Activism in Jordan
The Figure of the Migrant
Pillaged: Psychiatric Medications and Suicide Risk
Beyond Obamacare: Life, Death, and Social Policy
Sex Ed, Segregated: The Quest for Sexual Knowledge in Progressive-Era America
Understanding Mental Disorders: Your Guide to DSM-5®
Thailand’s Hidden Workforce: Burmese Migrant Women Factory Workers
Outsiders in a Promised Land: Religious Activists in Pacific Northwest History
Just Married: Same-Sex Couples, Monogamy, and the Future of Marriage
Posters for Peace: Visual Rhetoric and Civic Action
Interviewing: The Oregon Method
Interviewing is a crucial skill for journalists but the list of professions that rely on the interview to conduct business is long. . . . Interviewing: The Oregon Method collects analysis and instruction from three-dozen expert interview practitioners, scholars and teachers. Its chapters take focused looks at interview ethics, the sanctity of quotes, sourcing via social media, studies of interviewing in the virtual world, negotiating identity, and building rapport.
eGirls, eCitizens: Putting Technology, Theory and Policy into Dialogue with Girls’ and Young Women’s Voices
Drawing on the multi-disciplinary expertise of a remarkable team of leading Canadian and international scholars, as well as Canada’s foremost digital literacy organization, MediaSmarts, this collection presents the complex realities of digitized communications for girls and young women as revealed through the findings of The eGirls Project (www.egirlsproject.ca) and other important research initiatives
Rethinking Canadian Aid
Beyond Rust: Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America
Breaking Out of the Box: Adventure-Based Field Instruction, 3rd Edition
New South Asian Feminisms: Paradoxes and Possibilities
An Unlikely Union: The Love-Hate Story of New York’s Irish and Italians
Preventing Intimate Partner Violence in Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania: Summary of a Joint Workshop by the Institute of Medicine, the National Research Council, and the Ugandan National Academy of Sciences
Ethnic Cleansing and the Indian: The Crime That Should Haunt America
Latino Heartland: Of Borders and Belonging in the Midwest
African Asylum at a Crossroads
Caring Across Generations: The Linked Lives of Korean American Families
Keywords for Asian American Studies
Give a Man a Fish: Reflections on the New Politics of Distribution
Critical Issues in Child Welfare
Saloons, Prostitutes, and Temperance in Alaska Territory
Covered in Ink: Tattoos, Women and the Politics of the Body
Enabling Discovery, Development, and Translation of Treatments for Cognitive Dysfunction in Depression: Workshop Summary
Chronic Youth: Disability, Sexuality, and U.S. Media Cultures of Rehabilitation
Qualitative Research from Start to Finish, Second Edition
Advocacy in Conflict Critical Perspectives on Transnational Activism
Depressive Disorders: DSM-5® Selections
Geisha of a Different Kind: Race and Sexuality in Gaysian America
Unlikely Communities: Breaking the Alienation of Incarceration
12 Tips for Caring for Someone with Alzheimer’s Disease
Whose Harlem Is This, Anyway? Community Politics and Grassroots Activism during the New Negro Era
The Practice of Health Program Evaluation, 2nd Ed
Participatory Research with Children and Young People
Out of Sight
Decolonizing Solidarity Dilemmas and Directions for Supporters of Indigenous Struggles
Advocacy Practice For Social Justice
Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States
Convict Voices: Women, Class, and Writing about Prison in Nineteenth-Century England
Not a Catholic Nation: The Ku Klux Klan Confronts New England
During the 1920s the Ku Klux Klan experienced a remarkable resurgence, drawing millions of American men and women into its ranks. In Not a Catholic Nation, Mark Paul Richard examines the KKK’s largely ignored growth in the six states of New England—Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont—and details the reactions of the region’s Catholic population, the Klan’s primary targets.
Irish Catholic identities
Book aims to debunk myth of absent Black fathers
Kent State
On May 4, 1970, National Guard troops opened fire on unarmed antiwar protesters at Kent State University in Ohio, killing four students and wounding nine others, including the author of this book. The shootings shocked the American public and triggered a nationwide wave of campus strikes and protests. To many at the time, Kent State seemed an unlikely site for the bloodiest confrontation in a decade of campus unrest—a sprawling public university in the American heartland, far from the coastal epicenters of political and social change.