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Human Rights and Wrongs

Reluctant Heroes Fight Tyranny

Adrianne Aron Sunshot Press

$29.95   $26.64

Paperback

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English
Sunshot Press
01 October 2018
-- 2017 SUNSHOT BOOK PRIZE FOR NONFICTION --

A gift of truth for a generation of Dreamers, a vault of memories for their parents, and a record of shame, pride, sorrow, humor, and forgotten fact for a nation of immigrants.

One comes away from Human Rights and Wrongs knowing more about motivation, fear, risk-taking, and problem solving than when one began. But more than that, one knows more about the conditions of oppression that force people from all over--Central America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, North Africa--to flee their countries, and the conditions of human support and solidarity that help them rebuild shattered lives.

A broken immigration system that leaves a child in Arizona without parents and a man in El Salvador without children may make one cry. But there's much to celebrate, too, like positive outcomes in asylum hearings, the beauty of volunteer efforts that ransom a student out of immigration detention, the helicopter rescue of a writer lost in the woods.

Dr. Aron's book is both instructive and uplifting, and a fierce rebuke to anti-immigrant voices booming across our spacious skies.

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Imprint:   Sunshot Press
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 8mm
Weight:   181g
ISBN:   9781944977214
ISBN 10:   194497721X
Pages:   136
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Dr. Adrianne Aron is a practicing psychologist in Berkeley, California. For many years she was clinical director of a pro-bono service for Central American refugees, the Centro Ignacio Martín-Baró, a project of the Committee for Health Rights in the Americas. She is the co-editor and chief translator of a collection of essays by Martín-Baró, Writings for a Liberation Psychology (Harvard University Press) and translator of Mario Benedetti's Pedro y el Capitán, into English as Pedro and the Captain (Cadmus Editions). For respite from her long hours with traumatized refugees she took up writing fiction and little essays of creative nonfiction and, on receiving awards in both genres, was encouraged to write Human Rights and Wrongs in the style of a collection of stories to make the book accessible to the general reader - the audience a liberation psychologist always wants to reach. Her website is www.adriannearon.com.

Reviews for Human Rights and Wrongs: Reluctant Heroes Fight Tyranny

Every page I read took me to thousands of stories I've heard and at times felt I'd lived myself. Each page gave me pause, because there was so much tied together there, and so much rope that it could choke you, take your breath away, make you want to scream, and send you looking for matches to burn down the courts that were designed to defend slavery, colonialism, and the capitalist system. Human Rights and Wrongs should be required reading for law students and psychologists. -- Felix Kury, Program Director, Clinica Martin-Baro, San Francisco State University, U.C. San Francisco Human Rights and Wrongs demonstrates how the strictures of professionalism can limit the effectiveness of psychological expression. Aron and her colleagues are liberating her profession by telling the story, under oath, in Federal Immigration Court. In the fashion of Eduardo Galeano, the story can absolve the victim and leave the perpetrator self-condemned. This style can be troublesome for domesticated professionals since it identifies the state terror of their government. No American exceptionalism here. The self-condemned are not a few bad apples, nor do they represent a tragic mistake. The foreign policy is consistent and international. This study by Adrianne Aron ends with a true story and a metaphor. She remembers being lost in the Yosemite Valley. That memory represents the many people lost in our criminal justice system and ICE. What she does not say is the unspoken truth that she also represents a holy helicopter rescuing the dispossessed lost in the forest. -- Blase Bonpane, Ph.D., Director, Office of the Americas Combining the qualities of a psychologist, a political activist, and a skilled writer, the author draws the reader close to individuals' experiences while informing the reader about recent histories of governmental violence. In other words, Human Rights and Wrongs teaches the reader both compassion and justice. -- Tom F. Driver, The Paul J. Tillich Professor of Theology and Culture Emeritus, Union Theological Seminary A clever joker once said, I dream of a world where chickens can cross the road without having their motives questioned. I, as a mental health professional, dream of one where psychologists will understand why Ernesto Cruz drinks himself into a stupor, why Eva refuses to speak about what happened to her in Honduras, why Mrs. Malek is afraid to return to Afghanistan. In a collection of serious yet entertaining human interest stories, Adrianne Aron's Human Rights and Wrongs engages the general reader while inspiring psychologists to think outside the box. -- Shawn Corne, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, Albany, California Throughout the book the author provides gems and nuggets of hope highlighting the power of story. The ideas are powerful and challenge the reader to examine the resilience of the human spirit and our relationship to others as human beings. -- Hugo Kamya, Ph.D., Professor, Fulbright Scholar, Simmons College School of Social Work En cada pagina que leia me transportaba a un millar de historias que he oido y que aveces las he sentido como si yo las habia vivido. Cada pagina se me hizo largas semana pues habia tanto que atar cabos y que tambien de tanto atar puedes quedar ahorcado, perder la respiracion y con una sensacion de pegar un grito y buscar fosforos y quemar la corte que solo fue disenada para defender la esclavitud, colonialismo y el sistema capitalista. -- Felix Kury


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