Women Rising: In and Beyond the Arab Spring
The Violence of Work: New Essays in Canadian and U.S. Labour History
Sharing Clinical Trial Data: Reflecting Back and Looking Ahead – A Workshop
Beyond Homophobia: Centring LGBTQ Experiences in the Anglophone Caribbean
Evaluating Police Uses of Force
Social Media and Social Work: Implications and Opportunities for Practice
Camouflaged Aggression in Organizations
Allies and Obstacles: Disability Activism and Parents of Children with Disabilities
Cops, Cameras, and Crisis: The Potential and the Perils of Police Body-Worn Cameras
Storytelling in Queer Appalachia: Imagining and Writing the Unspeakable Other
A Recipe for Gentrification: Food, Power, and Resistance in the City
Trad Nation: Gender, Sexuality, and Race in Irish Traditional Music
Gender Variances and Sexual Diversity in the Caribbean: Perspectives, Histories, Experiences
Greening the Black Urban Regime: The Culture and Commerce of Sustainability in Detroit
Transforming Politics, Transforming America: The Political and Civic Incorporation of Immigrants in the United States
What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About #MeToo: Essays on Sex, Authority and the Mess of Life
Do More Than No Harm: On Judith Butler’s “The Force of Nonviolence”
Student Research for Community Change: Tools to Develop Ethical Thinking and Analytic Problem Solving
Closing the Enforcement Gap: Improving Employment Standards Protections for People in Precarious Jobs
The nature of employment is changing: low wage jobs are increasingly common, fewer workers belong to unions, and workplaces are being transformed through the growth of contracting-out, franchising, and extended supply chains. Closing the Enforcement Gap offers a comprehensive analysis of the enforcement of employment standards in Ontario.
Canadian Landmark Cases in Forensic Mental Health
Understanding School Segregation: Patterns, Causes and Consequences of Spatial Inequalities in Education
Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-Made World
Creating Spaces of Engagement: Policy Justice and the Practical Craft of Deliberative Democracy
Necessary but Not Sufficient: Improving Community Living for Youth after Residential Mental Health Programs
Queering Family Trees: Race, Reproductive Justice, and Lesbian Motherhood
Measuring Race: Why Disaggregating Data Matters for Addressing Educational Inequality
Arab American Women: Representation and Refusal
Black Racialization and Resistance at an Elite University
Under the Knife: Cosmetic Surgery, Boundary Work, and the Pursuit of the Natural Fake
Campus Uprisings: How Student Activists and Collegiate Leaders Resist Racism and Create Hope
Organizing While Undocumented: Immigrant Youth’s Political Activism under the Law
Applying Big Data to Address the Social Determinants of Health in Oncology: Proceedings of a Workshop
Textbook of Anxiety Trauma and OCD-Related Disorders Third Edition
13 of the Most Anticipated Books by Indigenous Authors For the Second Half of 2020
Decision Making in Child and Family Social Work: Perspectives on Children’s Participation
There is increasing pressure to involve children and young people in the decisions that affect them. Presenting new research on the extent to which parents and children participate in decision making when childcare social workers are involved, particularly in child protection conferences and Child in Care reviews, Diaz argues for a radical shift in existing practices.
Advancing Effective Obesity Communications: Proceedings of a Workshop
The Torture Letters: Reckoning with Police Violence
Torture is an open secret in Chicago. Nobody in power wants to acknowledge this grim reality, but everyone knows it happens—and that the torturers are the police. Three to five new claims are submitted to the Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission of Illinois each week. Four hundred cases are currently pending investigation. Between 1972 and 1991, at least 125 black suspects were tortured by Chicago police officers working under former Police Commander Jon Burge. As the more recent revelations from the Homan Square “black site” show, that brutal period is far from a historical anomaly. For more than fifty years, police officers who took an oath to protect and serve have instead beaten, electrocuted, suffocated, and raped hundreds—perhaps thousands—of Chicago residents.
The Craft of Qualitative Research: A Handbook
Remote and Rural Dementia Care: Policy, Research and Practice
Why You Should Be a Socialist
Biased
Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer
There has been an enormous upward redistribution of income in the United States in the last four decades. In his most recent book, Baker shows that this upward redistribution was not the result of globalization and the natural workings of the market. Rather it was the result of conscious policies that were designed to put downward pressure on the wages of ordinary workers while protecting and enhancing the incomes of those at the top.
Housing Shock: The Irish Housing Crisis and How to Solve It
This Is All I Got: A New Mother’s Search for Home
Black Mental Health: Patients, Providers, and Systems
Creating Indigenous Property: Power, Rights, and Relationships
While colonial imposition of the Canadian legal order has undermined Indigenous law, creating gaps and sometimes distortions, Indigenous peoples have taken up the challenge of rebuilding their laws, governance, and economies. Indigenous conceptions of land and property are central to this project.
Radical Hope: Poverty-Aware Practice for Social Work
The author defines the core components of the Poverty-Aware Paradigm, explicates its embeddedness in key theories in poverty, critical social work and psychoanalysis, and links it to diverse facets of social work practice.
Who Killed Berta Cáceres? Dams, Death Squads, and an Indigenous Defender’s Battle for the Planet
The first time Honduran indigenous leader Berta Cáceres met the journalist Nina Lakhani, Cáceres said, ‘The army has an assassination list with my name at the top. I want to live, but in this country there is total impunity. When they want to kill me, they will do it.’ In 2015, Cáceres won the Goldman Prize, the world’s most prestigious environmental award, for leading a campaign to stop construction of an internationally funded hydroelectric dam on a river sacred to her Lenca people. Less than a year later she was dead.