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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: June 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: June 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is A Theory of African American Offending: Race, Racism, and Crime by James D. Unnever and Shaun L. Gabbidon.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: April 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: April 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is America's Original Sin: Racism, White Privilege and the Bridge to a New America by Jim Wallis.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: March 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: March 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is Killing with Prejudice: Institutionalized Racism in American Capital Punishment by RJ Maratea.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: February 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: February 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is Policing Black Bodies: How Black lives are surveilled and how to work for change by Angela J. Hattery and Earl Smith.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: January 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: January 2021, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is Biased: Uncovering the Hidden Prejudice That Shapes What We See, Think, and Do by Jennifer Eberhardt.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: December 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: December 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is Black Bodies, White Gazes: The Continuing Significance of Race in America by George Yancy.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: November 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: November 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is The Truly Disadvantaged: The Inner City, The Underclass, and Public Policy by William Julius Wilson.
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: October 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: October 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is American Apartheid by Douglas S. Massey & Nancy A. Denton
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: September 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Racism And Criminal Justice Book Discussion: September 2020, Central Washington University, Roger Schaefer
Brooks Library Events
Monthy book discusion on racism and criminal justice. The book for this month is Reading Urban Uprising by R. Gooding-Williams
Embodying The Hyphen: An Ethnography On Korean Adoptees, Barbara Hammersberg
Embodying The Hyphen: An Ethnography On Korean Adoptees, Barbara Hammersberg
All Master's Theses
An estimated 150, 000 Korean children have grown up in culturally and racially different homes in the United States and other countries since the increase of transnational adoption in 1953. Due to the large number of Korean adoptees living in the U.S. the potential for ethnographic research is profound. Past studies have favored adoptive parents’ perspectives over that of Korean adoptees. This study aims to address that limitation in hopes of contributing to the growing trend of Korean- adoption ethnographic research led by Korean adoptees. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with six Korean-American adoptees living in the Seattle metropolitan area in …
"Return To Sender": Confronting Lynching And Our Haunted Landscapes, Mark J. Auslander
"Return To Sender": Confronting Lynching And Our Haunted Landscapes, Mark J. Auslander
All Faculty Scholarship for the College of the Sciences
This article considers a set of controversial images, primarily taken between 1880 and 1920, depicting lynchings and racial violence. Emory University has made these images publicly available, prompting some to worry that the collection will re-inflict trauma on those who suffered under racism in the United States. The articles asks, in part: if new initiatives in museums or other public spaces could help Americans to collectively confront their inner demons and move beyond the timeless repetition of trauma.
The article is available from Southern Changes: The Journal of the Southern Regional Council, 1978-2003.