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  Author: creativelivenew1   |   19 March 2024   |   comments: 0
Missing and Unsolved Ireland's Disappeared The Unsolved Cases of Ireland's Missing Persons
Free Download Barry Cummins, "Missing and Unsolved: Ireland's Disappeared: The Unsolved Cases of Ireland's Missing Persons"
English | 2010 | pages: 275 | ASIN: B009ZW08JC | EPUB | 1,1 mb
They are some of Ireland's most famous names, for all the wrong reasons. They are Ireland's missing women, many of them murdered and their bodies hidden by evil killers who remain at large. They include Annie McCarrick, who was murdered in the Dublin-Wicklow mountains; Jo Jo Dullard, who was abducted and murdered while hitching a lift in Co. Kildare; and Fiona Pender, who was seven months pregnant when she was murdered and hidden at an unknown place in the midlands.

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  Author: creativelivenew1   |   11 January 2024   |   comments: 0
Until I Find You Disappeared Children and Coercive Adoptions in Guatemala
Free Download Rachel Nolan, "Until I Find You: Disappeared Children and Coercive Adoptions in Guatemala"
English | ISBN: 0674270355 | 2024 | 320 pages | PDF | 18 MB

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  Author: creativelivenew1   |   17 August 2023   |   comments: 0
The Girls Who Disappeared A Novel
Free Download The Girls Who Disappeared: A Novel by Claire Douglas
English | January 10, 2023 | ISBN: 0063296691, 0063277417 | True EPUB | 384 pages | 3.1 MB
A journalist's life is threatened when she investigates the truth about a mysterious car crash that happened twenty years earlier in this gripping thriller from the internationally bestselling author of The Couple at Number 9 and Just Like the Other Girls.

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  Author: creativelivenew1   |   04 March 2023   |   comments: 0
How the Soviet Union Disappeared An Essay on the Causes of Dissolution
Free Download How the Soviet Union Disappeared: An Essay on the Causes of Dissolution By Wisla Suraska
1998 | 200 Pages | ISBN: 0822321246 | PDF | 5 MB
Many theories have been offered to explain the disintegration of the Soviet Union, yet none sufficiently explain the speed and profundity of the empire's collapse. In this powerful polemic, Wisla Suraska disputes popular interpretations of the dissolution of the Soviet Union and explains how theories, such as totalitarian theory, have failed to examine the exigencies of arbitrary government. At the center of Suraska's own theories on the Soviet collapse is her claim that it came about not simply because it was an economically declining country that contained too many nationalities but because it was despotic and that despotism is unworkable in modern societies.Using numerous secondary sources, recently published memoir literature, and new archival research, Suraska's multidimensional study delves into the many factors involved in the dissolution of the Soviet empire-the role of Gorbachev and his contest with Yeltsin, the weakness of the Soviet state, and the poverty of ideas that informed perestroika. She also examines the complex relationship between the Communist Party, the KGB, and the military; the way Gorbachev dealt with the German question; and the rise of post-Marxist thought in the Soviet Union. Whether discussing how insufficient control over coercive forces or the growing strength of provincial barons impacted the collapse, Suraska furthers her argument that the explosion of nationalisms in the Soviet Union was as much activated by the breakdown of central structures as it actually contributed to the final demolition of the regime. In the end, How the Soviet Union Disappeared reveals Gorbachev's perestroika as having been nothing short of a radical attempt to rebuild power that the Soviet center had lost in the post-Stalinist period.In its questioning of the assumptions of most previous scholarship and discourse on the Soviet Union, this book will be of interest to Sovietologists, political scientists, and students of communism and nationalism.

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  Author: Baturi   |   12 February 2023   |   comments: 0
Reunion Finding the Disappeared Children of El Salvador
Elizabeth Barnert, "Reunion: Finding the Disappeared Children of El Salvador"
English | ISBN: 0520386140 | 2023 | 370 pages | PDF | 4 MB
This captivating ethnography reveals the immediate and persisting impact of forced family separations and the eventual reunifications in communities affected by El Salvador's civil war.

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  Author: Baturi   |   29 January 2023   |   comments: 0
Digging for the Disappeared Forensic Science after Atrocity
Adam Rosenblatt, "Digging for the Disappeared: Forensic Science after Atrocity"
English | 2015 | pages: 305 | ISBN: 0804788774, 080479491X | PDF | 3,5 mb
The mass graves from our long human history of genocide, massacres, and violent conflict form an underground map of atrocity that stretches across the planet's surface. In the past few decades, due to rapidly developing technologies and a powerful global human rights movement, the scientific study of those graves has become a standard facet of post-conflict international assistance. Digging for the Disappeared provides readers with a window into this growing but little-understood form of human rights work, including the dangers and sometimes unexpected complications that arise as evidence is gathered and the dead are named.

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  Author: Baturi   |   10 July 2022   |   comments: 0
The Year We Disappeared A Father - Daughter Memoir
Cylin Busby, John Busby, "The Year We Disappeared: A Father - Daughter Memoir"
English | 2010 | ISBN: 1599904543, 1599901412 | EPUB | pages: 368 | 1.8 mb
The extraordinary true crime story of a family, a brutal shooting, and the year that would change their lives forever.

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  Author: Baturi   |   28 June 2022   |   comments: 0
Rights of Families of Disappeared Persons How International Bodies Address the Needs of Families of Disappeared Persons
Grazyna Baranowska, "Rights of Families of Disappeared Persons: How International Bodies Address the Needs of Families of Disappeared Persons"
English | ISBN: 1839701374 | 2021 | 218 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This book examines how international judicial and non-judicial bodies in Europe address the needs of the families of forcibly disappeared persons. The needs in question are returning the remains of disappeared persons; the right to truth; the acceptance of responsibility by states; and the right to compensation. These have been identified as the four most commonly shared basic and fundamental needs of families in which an adult was disappeared many years previously and is now assumed to be dead, which is representative of the situation of the vast majority of families of disappeared persons in Europe.The families of disappeared persons have an increasing number of international mechanisms through which they can attempt to address their needs. The proliferation of such mechanisms gives victims of enforced disappearance in Europe access to many different international procedures. At the same time, however, a functional analysis of the specific organs involved has shown that they respond to the needs of families to varying degrees. This results from the differences in their competences as well as those in their jurisprudence.There is no international instrument or mechanism capable of fully satisfying the four basic needs of the families of disappeared persons. However, in Europe, these families do have the possibility to make use of various judicial and quasi-judicial means and mechanisms which - if the states involved would properly execute the judgments or cooperate with the proper bodies - could lead to the return of the remains of disappeared persons, to obtaining knowledge about their fates, and to receiving financial compensation.The analysis covers the judgments and decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, the UN Human Rights Committee, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the Human Rights Chamber for Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Human Rights Advisory Panel in Kosovo, as well as the activities of the Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus, the Special Process on Missing Persons in the Territory of former Yugoslavia, the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances and the International Commission on Missing Persons. In so doing, the book demonstrates whether, how, and based on what principles these four needs of the families of disappeared persons can constitute a claim based on international human rights law.

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  Author: Baturi   |   24 January 2021   |   comments: 0

Before She Disappeared A Novel [Audiobook]
Before She Disappeared: A Novel (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B08DFBYVJ4 | 2021 | 12 hours and 7 minutes | MP3@128 kbps | 667 MB
Author: Lisa Gardner
Narrator: Hillary Huber

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