
Carol Devine
I'm a humanitarian, researcher and writer based in Toronto but I'm thinking about books, Antarctica, refugee issues, global and earth health. I'm preoccupied about Syria, Congo, lack of access to medicines, climate change and I dream about glacier hiking.
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Papers by Carol Devine
of China's (PRC) illegal occupation
of Tibet, the women of Tibet have
been active, vocal, and effective in the
human rights movement. Indeed,
they are leaders in the ongoing struggle
to achieve recognition of the widespread
human rights violations occurring
in their country.
Through the Body Map project, the lack of access to medicine, stigmatization and criminalization of HIV status is challenged. Women bear the brunt of the disease, those who make body maps give testimony to the scars and courage in face of the pandemic. Viewed individually and collectively, they are a narrative of injustice, fortitude, health-seeking behavior and consciously or not, a demand for change.
Dignitas International came to Phalombe in 2010. Its program includes supporting a multi-sector SGBV network to reduce HIV vulnerability, drawing from its experience in Zomba District. The network's goal was to analyze common forms of abuse reported, improve the district's SGBV medico-legal and social response and strengthen case management. 2010
Maps tell Antarctica’s multilayered story from its history, geology, politics and more. Names reveal the human experiences of Antarctic discovery, as well as its wild and changing topography and aesthetic beauty.
A critical tool for navigation, maps are also the archive of human activity and of entities discovered. The Antarctic continent itself, charted symbolically, is the archive of life on earth.
of China's (PRC) illegal occupation
of Tibet, the women of Tibet have
been active, vocal, and effective in the
human rights movement. Indeed,
they are leaders in the ongoing struggle
to achieve recognition of the widespread
human rights violations occurring
in their country.
Through the Body Map project, the lack of access to medicine, stigmatization and criminalization of HIV status is challenged. Women bear the brunt of the disease, those who make body maps give testimony to the scars and courage in face of the pandemic. Viewed individually and collectively, they are a narrative of injustice, fortitude, health-seeking behavior and consciously or not, a demand for change.
Dignitas International came to Phalombe in 2010. Its program includes supporting a multi-sector SGBV network to reduce HIV vulnerability, drawing from its experience in Zomba District. The network's goal was to analyze common forms of abuse reported, improve the district's SGBV medico-legal and social response and strengthen case management. 2010
Maps tell Antarctica’s multilayered story from its history, geology, politics and more. Names reveal the human experiences of Antarctic discovery, as well as its wild and changing topography and aesthetic beauty.
A critical tool for navigation, maps are also the archive of human activity and of entities discovered. The Antarctic continent itself, charted symbolically, is the archive of life on earth.