Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Justice Shop




Justice Shop Biography
Our quarterly journal online makes available are all of our editorials and tables of contents dating back to 1974. There is also supplemental material, such as recent recognition of our colleague, Paul Takagi, including an archive of his work. His latest book is also available. See Tony Platt's commentary on the Pelican Bay hunger strike and his testimony before the California Senate Judiciary Committee relative to historical lessons to be drawn from the eugenics movement in the United States and Europe. For teachers, we have compiled the classroom materials that have appeared in our pages and added some new ones.
We hope you will subscribe to the print version, and we offer first-time online visitors a discount. Many of our articles dating to 1986 are available in Adobe Acrobat (pdf) format upon request for $4.00 each as e-mail attachments. This way, you can put together collections of articles specific to your research, using our subject index; this is the only way to obtain articles from out-of-print issues. (Publishers and copy services wishing to reprint or reproduce this material in any form must contact Social Justice for permissions instructions.)A strength of our journal is that most issues are thematic, developed by guest editors who are intimately involved with the topic. Over the years, we have published volumes on "globalization," on threats to global security, on violence in its many forms, on gender and ethnicity, on immigration, on civil and human rights, on social welfare and educational policy, on crime, policing, and the related punishing institutions, and on harms related to the environment.Global themes: Before War, Crisis, and Transition (Vol. 35, No. 3), our Resisting Militarism and Globalized Punishment (Vol. 31, Nos. 1-2) examined the global structures that reproduce war, conflict, and controlling institutions such as prisons. It develops themes found in in Neoliberalism, Militarism, and Armed Conflict (Vol. 27, No. 4, Gwyn Kirk and Margo Okazawa-Rey, eds.), Criminal Justice and Globalization at the New Millennium (Vol. 27, No. 2, Robert Weiss, ed.), as well as two issues edited by Robert Gould and Pat Sutton, Global Threats to Security (Vol. 29, No. 3) and Public Health in the 1990s: In the Shadow of Global Transformation and Militarism (Vol. 22, No. 4). Our Intersection of Ideologies of Violence (Vol. 30, No. 3) explains violence at the local and global levels, and Race, Security, and Social Movements (Vol. 30, No. 1) offers an analysis of the consequences of September 11. Lipschutz and Jonas' Beyond the Neoliberal Peace: From Conflict Resolution to Social Reconciliation (Vol. 25, No. 4) reinforces the utility of multilateralism and diplomacy in peacemaking. Perspectives on sustaining a livable planet are offered by Globalization and Environmental Harm (Vol. 29, Nos. 1-2), Children and the Environment (Vol. 24, No. 3), and Environmental Victims (Vol. 23, No. 4).
Domestic policy is the focus of two issues edited by Gwendolyn Mink, Disdained Mothers and Despised Others: The Politics and Impact of Welfare Reform (Vol. 25, No. 1) and Women and Welfare Reform (Vol. 21, No. 1). Follow-up issues on the impact of welfare reform include Welfare and Punishment in the Bush Era (Vol. 28, No. 1) and In the Aftermath of Welfare "Reform" (Vol. 28, No. 4). Jose Palafox's volume, Gatekeeper's State: Immigration and Boundary Policing in an Era of Globalization (Vol. 28, No.2), and our out-of-print Immigration: A Civil Rights Issue for the Americas in the 21st Century (Vol. 23, No. 3) show the impact of domestic policy on our hemisphere. Our commitment to hemispheric themes is shown in Shadows of State Terrorism: Impunity in Latin America (Vol. 26, No. 4).
Recently Published:Social Justice for Workers in the Global Economy (Vol. 31, No. 3), edited by Adalberto Aguirre, Jr., and Ellen Reese.Emerging Imaginaries of Regulation, Control, and Oppression (Vol. 32, No. 1), edited by Ronnie Lippens and Tony Kearon.The Many Faces of Violence (Vol. 32, No. 2), contains Tony Platt's article on activism against the legacy of eugenics in the U.S. and an appraisal of international crimes committed by the U.S. in the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Order it online now.
Race, Racism, and Empire (Vol. 32, No. 4), focuses primarily on currents in Canadian critical race scholarship regarding the relationship between race, racism, anti-racism and empire. The issue explores transnational processes in the construction of "race" and racism and reflects on the re-articulation of "race" and racism in terms of local and transnational forces. Articles point to Canada’s involvement in post-September 11 militarization, framed in terms of a "clash of civilizations." Order it online now.
Download the Social Justice brochure, price list and order form, list of issues by year, or Notice to Contributors.College ReadersWe are now offering custom classrom readers in pdf format upon request. For students in Professor Arriaza's course, please order here.

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