Limit Search Results
Format
Language
Shelf Location
6 Results Found Subscribe to search results
000000PKL
Print
Cover image for The price of civilization : reawakening American virtue and prosperity
Sachs, Jeffrey.
2011
Perpustakaan Kuala Lumpur Perpustakaan Kuala Lumpur, Cawangan Taman Tun Dr Ismail
ISBN 
9781400068418
Excerpt: 
Social responsibility of business -- United States.
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available:
Thomas L Friedman Mohd Mustamam Abd Karim Nurulhuda Abdul Rahman
2011
Pustaka KL @ Keramat
ISBN 
9789830685809
Excerpt: 
United States -- Social conditions
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available:
Cover image for Third world america: How our politicians are abandoning the average citizen
Huffington, Arianna
2011
ISBN 
9780007437320
Excerpt: 
United States -- Economic conditions
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available:
Cover image for Lost in America : a dead-end journey
Buzzell, Colby
2011
Perpustakaan Kuala Lumpur
ISBN 
9780061841354
Excerpt: 
United States -- Social conditions -- 21st century.
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available:
Cover image for Never the hope itself : love and ghosts in Latin America and Haiti
Hadden, Gerry
A former NPR correspondent takes you into his own ghost-filled life as he reports on a region in turmoil. Gerry Hadden was training to become a Buddhist monk when opportunity came knocking: the offer of a dream job as NPR's correspondent for Latin America. Arriving in Mexico in 2000 during the nation's first democratic transition of power, he witnesses both hope and uncertainty. But after 9/11, he finds himself documenting overlooked yet extraordinary events in a forgotten political landscape. As he reports on Colombia's drug wars, Guatemala's deleterious emigration, and Haiti's bloody rebellion, Hadden must also make a home for himself in Mexico City, coming to terms with its ghosts and chasing down the love of his life, in a riveting narrative that reveals the human heart at the center of international affairs. -- Cover, p. [4].
2011
Perpustakaan Kuala Lumpur
ISBN 
9780062020079
Excerpt: 
Foreign correspondents -- United States -- Biography
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available:
Cover image for Reimagining equality : stories of gender, race, and finding home
Hill, Anita
"In 1991, Anita Hill's courageous testimony during the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings sparked a national conversation on sexual harassment and women's equality in politics and the workplace. Today, she turns her attention to another potent and enduring symbol of economic success and equality-the home. Hill details how the current housing crisis, resulting in the devastation of so many families, so many communities, and even whole cities, imperils every American's ability to achieve the American Dream. Hill takes us on a journey that begins with her own family story and ends with the subprime mortgage meltdown. Along the way, she invites us into homes across America, rural and urban, and introduces us to some extraordinary African American women. As slavery ended, Mollie Elliott, Hill's ancestor, found herself with an infant son and no husband. Yet, she bravely set course to define for generations to come what it meant to be a free person of color. On the eve of the civil rights and women's rights movements, Lorraine Hansberry's childhood experience of her family's fight against racial restrictions in a Chicago neighborhood ended tragically for the Hansberry family. Yet, that episode shaped Lorraine's hopeful account of early suburban integration in her iconic American drama A Raisin in the Sun. Two decades later, Marla, a divorced mother, endeavors to keep her children safe from a growing gang presence in 1980s Los Angeles. Her story sheds light on the fears and anxiety countless parents faced during an era of growing neighborhood isolation, and that continue today. In the midst of the 2008 recession, hairdresser Anjanette Booker's dogged determination to keep her Baltimore home and her salon reflects a commitment to her own independence and to her community's economic and social viability. Finally, Hill shares her own journey to a place and a state of being at home that brought her from her roots in rural Oklahoma to suburban Boston, Massachusetts, and connects her own search for home with that of women and men set adrift during the foreclosure crisis. The ability to secure a place that provides access to every opportunity our country has to offer is central to the American Dream. To achieve that ideal, Hill argues, we and our leaders must engage in a new conversation about what it takes to be at home in America. Pointing out that the inclusive democracy our Constitution promises is bigger than the current debate about legal rights, she presents concrete proposals that encourage us to reimagine equality. Hill offers a twenty-first-century vision of America-not a vision of migration, but one of roots; not one simply of tolerance, but one of belonging; not just of rights, but also of community-a community of equals"--Provided by publisher.
2011
ISBN 
9780807014431
Excerpt: 
African American women -- Social conditions
Relevance: 
0.0000
Available: