“Today there are nearly 80 million people displaced by war and persecution. They are alternately forgotten and demonized. In sharing their words, Ai Weiwei reminds us that while they are refugees, they are first and foremost men, women, and children with the same dreams and aspirations as the rest of us, equally deserving of the peace, protection, and opportunity we seek for ourselves and our own families.”—Filippo Grandi, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees“In Human Flow, a hundred voices of different kinds and from different places dramatize our collective failure to design a humane world. With its moments of bravery, outrage, and suffering, this book is a challenge to make the future different from the past.”—Samuel Moyn, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World “With its astonishing variety, Human Flow offers a rich tableau of living, striving, achieving, frustration, sadness, and more. One gets a much fuller range of emotions and experiences than in conventional accounts of the refugee crisis. At a time when refugee fatigue has set in, we need this book.”—Jeremy Adelman, Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, Princeton University“Both heartbreaking and inspiring, Human Flow reminds us that our world is made up of stories. Ai Weiwei compassionately reaches into the heart of those he interviews to show that, despite the West's selfish politics and sinister misinterpretations of international law, there are always helpers, and places where our histories are kept and protected.”—Dina Nayeri, author of The Ungrateful Refugee“Ai Weiwei helps us understand on a personal level the large-scale movement of migrants and refugees, driven by conflict, the climate crisis, persecution, and inequality. He translates a global phenomenon into a compelling collection of diverse human stories—each demanding our moral attention if we hope to comprehend the whole.”—Patrick Gaspard, president of the Open Society Foundations“Human Flow recounts intimate and often harrowing stories that are testaments, urgent and desperately needed, not only of hardship and loss but of survival and endurance, of the need to speak, to be seen and heard.”—Dinaw Mengestu, author of How to Read the Air
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