Justice Printable Coupons Biography
Sexuality, Criminalization, and Social Control (Vol. 37, No. 1) concentrates on the 30-year strategy of increasingly managing social problems through penal measures. To date, scholars have critically considered race in studies of criminalization, examining the severe and disproportionate effects on low-income communities and communities of color. They have also analyzed the gendered dynamics of incarceration. This special issue builds upon existing scholarship, by investigating multiple relationships between sexuality, criminalization, and social control. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online.
Activist Scholarship: Possibilities and Constraints of Participatory Action Research (Vol. 36, No. 4) reflects the research and voices of scholars concerned with power and representation in academic scholarship. Contributors link the idea of democracy to research and scholarship and explore whether it is possible to authentically bridge the gap between the community and the academy. The issue addresses the possibilities and constraints for activist scholarship and adds to the growing body of work that exemplifies participatory action research as a methodology, ideology, and commitment. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now. Also of interest is Applied Research and Social Justice (Vol. 30, No. 4). See below.Resisting State Criminality (Vol. 36, No. 3) focuses on the role of resistance in efforts to control or constrain the criminality of states. It examines some of the most egregious and systemic crimes, from genocide, mass murder, and environmental catastrophes, to the ongoing bombing of civilians. Contributors explore the most useful mechanisms available for reversing this pattern of impunity. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
Policing, Detention, Deportation, and Resistance (Vol. 36, No. 2) demonstrates that imprisonment, including immigrant detention, is essential to the U.S. drive to preserve geopolitical dominance. It examines activist efforts to resist this trend and urges the building of bridges between prison abolition and immigrant justice work. Read the "Introduction," see the article abstracts, or order the issue online now.
Justice Printable Coupons
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