is full of lessons and suggestions that many English speaking people can learn from as non-Americans will also find this information poignant.  

This book presented some very good ideas about race relations, cultural understandings/misunderstandings, differences in choice, varying life perspectives, poverty, all within the subject of travel.  He is honest as a traveler and points to the places where he, as an American, is welcome, where he encounters harsh words, and differentiates between government propaganda and the people in the same country/city who see through their country's poor attempts at defaming other countries.  While I did not agree with everything he says in the book (i.e. the continued myth that the USA won World War II for the Europeans, and calling the USA America), as a person who was raised in foreign countries and continues to travel, I did see his open-mindedness and joy in meeting other people through his writing.  I would recommend everyone read this book, in particular those individuals who are afraid of travel or a particular country.  Time to set fear aside and ride the wave of mutual understanding and respect.


Best Parts:

I worry that the mainstream tourism industry encourages us to be dumbed down.  To many people, travel is only about having fun in the sun, shopping duty-free, and cash in in frequent flyer miles.  But to me, that stuff distracts us from the real thrills, rewards, and value of travel.  In our travels - and in our everyday lives - we should become more educated about and engaged with challenging issues, using the past to understand the present.  The more you know, and the more you strive to learn, the richer your travels and you life become.  In my own realm as a travel teacher....I take it with the responsibility to respect and challenge the intellect of my tour members, readers, or viewers.  All of us will gain more from our travel partners to be engaged and grapple with the challenging issues while on the road.  Your experience will be better for it.  p. 12

While traveling, I'm often struck by how people give meaning to life by producing and contributing.  p. 45

Perhaps Europe's inclination to be tolerant is rooted in the intolerance of its past.  In the 16th century, they were burning Protestants for their beliefs.  In the 18th century, they were drowning women who stepped out of line as witches.  In the 20th century, Nazis were gassings Jews, Gypsies, and gay people.  Now in the 21st century, Europe seems determined to get human rights, civil liberties, and tolerance issues right.  Instead of legislating morality, Europe legislates tolerance and human rights. Along with all the rights an American would expect, the in-the-works European constitution will include the right to work, food, and education.  All will have the right not only to healthcare, but to preventative healthcare.  In Europe, the "right to life" means no death penalty.  Europeans will all have the right to the protection of personal data, the right to access any data that has been collected, and the right to have it rectified if it is inaccurate.  Everyone will have the right to paid leave and paid parental leave.  And all will have the right to join or form a trade union.  p. 72

That first [travel] trip lit a fire in me.  I realized I have a right, if not the responsibility, to form my opinions based on my own experience, even if it goes against the mainstream at home.  p. 87

Traveling reminds us that contentment is based not on surrendering to conformity, but in finding that balance between working well together and letting creative spirits run free.  p. 125

What I learn about Islam from media and the US can fill me with fear and rage.  What I learn about Islam by traveling in Muslim countries fills me with hope...The centuries-old tension between Christendom and Islam is like a human sharing a forest with a bear.  Both just want to gather berries, do a little fishing, raise their kids, and enjoy the sun.  Neither wants to do harm to the other, but - because they can't readily communicate - either would likely kill the other if they crossed paths.  The world is our forest and we're sharing it with others.  As it gets smaller, more and more cultures will cross paths.  Our advantage over the human and the bear: we can communicate.  p. 147

When we travel - whether to the "Axis of Evil" or just to a place where people yodel when they're happy, or fight bulls to impress the girls, or can't serve breakfast until today's croissants arrive - we enrich our lives and better understand our place on this planet.  We undercut groups that sow fear, hatred, and mistrust.  People-to-people connections help us learn that we can disagree and still coexist peacefully.  p. 193

My travels have taught me that you don't want to be really rich in a terribly poor world...[it is] simply pragmatic to bring compassion for the needly along with me into the voting booth.  p. 199


Interesting Websites from book:

Take Back Your Time
http://www.timeday.org/

www.ricksteves.com/politicalact


View all my reviews

Tuesday, February 7

Winnipeg Weather 2

Due to the copious amounts of snow that fell during the winter of 2011, the Spring was upon us here in the water drenched province of Manitoba.  With 56 rivers, over 1,000 lakes we were join to lose.  Lose what?  I did not know as this was my first Spring in Winnipeg, but that amount of snow and the continuous rain?  We were going to lose.

Canadians were smart back in the day, and most of our cities are built on waterways as this was the best way to transport goods, people, and the necessities of life as Canada was being stolen from the First Nations people (might as well be blunt).  This also precipitates flooding in many cities as the water is right there meandering through the centre of the city.  Too much water in any form will eventually turn to the liquid variety, collect at the lowest points in town, and forge onwards.  Flooding is a big problem in several cities, but in a province where water flows in from the West, South and North, it can be even more damaging.

This is why in the Red River Floodway was built around Winnipeg in 1969.  Essentially, it is a big ditch into which water from the Red River can be diverted that would normally flow through the city, but can be taken around the city if the Red River is too high.  It truly is a large ditch.  Ingenious really.  Until the flood waters of 2011 collected and could not find a place to go.    

In May 2011 it all hit with evacuations, planned dike breaches, farm and reserve land flooded, roads cut off, people losing their home, it was chaos for many all along the Hoop and Holler Bend.  I was unfamiliar with all this information until the news, media, World Wide Web and people talked about it for months.  Interestingly enough, because of the floodway, Winnipeg was not flooded.  It could have been disastrous for the city but in diverting all the water to the floodway, most of the city did not even notice there was a flood.

The park path over-run with water


Water very close to the underbelly of this pathway bridge

Will the truck survive the day?

Don't live on the first or second floor

Just outside the city however, the floodway was dangerously high and the government stepped in and planed a dike breach.  This decision flooded farm and reserve land halting the growing season for many farmers, leaving many First Nations people without homes and a community, and cottage dwellers were left with little information about available support to help their properties remain in tact.  7,000 sandbags, $8 million dollars in temporary housing, multiple rivers high enough to evacuate homes.  All outside the city.
Trees in the river
Another road was needed to get to this destination
I was safe.  My apartment was higher up in my building.  My car was parked far from the river.  A series of philosophical questions filled my mind.  What is more important, a city of cement and wood or farmland on which we grow our food?  Whose lives are more important and should be left undisturbed, rural people, First nations people, or urban people?  Who decides what is important, government, city officials, general populace?  How do I take a flood seriously when my home and car are not in immediate danger?  I am new here and don't necessarily feel that this is my community, so how do I contribute feeling like an outsider?  Still thinking about some of these questions.

Thursday, December 8

Uh...Really?

While studying in the abnormal heat of September in Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg this past fall, I took a break, went for a walk and found a place to relieve myself.  I found a port-o-pottie, a place we all dread and praise at the same time.  Better than a bush along the river I suppose.  On the door I spotted a sign.  Yep. Odd?  Weird?  or Normal?  You decide.

The saviour of my bladder.

Follow you on what? Really? Why?


Thursday, August 25

I Don't Buy Books, Thank You Libraries!

It has now been about a decade since I discovered that sharing books through a public library keeps money in my pocket and less heavy clutter in my life.  Since my conversion to the public and academic libraries and the wonderfullness of their existence, I visit at least 1 day per week.  When is the last time you visited your local library?  Read an actual book?  Touch and smelled the pages of a good read?  May I suggest you give it a whirl.  Find your local library.  Walk, bike, drive to it.  Walk the isles and peruse the possible books to read.  Try a new genre.  If you don't have 3 -10 books as possible reads at the end of your visit, look a little harder and the library will deliver.  Pay your $10 fee for a card.  Take them home and dwell in happiness as you expand your own mind.  I also discovered the art of books on CD which are also available from the library.  I know, I know, kinda old school with podcasts, Kindles, and other electronic devices but you can't beat the smell, touch and enjoyment of a good, physical, delightful read.

If you live in Toronto, you may want to jump on the rescue project to save public libraries as their budgets are about to be cut and a petition has started.  Keep in mind, what happens in major cities like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver often become the trends seen in less large cities in a few years.  Therefore, people in Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Halifax, etc will want to start visiting their local libraries if you love libraries and want to continue seeing them as part of the public spaces available to citizens.

I do enjoy electronic media and it is important to acknowledge change and progress but I don't want to cuddle up with a Kindle, I want paper, printed words and a cover I may or may not have judged well.

Friday, July 29

Grown Up Digital


Grown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing the WorldGrown Up Digital: How the Net Generation is Changing the World by Don Tapscott


Very interesting book if you are older than 31 to help you understand the reasons why the Net Generation is always connected and online.  Full of positive opinions about the generation now 11 - 31 years old and the powerful voices they are developing to use Web 2.0 to influence companies, governments, schools and institutions to be transparent, forthright, accountable and demonstrate a concern for people and the world.  Held my interest and helped me understand, as an individual just older than this group, the perspective of many in this age group.  I would suggest that not all children, teens and young adults are as attached to the internet, creating information, and holding organizations accountable, but there is a large number who are.  Great read!


View all my reviews

Thursday, June 16

Student Governance, Here I Go!

When I arrived in the Peg and looked around the University I decided that as this may be my last time around (PhD undecided), I was going to really, I mean REALLY, get involved in the University.  At every turn there seemed to be someone already in a position that I found interesting.  Towards the end of the first school year the Graduate Student Association advertised their elections in April and I began investigating possible ways to become involved.  As it turned out, the Vice President External position was available as I am adept and reaching out to groups and connecting them to each other it appeared to be an ideal position.  I ran unchallenged but according to the by-laws no one can win by acclamation and people can vote against you in the process.  Having achieved an 89% yes vote I took up my new position in May.  Thus far I am the only person on the 7 member executive that has no student governance experience so the learning curve is steep.  Tres steep.  I shall persevere.

One of the first jobs I had was to attend the Manitoba Canadian Federation of Students meeting where we discussed provincial wide student issues, which interestingly had changed very little from the early 1990's when I first started post-secondary education.  Rising tuition fees, privatization of education, privatization of university services, copyright issues, UPass possibilities, water-bottle-free campuses, not all repeats issues but many sounded familiar.  While at the meeting we voted for Manitoba representatives for all the CFS positions.  Having spent a good portion of my life with a penchant for seeing, understanding and enjoying Women's Issues I ran with another individual to be the Co-Women's Representatives for the province.  This means more meetings of course but it also means more opportunity to see how policy is developed, learn how to chair and attend official meetings, run campaigns to ensure student life improves, learn Robert's Rules of Order, speak up on behalf of the people I represent (graduate students or students who identify as women), and try to encourage groups to work together to find mutually agreed upon solutions.  Another interesting and steep learning curve.

The second task I took on was leading a small delegation of students who attended the National Confederation of Students meeting in Ottawa at the beginning of June.  It was a week full of meetings, meeting people, talking governance, discussing issues, cheering and chanting (I felt too old for both), listening to labour movement connoisseurs, and learning when to speak and when to shut-up.  Great week but I do wish there had been more concrete actions taken and fewer hours of cheering.

At the Closing Plenary
Oh the new words I am learning!
Maracary, Tonia, Greg in Solidarity

Tuesday, January 18

Cleveland

Amongst the travels my family made one spot was Cleveland, Ohio.  We moved to the city in 1986 and left to move to Ottawa in 1990.  That provided me with enough time to begin Grade 9 and finish high-school completing Grade 12.  Interestingly enough we moved from Brussels, Belgium to Cleveland.  I know, odd really.  Two cities that I thought were polar opposites historically, in entertainment, architecturally, proximity to other countries, with respect to languages, in culture and in the ways of chocolate, frites and gaufres.  Needless to say, in my eyes after four years in both cities, in a list of two cities, Cleveland was not at the top.

After spending time as an adult near Brussels, I realized that each city has more in common that I once thought.  Both cities are largely overlooked as people plan travels or consider a place to live; I found friends in both cities with whom I am still in contact; each city has its respective although somewhat different entertainment activities; both specialize in amazing musical acts that sucked up much of my hard earned babysitting money.  In all, both cities made their mark on this one soul.

Returning to the point of being an over looked city, here is a cry out for help from one of Cleveland's most well-known supporters, Drew Carey, questioning the continued decline of Cleveland and attempting to find alternative ways to revitalize a large and wonderful place on Lake Erie.  While I do not agree with the documentary's opinion about education and increasing the number of charter schools (the best way to suck the public system dry of many good students, teachers and administrators), the show does raise interesting questions about the best practices involved in revitalizing and growing an already established city.  During some moments, I kind wanted to move back......

  

Wednesday, January 5

!WAR

Recently on the website 'big think', Bob Duggan reviewed the movie '!Women Art Revolution'.  He tells the reader about one women's documentary journey, Lynn Hershman Leeson, filming 42 years of women fighting the battle of being under-represented in the art world.  The film is being premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this January, a festival in my list of 'must do's before six feet under'.  In hopes that the film comes by the way of a film festival or other event to Winnipeg, I hope to see it in the next year.

My love of the visual arts was instilled in my soul as a young child living in Brussels, with parents who ensured their children received a first hand education in art as we toured European art galleries.  I have fond memories of asking my mother about certain paintings, and feeling a whisper on and in my ear of the symbolism of a particular piece of art, the reasons for it being painted a certain way, and even why there were so many nude and semi-nude people in European art.  All queries of a young mind.

As an young adult I moved to Canadian cities where the art world was small and lost contact with my childhood memories and connection with the visual beauty of another person's creativity.  Visits to Ottawa and Montreal and their respective museums rekindled my love of art.  During my first brief trip to New York City, I walked through the MoMa, MET and other galleries to build on my knowledge of art which had deepened to an appreciation of not only Medieval, Renaissance, and other European art, but also a further respect towards Surrealism, Abstract art, Pop art and now Contemporary art.  While in the NYC galleries I had a sense that I was missing something, though I could not ascertain what what it was.  After three days of meandering through various forms of art I realized I was missing my mother's voice in my ear, providing me with information and answering my queries.  I was now an adult and had to provide the answers to my questions through my own research and thoughts.  The adjustment to the missing voice was not easy.

Building on my childhood knowledge and developing my own art voice, I was intrigued when I say a group of women in the NYC streets with make-shift small stands, in odd costumes, asking people to complete their art survey.  Being willing to participate in other people's work it slowly dawned on me that this was not an academic survey, but a rouse of different stations, each one enlightening the participant to the lack of women artists represented in museums and art galleries in New York.  As it turned out, these interesting, vibrant and intelligent women were part of the Guerrilla Girls movement showing us at the end of the survey, that there are large numbers of female artists but their work is presented in on a fraction of major art galleries and museums in New York City.  I had no idea.

This group along with many other individual artists are featured in Leeson's movie, which is one documentary not to be missed.

(Copied from http://www.guerrillagirls.com/posters/getnakedshanghai.shtml)

Saturday, December 18

We Are Missing

"There is the side that fights.
There is a side that keeps schools, factories, and hospitals, open."

"We are missing the stories of the women who are literally keeping life going in the midst of war."

"There is the side that is led by men.  There is the side that is lead by women...We must understand war and peace from both sides."

"We have to understand that we cannot actually have negotiations of ending of wars or peace, without fully including the women at the negotiation table."

"I find it amazing that the only group of people who are not fighting, and not killing, and not pillaging, and not burning, and not raping, and the group of people who are mostly (though not exclusively) who are keeping life going in the midst of war, are not included at the negotiating table."

"There is no way that we can talk about stability until we start investing in women and girls."

Zainab Salbi is astonishing.


Sunday, November 28

Cultural History Buff!

Did you know that Canada has a Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC)?  Until I started completing a Master's Degree in Recreation Management, I was unsure as well.  It is the government's agency to increase the awareness of Canada as a tourism destination to the rest of the world, and to encourage Canadians to travel in their own country rather than heading off to foreign destinations.  As of 2011 the CTC will be targeting the following countries as major sources of vacation travellers to Canada: USA, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Mexico, Japan, China, South Korea, Australia, India and Brazil.

Their website includes links to multiple pages that will lead you to through a labyrinth of initiatives including LOCALS KNOW; brand, experiences and EQ toolkits; you can find out your EQ (Explorer Quotient); flip through a corporate brochure; order posters featuring many of Canada's beautiful sights; sign-up to receive updated information as new initiatives are implemented.  As well, the CTC has joined all the social networking sights online.

The only thing I don't like is the branding of a country, my country.  It is a brand?  Do we want people to come to Canada because we have adopted a corporate model of marketing?  Branding and I don't really get along.

Saturday, November 6

Voices and Society

Edward Bruner has said, 'there are always feelings and lived experiences not fully encompassed by the dominant story.  Only after the new narrative becomes dominant is there a re-examination of the past.' - Canadian Journal of Traditional Music, 1986

Thoughts have been swirling around in my head for many weeks now.  It all started when I picked up a book that had been staring at me, calling out my name, and asking me why I had not yet purchased it yet every time I entered a UK bookstore.  After months of denial of desire, I purchased a copy, read it faster than a gazelle escaping a sharp toothed beast; purchased the second book and sped through it like a short track runner; pleaded with family to purchase the third and final book in the series in the UK as it had not been released in Canada.  When the last book landed in the city, was placed in my hands, and quickly consumed the series haunted my thoughts and still do.  Its messages very vivid and mentally an interesting to wrestle with as these books are not happy-go-lucky.  The heroine is an intricate mix of edgy, intellectually brilliant and emotionally complex.  All interesting people are.  

Steig Larsson, the talented writer whose life was cut short would be devastated to see how his life partner is now being treated due to the books he wrote about the corruption of some areas of government and their treatment of the marginalized.  As a CBC: The Current podcast shared, Eva Gabrielsson, Steig's partner of 32 years, did not receive any legal access to Steig's legacy because of Swedish law.  Interesting no?  His books include themes of women's experiences, injustice, cruelty, violence, sexual exploitation, power struggles, and using your own means for self-care, and here is his partner struggling as a woman for justice and equity under the law.

The experiences of Eva, the stories from Steig, combined with the student who made an appalling comment this week in class (after having spent nine weeks discussing and studying the voices of the marginalized) is prompting me to share books, people, news, views, pages and clips that have reminded me that the dominant voice is rarely faultless or representative of the majority of voices.  Follow what ever link you wish in hopes that it will help you remain a critical thinker and participant positively in the society we are all creating.

The Case of Russell William

Gentlemen Prefer Bones

Wednesday, October 6

Mind Mapping with Prezi


Last week I started an MBA course in Organizational Theory and Design and the professor begin his lecture telling us that he no longer used PowerPoint.  That audiences had been slided to death and people no longer paid attention to the slides, or the presenter, or both.  He then mentioned that he used a substitute software called Prezi.  He admitted that he was a new user of the program and that his movement around the program might be slower.  "No problem," I thought, "I am just excited that I am understanding what you are saying and you have not jumped right into business technology.  Prezi away!"

The projector turned on and we saw a map of many pictures, words, speech bubbles, quotes, and wavy lines all organized in a creative pattern around the main idea, "What is Organizational Behaviour?"  The professor proceeded to slide and glide around the map, scrolling in and out of the text, shapes and pictures making them large enough to see, and referring to a specific concept on the screen only every so often.  We sat in amazement at this new program, listening to his words, asking questions, and enjoying the novel 'picture within a text, within a picture' pattern.

(Lomography Mind Map copied from fuzz2buzz Google Images.)

Tuesday, March 9

Honouring a Woman

Tonight, as the whole day was International Women's Day, I wanted to honour a woman whose life, work and opinions I admire.  Too bad International Women's Day ended 58 minutes ago.  But I shall not falter; I shall proceed.  From what I can devise from broadcasts, podcasts, CBC, her French blog, and her political comments across these mediums, her intelligence and wit is admirable.  She can play with the big boys and girls, and she impresses easily.  No grasping hold of an archetype, latching on to a stereotype, or conforming to a prescribed notion of womanhood to achieve notoriety.  She is authentic, real and deomonstrates high intelligence within her professional domain.  Here are a few links for you to enjoy!

Chantel Hebert Blog in French   Blog in English

Chantel Hebert on the CBC

Chantel's Book "French Kiss" and Short Podcast

Chantel's Wiki Bio

Chantel on Canadian Voices

Writing for The Star

On Twitt

(Photo copied from flickr.com)

Sunday, January 10

Dadawa

My father’s co-worker from Cleveland was coming through London with his wife, and stayed in the flat for a few days. Unbeknownst to me, it turned into an informative and incredibly interesting visit. The co-worker told us of some of his events and travels as the Canadian Ambassador in North Korea, and his wife Dadawa shared with us her work as a well-known Han Chinese singer and United Nations Goodwill Ambassador.

Image from Weblo.com

Dadawa’s bio progresses in brief thusly: born in Guangzhou, China (where my father worked for 3 years), she went to university in her early 20’s, a professor ‘discovered’ her voice, and she released her first CD in 1995 with Tibetan influences titled Sister Drum which resulted in international acclaim. Her second CD was titled Voices from the Sky (1997), she began receiving awards, performing and travelling all over China and the world, released a CD in 2006 titled Seven Days, received more awards, then accepted a post as UN Goodwill Ambassador.

Here is where the story became fascinating for me, as my conversation with her focused on her Ambassadorship to document and preserve the traditional music and handicrafts of China. Joined by 9 other professionals driving four Jeeps; these experts in music, photography, video, research, and documentation, travelled to 6 different Chinese provinces to document the traditions in China’s lesser known regions. They created a 17 piece television series that documents communities who continue to follow ancient, local, music and handicraft traditions. Dadawa said that their work was well received in China and plans to translate the work are in progress.

The reason she agreed to complete this work, with UN support, is her concern over the influence of the Western world on the Chinese culture and the abandonment of many ancient Chinese traditions. She does not want her country to be solely known for making and exporting Western goods, nor does she want her country to become the IT capital of the world. For centuries the Chinese were a dominant world force, whose influence began waning when the Chinese emperor closed its borders to international trade in the early 1400’s. For the next 1,000 years any dominance on the world stage decreased rapidly due to several factors: lack of international trade, Opium Wars with Britain in the 1800’s, fear and execution of reformers in the 1800’s, civil unrest in the early 1900’s, the Japanese invasion in the 1900’s which resulted in political disorder, the Cultural Revolution of the 1960’s (see The End of Poverty by Jeffrey Sachs). It was mentioned in our conversation that as part of the Cultural Revolution the Chinese government decided to promote a ‘New China’ and rid itself of its old heritage and reputation. In 1976 the Cultural Revolution died along with its leader, Mao Tse-tung. Since 1978 China has been the worlds’ most successful example of economic development and growth, but it not all been jolly walk down money lane (environmental and human rights issues, as well as division between the rich and destitute).

In 2009 Dadawa and others are still asking themselves, ‘what does New China mean?’ This led our discussion on to the historical influences of many Chinese inventions including paper, printing, compass and music theory.  That these incredible contributions to modern society and the country’s rise out of poverty, has become synonymous with the ‘Made in China’ stamp found on so many things in Western homes, seemed disappointing to us both.

The history of China is extensive and its brisk economic rise unmatched in the world, but is there a space for the preservation of thousands of years of history amongst its place on the stage of world economics?  Does one need to be forgotten in order for the other to evolve? Is there space for tradition and advancement in the same history?

Dadawa and her cohorts are one group trying to find a desirable mix and their work with the United Nations is a strong contribution to this process.  From the videos and stories Dadawa shared the people she met, these are my favourite:

Authentic Voices
The group of 10 entered one village and asked if there was a singing group in the community. There was, it was gathered and they began to sing. It became evident very quickly that this was the tourist version of their community. Dadawa explained who they were, their purpose and the villagers responded with authentic voices and songs. The group took everyone up into the mountains and began singing in fourths and fifths, then slurring notes up and down in droopy scales. I asked her what they were doing and she had learned that they sing in the mountains to allow their voices, which are imitating nature, to also flow out into nature. Once I knew this, the music and the group’s voices made more sense as they did sound like nature reverberating and echoing in the hills. Beautiful!

Authentic Clothing
One group had 7 women in it and I noticed they had buns on top of their head and with long, flat, horizontal pieces of gold through the top of the bun. On their necks they had large moon shaped necklaces with dangling pieces of gold and beads on each side. The choir wearing these pieces discussed the meaning of them for the documentary.

Where Are They?
Since the development of China’s own Industrial Revolution, many people have moved from rural locations to urban environments for work. Dadawa’s group noticed that there was an entire age range of people missing from the villages. There were children and the elderly present in towns, but the older teenagers and adults were missing. The provinces this group visited were in the Western and Northern parts of China and the industrial development has been along the Eastern and Southern portions of China, requiring wage earners to leave their communities (see The End of Poverty by Jeffrey Sachs). Most of them had moved to the urban centres leaving grandparents to raise their grandchildren.

Knock Knock...Whose Your Uncle?
One village works in a Matriarchal society in which fatherhood is not as important and brotherhood. In the evenings after dinner, all the elders go to bed, and the women and men go back to their individual homes. After an acceptable period of time, the men get up and go in search of sex with a woman. A man approaches a female’s home and looks to see if there is an item on the door. If so this means the woman inside is already ‘busy’. The man then moves on to another home in search of sexual pleasure. Once a free home is found and the woman agrees, the woman and man enjoy an evening of lovin’ and the man returns home. If a baby is produced from the evening’s events, the father of the child is not identified or even important, as it is the woman’s brother who becomes the ‘father’ of her children. Sisters and brothers do not sleep together but they do remain connected through the birth of the sister’s children. Everyone knows what is going on, but the elders head to bed and pretend they don’t know what is happening. The question remains, do the elders reproduce?

Dadawa said that there were many interesting communities, all with their unique stories, histories and cultures and she is proud to be doing her part to document their existence. I was delighted about our conversation, learning about fascinating people who live differently than I. I am not interested in a world that conforms to one way of life or whose sole purpose is economic viability; our diversity is what makes us interesting and remarkable. Our depth as people, groups, cultures and communities remains strong when we learn to hold on to the good which forms us, as we move forward into new spaces.

I wish Dadawa and her group joy in their work as it was a pleasure to have met and talked with her and her husband.

Dadawa’s Blog (in Mandarin or Cantonese)

University of British Columbia Artist in Residence

Video: Balad of Lhasa

Video: Concert in New Zealand