
Yahoo! News Search Results for Trinidad and Tobago Society and Culture
Hard times ahead (Tobago News) Again and again this column has projected politics as a science by which people live. The science of politics affects every aspect of human life, from the food we eat to the way we live and even die.
The rights of women as casualties of war (Online Journal) Qurban-Bibi and Nahil Abu-Rada are two women, one Afghan and the other Palestinian, who made news with similar tragedies. But their losses also helped further delineate the plight of millions of women in war zones and poor countries.
Invisible casualties of war (Al-Ahram Weekly) Qurban-Bibi and Nahil Abu Rada are two women, one Afghan, the other Palestinian, whose tragic plight has made news. Their losses also help delineate the plight of millions of other women in war zones and poor countries.
The Rights of Women as Casualties of War (Middle East Online) War and military intervention often jeopardize, more than anything else, the rights and welfare of women, notes Ramzy Baroud .
Change in times (Tobago News) The recent outbreak of violence at the Signal Hill Comprehensive School is a reflection of what obtains in the wider society. Whether authorities want to admit it or not, Trinidad and indeed Tobago has been engulfed in a seemingly unending culture of violence.
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