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From their first chance encounter in the British-ruled territory of Hong Kong, to their fateful reunion during the Chinese takeover decades later, twelve very different people discover that their lives have been irrevocably altered by the events of the Cold War.
Anne Marie Lunkenheimer’s memoir is a breathtaking journey that takes readers from a small rural community in upstate New York to the far corners of the world. Driven by a passion for international development and a desire to make a difference, she became an active participant in the global peace and feminist movements of the tumultuous 1960s and 70s. From her first experiences working in impoverished mountain villages in Mexico to a lifetime of commitments in Central America, Southeast Asia, the South Pacific, Africa, and the Caribbean, her journey was one of incredible danger and heartwarming experiences. In this candid and unflinching memoir, Anne Marie shares her most intimate moments, bringing readers along with her on a journey that defies expectations. With an unshakable commitment to justice and equality, she dedicated her life to making a difference in the world, no matter how daunting the challenge. A story of courage, perseverance, and the unbreakable human spirit, this memoir is a must-read for anyone who has ever felt the call to make a difference in the world.
Considers. S. 2095, Passport Reorganization Act of 1959, to establish U.S. Passport Service in State Dept. S. 2287 and similar bills, to provide standards for issuance of passports. S. 2315, to deny passports to supporters of international communist movements. S. 1303, to amend Immigration and Nationality Act wartime travel limitations and passport procedures. Appendix includes judicial opinions involving denial of or requests for passports.
In Nowhere Countries: Exclusion of Non-Citizens from Rights through Extra-Territoriality at Home, Pauline Maillet offers a new theoretical framework to understand the mechanisms by which non-citizens are excluded from the rights attached to sovereign territory when arriving at states’ borders. Initiated in Charles de Gaulle airport, the analysis encompasses similar cases in countries other than France. This interdisciplinary study traces how some liberal democracies create spaces construed as extra-territorial on their own soil to circumvent obligations owed to sea or airborne asylum seekers under the Refugee Convention and its Protocol. How do states make their territory vanish to prevent asylum seekers’ arrival? Using a combination of legal analysis and ethnography, this book identifies the legal techniques, enforcement practices and mental landscapes that have sustained nowhere countries.
Considers legislation to prohibit issuance of passports to communists.
Pt. 1: Examines China travel ban impact on journalists; pt. 2: Examines State Dept passport and travel restriction policy and its impact on U.S. newsmen abroad.