Social Justice - 2003
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The diversity rationale in higher education: an overview of the contemporary legal context.
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Temporary assistance to needy families reauthorization: bill summary, October 3, 2001.
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The racial economies of criminalization, immigration, and policing in Italy.
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The false allure of security technologies.
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Defending the pueblo: indigenous identity and struggles for social justice in Guatemala, 1970 to 1980.
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Incommunicado: Dispatches from a Political Prisoner.
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Introduction: applied research and social justice.
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When the topic is racism: research and advocacy with a community coalition.
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Bowling for Columbine: critically interrogating the industry of fear.
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Applied research in the pursuit of justice: creating change in the community and the academy.
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The Civil Rights Movement and the continuing struggle for the redemption of America.
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Learning to kill by proxy: Colombian paramilitaries and the legacy of Central American death squads, contras, and civil patrols.
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Recovering, amplifying, and networking the voices of the disappeared--political prisoners on Internet media.
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Legitimacy and political violence: a Habermasian perspective.
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Political consciousness and new social movement theory: the case of Fuerza Unida.
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Patriot acts.
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Communities of interest, social justice, and congressional redistricting: the case of Louisiana's fourth district in the 1990s.
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Critical Resistance-Incite! Statement on gender violence and the prison-industrial complex.
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The imagination to listen: reflections on a decade of Zapatista struggle.
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Feminist policy scholars intervene in welfare debate.
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The reality of political prisoners in the United States: what September 11 taught us about defending them.
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A new edition of Punishment and Social Structure thirty-five years later: a timely event.
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Introduction to Marilyn Buck's "Incommunicado": Dispatches from a Political Prisoner.
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Legitimizing empire: racial and gender politics of the war on terrorism.
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In defense of good work: jobs, violence, and the ethical dimension.
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Passion through the profession: being both activist and academic.
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Patterns of exclusion: sanitizing space, criminalizing homelessness.
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Agents of Repression: withstanding the test of time.
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The cultural roots of interventionism in the U.S.
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Civics as applied sociology.
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Comparing the African American and Oromo movements in the global context.
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Mapping political violence in a Globalized world: the case of Hindu nationalism.
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Class, crime, and film noir: labor, the fugitive outsider, and the anti-authoritarian tradition.
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"Social truth" and imprisoned radical intellectuals.
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Community-building and reintegrative approaches to community policing: the case of drug control.
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Nonviolent peace activism.
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Reflections on the "policy-relevant turn" in research.
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White supremacy in the movement against the prison-industrial complex.