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Loading... A Life Like Mineby Dorling Kindersley
In large, colorful spreads A Life Like Mine shows the lives of children living all over the world. The book is divided into sections showing how different children get water, feed themselves, go to school, play, stay healthy, etc. The book also discusses the fact that a large number of children don't have the basic necessities. This is a great book for browsing and will be interesting to kids who like to know about kids in other cultures. ( )This is a book about Children All Around The World, but it is very, very different from the books like that which I had as a kid. It's based around the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, so it doesn't just talk about all kinds of children, but it teaches about what basic needs and rights are and the ways all of thoses necessary things are expressed in all different cultures. Each chapter is centered around some of those rights and needs, and starts with a discussion of how they work in different places, before giving a closer look at one child in one country who may have a very diferent experience in that realm than other children. Because of this, it focuses on what all children have in common before it starts discussing the differences. This is a wonderful way to get people to look at the things they take for granted, full of bright pictures and interesting stories, and I recommend it not just for kids, but for everyone. (My friend bought me this for Christmas because she knows I try to write stories set in all kinds of cultures, and this book will be marvellously helpful at that - colorful pictures and all.) Explores the rights of children - survival, development, protection, participation - throughout the world by exampling these countries: England, USA, Colombia, Sierra Leone, Netherlands, Yugoslavia, Israel, Occupied Palestinian Territory, Yugoslavia, Sudan, South Africa, Afghanistan, India, Laos, Bangladesh, Australia. |
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