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After the events of Eyes Like Blue Fire and Water Like Crimson Sorrow Katja finds herself tackling a very damaged and conflicted Raven. Hoping to heal that damage on her own, she sends Zero and Michael to find the only other vampire she knows still lives after learning about Anton's past and destroying the monsters she uncovered there. Divided, the two groups find themselves tackling more that they could have expected as Katja faces an unknown threat from a faceless monster, while Zero and Michael must face Mateo, and with him, their own dark secrets. Not all is as it seems and the past is far from buried.
Having discovered many of Anton's secrets, Katja must now seek out Raven and attempt to rescue him from the nightmare that his life has become. As she seeks him out, Raven is being eaten up by the horror of his own past; a past full of guilt, pain and a terrible revenant who is more than she seems. In time, these two paths will come to meet and a final confrontation that could mean the end of so many things will be in store.Will Raven survive the monster who's come to take over his life and will Katja be strong enough to face it?
This important Research Handbook explores the nexus between human rights, poverty and inequality as a critical lens for understanding and addressing key challenges of the coming decades, including the objectives set out in the Sustainable Development Goals. The Research Handbook starts from the premise that poverty is not solely an issue of minimum income and explores the profound ways that deprivation and distributive inequality of power and capability relate to economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights. Leading experts in the human rights field representing a range of disciplines outline a future research agenda to address poverty and inequality head on. Beginning with an interrogation of the definition of poverty, subsequent chapters analyse the dynamics of poverty and inequality in relation to matters such as race, gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, geography and migration status. The rights to housing, land, health, work, education, protest and access to justice are also explored, with a recognition of the challenges posed by corruption, climate change and new technologies. The Research Handbook on Human Rights and Poverty is an essential reference guide for those who teach in these areas and for scholars and students developing future research agendas of their own. This will also be a much-needed resource for people working practically to address poverty in both the Global North and Global South.
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