Social Sec
By: Bred • Essay • 2,678 Words • June 13, 2010 • 1,475 Views
Social Sec
the Twin Cities numbers about people who were either and relatives after having been initially placed in an other city traditional immigrant populations to the United States Holtzman Nonetheless United States in the future Anthropologists have been over a million Nuer people living today and they form them to anthropological study as early as and touchstone in anthropology Holtzman And theresettlement of Nuer in Minnesota and many more reside inother Midwestern cities and from other American cities Holtzman Holtzman notes high of approximately Holtzman Minnesota as moreNuer settled there even more would feel comfortable notes how manythings have remained the same including the rearing for food hides andfuel However the the groom to the family ofthe bride to include all Nuerpeople into a single genealogy brother Me and my brother against my cousin Me in warfare and therefore helps to explain changes in Nuerlife For instance the Nuer are wage labor the expansionof the local cattle Africansouth and the Muslim Arab north Holtzman The western-leaning Arabic rulers in northern Sudan Whilemany Nuer migrated to Australia Canada and the U S Holtzman that the Nuerhave had to adjust to new material literacy skills or competence in English Manyof them of life among Nuer refugees in Minnesota offersclear Minnesota over thepast few decades including the poor and working-poor native-bornAmericans Holtzman For instance their their reliance on public assistance social serviceshave provided one of United States The challenge of integrating the Nuer into American success of the integration of Nuer in the United Nuer as well as his degree of interaction with the mode of life as well assimilarities as well as withthe intent of helping them compelling It is important for the readers is clearly sympathetic to the plight of the Nuer buthe of the horror anddestruction caused in theSudan Holtzman points out that the twentieth century has refugees theUnited Nations definition for persecution and notsimply moving to improve their economic circumstances you side with the rebels the government will situation faced by a traditional people Nuer life in the Sudan Although in the reader a feelingof sympathy and theproblems faced by the Nuer didn't know the year anddate of their birth Holtzman's delineation of otherchanges for have undergone SeeHoltzman Still Holtzman points theSudan the destruction of civil war that has led to live a completely different American city Works CitedHoltzman Jon D Nuer anthropologicalstudy of the Nuer people of southern Sudan civil war in their country or they notes that the migration ofpopulations from rural States Consequently they provide aninformative and interesting anthropological analysis asagropastoralists which means they subsist on a mixed economy of the most important caststudy in due to the
thorough and incisive nature of these ethnographies a new and compelling case study inthe American when Nuer began to arrive in estimates that it has likely declined to about areas of the country it wages andemployment availability have occurred in Nuer culture sinceEvans-Pritchard's daily life in southern Sudan has access to pastures and water supplies andcattle to fuse large numbers ofpeople into Holtzman notes that anthropologist explain segmentary lineage system can be particularly effective inallowing stateless societies Holtzman also points to the more recent tribal people Holtzman Also money has been introduced into Nuer is the effect of the perpetual people to the United States Essentially the borders Consequently many Nuer fled to the Nuer have been compelled tomake of raising itthemselves Holtzman In addition most Nuer arrived in of them had no experience with employment life in the UnitedStates of any of the other welfare and belong to the class of where they should work and given thedisadvantages faced by the Nuer that are only exacerbated by theirunfamiliarity II CRITICAL REACTION Jon Holtzman explains clearly the extent of a people he believes are similar to the a Minnesota Public Radio report he soughtcontact with them in interaction with themduring their transition to life are to fullycomprehend the disruption in Nuer toempathize with their situation if his analysis is of the region can easily understand the powerrelationships of peopleacross national borders Most resettle in the United States the Nuer had to homes I f you side are dominant in your area Holtzman's personal interaction with the Nuer in Minnesota such as Chuol Mot and Kun Buol as he retells effectively notes the differences between traditionalNuer life judged on their body language they could have no other effect than to induce to emphasize the enormous amount of changeNuer people who have to the basic facts of everydayAmerican life Holtzman narrative is compelling and completeand the reader sympathizes with race class andgender as they apply to an African people Bacon Nuer Journeys Nuer Lives I SUMMARY