While growing up in Ellsworth, Wisconsin, Jacqueline Schaar created both wonderful memories and delicious dishes while sharing the kitchen with her grandmothers and mother. In Jackie's Country Family Favorites, she recreates the recipes that have been tried and perfected by family members over the years and today, bound together in a family cookbook sure to be cherished by many generations to come. From Grandma Theis's recipe for the blueberry dessert she made every Sunday to Grandma Doty's fried potatoes made with soaked bread, bacon grease, and fried onions, Schaar shares a timeless compilation of recipes for tasty appetizers, unforgettable main dishes, and mouthwatering desserts-all easy to prepare ahead of time and made from basic ingredients found in nearly every pantry. The diverse collection of recipes included in Jackie's Country Family Favorites is sure to please today's busy cooks who want to serve their family the kind of comfort food that reminds them of days gone by, when Sunday dinner at their grandmother's house was a time to share fellowship, laughter, and best of all, scrumptious food.
This work critically examines diversity, discrimination, and inclusion in the English-speaking Caribbean nations, with a specific emphasis on persons with disabilities. The chapters include an evaluative analysis on the extant theoretical and empirical literature on persons with disabilities in employment, exploring the nature of their disability, the role of information technology in gaining and retaining employment, and an analysis of the laws and relevant policies which prohibit the discrimination against persons with disabilities in the Caribbean region. Though the enactment of legislation outlawing the discrimination of persons with disabilities is not widespread in the Caribbean, a few select territories have taken positive steps towards recognition of the need to achieve inclusion of persons with disabilities and accept the diversity of the Caribbean populace. After exploring the general state of disability and discrimination in the Caribbean region, the authors analyze workplace accommodations provided to persons with disability, particularly as relations to IT and assistive devices, before focusing on workplace stigmas related to mental health disability and employment law. In addition to literature-based analyses, the book includes qualitative case studies, with the goal of providing benchmarks in organizational responses to employees with disabilities. Further, the authors highlight lessons to be learned from other countries in addressing inequality in the workplace for disabled persons. With its analysis of employment as well as socio-economic and legal issues, this interdisciplinary text will serve as a useful resource in not only understanding the organizational challenges faced by persons with disabilities in the region but also the necessary legislation needed to address discriminatory practices on a wider scale.
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