Social Justice - 2008
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The intersections of the economic and cultural in U.S. labor's pro-migrant politics.
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Continuing significance of the model minority myth: the second generation.
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The Bush administration, debt relief, and the war on terror: reforming the international development system as part of the neoconservative project.
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Race, place, space, and political development: Japanese-American radicalism in the "pre-movement" 1960s.
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Building justice after war: the use of multiple post-conflict justice mechanisms.
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Strong-arming exploitable labor: the state and immigrant workers in the Post-Katrina Gulf Coast.
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Shared social space and strategies to find work: an exploratory study of Mexican day laborers in Freehold, N.J.
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Sanctions as everyday resistance to welfare reform.
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Battling for human rights and social justice: a Latina/o critical race media analysis of Latina/o student youth activism in the wake of 2006 anti-immigrant sentiment.
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Whose backyard? Boundary making in NIMBY opposition to immigrant services.
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Missing in action: "framing" race on prime-time television.
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Spaces of mobilization: the Asian American/Pacific Islander struggle for social justice.
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Overview: war, crisis, and transition.
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From traitor to collaborator: Nepali social action in the context of immigration, transnationalism, and diaspora.
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Lessons of belonging and citizenship among Hijas/os de Inmigrantes Mexicanos.
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Wearing "our sword": post-September 11 activism among South Asian Muslim women student organizations in New York.
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Toxic cities: globalizing the problem of waste.
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Immigration on the public mind: immigration reform in the Obama administration.
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Mexican border crossers: the Mexican body in immigration discourse.
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Reconciling research, rallies, and citizenship: reflections on youth-led diversity workshops and intercultural alliances.
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Citizenship normalizing and white preservice social studies teachers.
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Immigrants, racial citizens, and the (multi)cultural politics of neoliberal Los Angeles.
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Changing neighborhood: ethnic enclaves and the struggle for social justice.
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Transnational and transgenerational Latina/o cultural citizenship among kindergarteners, their parents, and university students in Utah.
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"Serve the people and you help yourself": Japanese-American anti-drug organizing in Los Angeles, 1969 to 1972.
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Moral responsibility in a time of war.
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Paul T. Takagi honored.
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Decolonizing resistance, challenging colonial states.
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Review of Darius Rejali's Torture and Democracy.
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The Rwandan genocide: international finance policies and human rights.
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Overview: migrant labor and contested public space.
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The politics of race and education: second-generation Laotian women campaign for improved educational services.