Sentences with phrase «british home children»

British home children were children found to be living either on the streets or in the poor houses of Britain in the 19th century.
The groups I have in mind are: (1) British home children; and, (2) «natural children» of First Nations.

Not exact matches

And British Columbia, Moore's home turf, happens to have the worst child poverty rate in Canada.
Coal dust billowing off the American coal trains careening through our towns is coating the homes and lungs of children in British Columbia.
De-registering a child from school — what to do if your child is in school Getting started — what to expect in the first months of home educating Different styles — These will depend on your personality and preferences Mailing list information — links to home educators» online mailing lists General links — links to general sites about home education Local group sites — links to mailing lists or sites related to British home educators» groups GCSE guide — how can home educators take GCSEs if they wish to?
But there are a growing number of British parents who home educate their children from the start.
Many British home educators, who start by using structure a bit like a school day, find themselves veering more and more to autonomous child - led learning, exploring new topics together, and following the child's own need to learn at their own rate.
His child is the same age as ours, his house is the same size as ours, and yet he and his British wife find they can manage quite well, thank you, without the tons of plastic crap — baby monitors included — that takes over American homes.
The British Crime Survey could be extended to include young children, the home secretary has said.
Children at home tend to have higher cortisol levels than children at school, one british study haChildren at home tend to have higher cortisol levels than children at school, one british study hachildren at school, one british study has shown.
Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children review: mordant British YA X-Men is Tim Burton's best in 20 years
How I Live Now is an adaptation of the award - winning novel from 2004 by Meg Rosoff, which took home the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize (awarded from the British newspaper, «The Guardian») and the Michael L. Printz Award (from the American Library Association) for young - adult literature.
The Lost City of Z (Closing Night, previously announced) Directed by James Gray USA, 2016 World Premiere James Gray's emotionally and visually resplendent epic tells the story of Lieutenant Colonel Percy Fawcett (a remarkable Charlie Hunnam), the British military - man - turned - explorer whose search for a lost city deep in the Amazon grows into an increasingly feverish, decades - long magnificent obsession that takes a toll on his reputation, his home life with his wife (Sienna Miller) and children, and his very existence.
Top of the agenda In April, the British Institute of Facilities Management's (BIFM) newly - revamped Education Special Interest Group (SIG) held a key event at the 128 - acre Cobham Campus of ACS International Schools, which is home to 1,500 children aged two to 18.
Earlier this year, a school teacher tragically died when a bus carrying a party of British children crashed in France on their way home from a skiing trip.
Even though English is the official language of the island and children are taught Jamaican standard English (a mix of American and British English) in Jamaican schools, many of them grow up speaking Jamaican Creole at home.
British author Charles Lambert's latest, The Children's Home, is like a strange dream in which you can't quite tell if you're awake.
The British architect is also currently working on a new home for the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, a children's cancer care treatment centre in Rwanda, and a plant - covered apartment block in Johannesburg.
Interview with Georganne Deen, Summer 2011 Fee, Georgia, Artslant, Interview w / Georganne Deen, Apr 22, 2008 Bors, Chris, Artinfo, Georganne Deen in New York, Apr 3, 2008 Reverend Jen, Artnet, Diary of an Art Star, Mar 31, 2008 Tanner, Matt, Beware the Wild Children, Grand Street News, Mar 2008 Powers, Kevin, Interview with Georganne Deen, Artes & Leiloes (Portugal), Nov, 2007 Behrens, Katja, Verspielter Exorzismus, TAZ nrw, March 20, 2007 Wertheim, Christine, Georganne Deen: Underground Woman, X-TRA, Winter 2006 Harvey, Doug, I Art the 80's, L.A. Weekly, March, 2006 Fahl, David, Text Hook, Houston Press, June 17, 2004 Klaasmeyer, Kelly, Deen's List, Houston Press, Jan. 2, 2003 Lowry, Mark, Artist's Work Hits Close to Home, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Mar. 13, 2002 Mitchell, Charles Dee, Self Examination Turns Disturbing, The Dallas Morning News, Feb. 28, 2002 Deen, Georganne, The Girlfriend and The Devil, Grand Street # 70 Halstrup, Anjee, Georganne Deen: The Secret Storm and the Vogue Book of the Dead, ZERO magazine, July, 2001 Rodriguez, Juan, Georganne Deen at Babilonia 1808, Artweek, June, 2001 McEwam, Ann, 15 Psychic Orgasms, Waitako Times, Mar. 8, 2000 Mutch, Nicola, Ads Undermine American Dream, Otago Daily Times, Oct. 26, 1999 Munro, Bruce, Artist Explores Dream World, The Star, Oct. 27, 1999 Madoff, Steven Henry, Pop Surrealism ARTFORUM, Oct., 1998 Gopnick, Blake, Old Wounds Healed Through Older Art Form, The Globe & Mail, Jul 29, 1998 Hume, Christopher, Allegories of Her Hateful Family Tree The Toronto Star, Jul 11, 1998 Schoenkopf, Rebecca, The Glamour of Ugly, Orange County Weekly, Sept 19, 1997 Curtis, Cathy, Light Images, Dark Truth, Los Angeles Times, Sept 9, 1997 Dambrot, Shana Nys, Georganne Deen, JUXTAPOZ, Fall 1997 Kim, Soo Jin, Georganne Deen, Art Issues, Summer 1997 Kandel, Susan, Fierce: Georganne Deen, Los Angeles Times, Feb 28, 1997 McKenna, Kristine, Los Angeles, Art & Antiques, Summer 1996 Zellen, Jody, The Mother Load, World Art, Summer 1995 Lueck, Brock, Co-Mix Art: Fine Tooning Pop, The New Art Examiner, Mar, 1995 McKenna, Kristine, Coming to Terms With Mom, L.A. Times, Dec 18, 1994 Desmarais, Charles, Georganne Deen, Grand Street # 49, 1994 Dubin, Zan, Experiences of a Girl as Seen by a Woman, L.A. Times, Oct 23, 1993 Rose, Cynthia, Pacific Meltdown, British Vogue, Jul, 1991 Carlin, John, Bad Influences, The Paper, Jun, 1988 Smith, Alton, Reinventing the WheelI, Village Voice, Nov 29, 1988 Tanney, Kathy, Paper Tigers, Plastic Toys, Art Week, Aug 22, 1987 Knight, Christopher, Bad Influences Knocks Popular Culture Wisdom, L.A. Herald Examiner, Aug 4, 1987 Leston, Kimberely, Georganne Deen, the Face, Dec, 1986 Pincus, Robt, Voyage on Sculpture May Make Some Viewers Ill, San Diego Union, Jul 10, 1986 Wilson, William, Social Distortion Exhibition, L.A. Times, Jul 10, 1986 Rugoff, Ralph, Exterminating Angel, Los Angeles Weekly, Oct 11, 1985 Drohojowska, Hunter, The Art World's Biggest Pests, Los Angeles Herald Examiner, Oct 20, 1985
However, it would exclude people who may have been in the country for several years possibly with British children without leave to remain and who are waiting for an application for leave to remain to be decided by the Home Office.
However, the Justices did criticise Home Office rules for failing to look at the treatment of children or consider alternative assets when examining the earning ability of the British spouse.
These officers are clearly «gamers,» far removed from the flesh and blood of a human child, and operating perhaps from the basement of their parent's home, or in some silo in the mountains of British Columbia dealing out BIOC decisions with the compassion of those who fly drones into Afghanistan from holes somewhere in the midwest of the United States.
In this case, the testator left his estate to the Loyal Protestant Home for Children, New Westminster British Columbia.
Immigration: All aspects of immigration, asylum, nationality and refugee law with particular emphasis and expertise in: asylum and human rights cases; overlap between asylum and extradition law; representing children subject to immigration control; representing victims of trafficking and other vulnerable clients; detention and deportation; immigration issues in adoption and surrogacy cases; immigration for family members of British and settled people; EEA - related matters, in particular relating to third - country national family members; appeal work in FTT and UT and the higher courts; public law challenges to Home Office in judicial review; and immigration bail.
The use of «home» to describe these children is a very English (or British) usage, and, in that sense identifies them as British descended people.
Important information for prospective adopters about British passport applications for children adopted from overseas When making post-adoption plans to apply for a British passport for a child adopted from overseas, adoptive parents need to be aware of the Home Office's policy pertaining to the change of names on official documents (e.g. passports).
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