Philippe volter biography of rory
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Inhalt (67 Artikel)
Cochlear implantation compliance among minorities at high risk for hearing impairment following universal newborn hearing screening
Oren Ziv, Mattan Danovitch, Daniel M. Kaplan, Muhammad Abu Tailakh, Revital Gorali, Lea Kurtzman, Sofia Kordeluk, Sabri El-Saied, Yuval Slovik, Oded Cohen
Causal association of gastroesophageal reflux disease with chronic sinusitis and chronic disease of the tonsils and adenoids
Weizhen Li, Yanan Zhang, Xinwei Li, Mengtong Xie, Lin Dong, Mengdi Jin, Qingxing Lu, Min Zhang, Fengyu Xue, Lintong Jiang, Qiong Yu
Plus moist HS-W®: a new nasal packing material for the middle meatus in endoscopic sinus surgery
Ryo Wakasugi, Takanobu Sasaki, Satoshi Takano, Hisashi Kamada, Kuniaki Yoshioka, Kaori Tochigi, Ryo Ikeda, Nao Takahashi, Hiroshi Matsuyama, Arata Horii
Choice of surgery in intestinal-type adenocarcinoma of the sinonasal tract: a long-term comparative study
Tijl Vermassen, Stijn De Keukeleire, Michael Saerens, Sylvester Heerwegh, Jens M. Debacker, Wouter Huvenne, Philippe Deron, David Creytens, Liesbeth Ferdinande, Sylvie Rottey, Claus Bachert, Fréderic Duprez, Thibaut Van Zele
Switching of biological therapy to dupilumab in comorbid patients with severe asthma and CRSwNP
Cecilia Rosso, Eugenio De Corso,
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List of William Shakespeare relay adaptations
(BBC Tv Shakespeare)
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Engaging with the Country of Origin and Its Past amongst Second-Generation Youth of Bosnian Descent in Switzerland
Dilyara Müller-Suleymanova
Introduction
And once you begin to seek your own answers, you realize it’s not that easy. You try to answer certain questions; you ask more and you get even more questions. And this goes on and on. And I had to do that all by myself.
The above quote by a young Swiss-Bosnian woman whom I interviewed for my research illustrates some important aspects of the ways in which children of migrants begin to engage with their families’ experiences of forced migration and explore the political past of their country of origin.[1] The quote expresses their desire to seek own answers to questions about the past rather than merely pursuing their family’s opinions and demonstrates the active role they want to take in this process. This quote represents many other experiences of dealing with a violent past in the country of origin that I encountered among young people of Bosnian descent in Switzerland whom I interviewed for my research.
In this article, I examine how young people of the so-called “second generation” (i.e. children of migrants) confront, address, and engage with the political past of their country of origin and what repercuss