Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Sarah de Leeuw, Nicole Marie Lindsay, and Margo Greenwood. PART 1 SETTING THE CONTEXT: BEYOND THE SOCIAL. Chapter 1— Structural Determinants of Aboriginal Peoples’ Health. Charlotte Reading. Chapter 2— Knausgaard, Nova Scotia. Liz Howard. Chapter 3— Embodying Self-Determination: Beyond the Gender Binary. Sarah Hunt

  2. Sarah de Leeuw's creative non-fiction captures strange inconsistencies and aberrations of human behaviour, urging us to be observant and aware. The essays are wide in scope and expose what--and who--goes missing.With staggering insight, Sarah de Leeuw reflects on missing geographies and people, including missing women, both those she has known and those whom she will never get to know.

  3. Sarah de Leeuw grew up and has spent most of her life in Northern BC, including Haida Gwaii and Terrace. With a Ph.D. in geography, de Leeuw works in a faculty of medicine where she teaches and undertakes research on medical humanities and health inequalities. Her creative and academic work has been widely anthologized and appears in journals ...

  4. View the profiles of people named Sarah De Leeuw. Join Facebook to connect with Sarah De Leeuw and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power...

  5. 1 de mai. de 2017 · Sarah de Leeuw. 4.32. 57 ratings12 reviews. FINALIST IN THE 2017 GOVERNOR GENERAL'S LITERARY AWARD FOR NON-FICTION!Where It Hurts is a highly-charged collection of personal essays, haunted by loss, evoking turbulent physical and emotional Canadian landscapes. Sarah de Leeuw's creative non-fiction captures strange inconsistencies and aberrations ...

  6. 1 de ago. de 2012 · Abstract. Aboriginal children’s well-being is vital to the health and success of our future nations. Addressing persistent and current Aboriginal health inequities requires considering both the contexts in which disparities exist and innovative and culturally appropriate means of rectifying those inequities.

  7. Sarah de Leeuw is an award-winning creative writer and Canada Research Chair in Humanities and Health Inequities with the University of Northern British Columbia’s Northern Medical Program in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia.