Justice Youtube Biography
College ReadersWe are now offering custom classrom readers in pdf format upon request. For students in Professor Arriaza's course, please order here.Recent IssuesEducation, Militarism, and Community (Vol. 38, No. 3) revolves around prominent influences on public education, including corporatization, militarism, and communities mobilizing in defense of their own interests. Read the Introduction, see the article abstracts, or order the issue online.Policing the Crisis: Policing in Crisis (Vol. 38, Nos. 1-2), edited by Kendra Briken and Volker Eick, discusses recent policing and security strategies, civil rights, and crime policy within the framework of the current financial and economic crisis. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.Community Accountability: Emerging Movements to Transform Violence (Vol. 37, No. 4) is edited by Ana Clarissa Rojas Durazo, Alisa Bierria, and Mimi Kim, who have extensive experience with grass-roots organizations, antiviolence activism within communities of color, and have been participants in debates about prisons and police responses to violence. Their feminist praxis as scholar/activists is reflected in the scope and breadth of this volume. Transdisciplinary and transnational in scope, contributors maintain high standards of political ethics, while maintaining a noteworthy commitment to mobilizing for real change. This special issue delivers on all essential dimensions of the debate on intimate violence. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
Imperial Obama: A Kinder, Gentler Empire? (Vol. 37, Nos. 2-3), edited by Robert P. Weiss and Gregory Shank, assesses "Obama's Wars," particularly in Afghanistan and north Africa, and the just war theory and counterterrorism doctrine used to justify them. There is detailed coverage of war crimes and violations of international law. The second set of articles examines the role of the military, private contractors, and psychologists and anthropologists in "enhanced interrogation," contributing to America's descent into torture under the cover of antiterrorism and counterinsurgency. The collection has been described as a significant contribution to the literature on these timely, difficult, and pressing issues. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
College ReadersWe are now offering custom classrom readers in pdf format upon request. For students in Professor Arriaza's course, please order here.Recent IssuesEducation, Militarism, and Community (Vol. 38, No. 3) revolves around prominent influences on public education, including corporatization, militarism, and communities mobilizing in defense of their own interests. Read the Introduction, see the article abstracts, or order the issue online.Policing the Crisis: Policing in Crisis (Vol. 38, Nos. 1-2), edited by Kendra Briken and Volker Eick, discusses recent policing and security strategies, civil rights, and crime policy within the framework of the current financial and economic crisis. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.Community Accountability: Emerging Movements to Transform Violence (Vol. 37, No. 4) is edited by Ana Clarissa Rojas Durazo, Alisa Bierria, and Mimi Kim, who have extensive experience with grass-roots organizations, antiviolence activism within communities of color, and have been participants in debates about prisons and police responses to violence. Their feminist praxis as scholar/activists is reflected in the scope and breadth of this volume. Transdisciplinary and transnational in scope, contributors maintain high standards of political ethics, while maintaining a noteworthy commitment to mobilizing for real change. This special issue delivers on all essential dimensions of the debate on intimate violence. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
Imperial Obama: A Kinder, Gentler Empire? (Vol. 37, Nos. 2-3), edited by Robert P. Weiss and Gregory Shank, assesses "Obama's Wars," particularly in Afghanistan and north Africa, and the just war theory and counterterrorism doctrine used to justify them. There is detailed coverage of war crimes and violations of international law. The second set of articles examines the role of the military, private contractors, and psychologists and anthropologists in "enhanced interrogation," contributing to America's descent into torture under the cover of antiterrorism and counterinsurgency. The collection has been described as a significant contribution to the literature on these timely, difficult, and pressing issues. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
Justice Youtube
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