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Jason DeParle

    Jason DeParle est un journaliste respecté dont le travail explore en profondeur les questions sociales et économiques. Son reportage, caractérisé par sa perspicacité et sa recherche méticuleuse, met souvent en lumière des défis complexes qui affectent la société. À travers ses écrits, DeParle cherche à découvrir les causes profondes des difficultés sociales, offrant aux lecteurs une compréhension approfondie du monde qui les entoure. Sa capacité à transformer des sujets complexes en récits captivants en fait une voix importante dans le journalisme d'investigation.

    A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves
    • A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      4,4(1289)Évaluer

      "When Jason DeParle moved in with Tita Comodas in the Manila slums thirty years ago, he didn't expect to make a lifelong friend. Nor did he expect to spend decades reporting on her family--husband, children, and siblings--as they came to embody the stunning rise of global migration. "In A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves," DeParle paints an intimate portrait of an unforgettable family across three generations, as migration reorders economics, politics, and culture across the world. At the heart of the story is Rosalie, Tita's middle child, who escapes poverty by becoming a nurse, and lands jobs in Jeddah, Abu Dhabi and, finally, Texas--joining the record forty-four million immigrants in the United States. Migration touches every aspect of global life. It pumps billions in remittances into poor villages, fuels Western populism, powers Silicon Valley, sustains American health care, and brings one hundred languages to the Des Moines public schools. One in four children in the United States is an immigrant or the child of one. With no issue in American life so polarizing, DeParle expertly weaves between the personal and panoramic perspectives. Reunited with their children after years apart, Rosalie and her husband struggle to be parents, as their children try to find their place in a place they don't know. Ordinary and extraordinary at once, their journey is a twenty-first-century classic, rendered in gripping detail"-- Provided by publisher

      A Good Provider Is One Who Leaves