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Policing Victimhood
  • Language: en

Policing Victimhood

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2023
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Since the turn of the 20th century, human trafficking has animated public discourses, policy debates, and moral panics in the United States. Though some nuances of these conversations have shifted, the role of the criminal legal system (police officers, investigators, lawyers, and connected service providers) in anti-trafficking interventions has remained firmly in place. Policing Victimhood explores how frontline workers in direct contact with vulnerable, exploited, and trafficked persons--however those groups are defined at personal, organizational, or legal levels--defer to the tools of the carceral state and ideologies of punishment when navigating their clients' needs. In Policing Victi...

Policing Victimhood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 335

Policing Victimhood

Since the turn of the twentieth century, human trafficking has animated public discourses, policy debates, and moral panics in the United States. Though some nuances of these conversations have shifted, the role of the criminal legal system (police officers, investigators, lawyers, and connected service providers) in anti-trafficking interventions has remained firmly in place. Policing Victimhood explores how frontline workers in direct contact with vulnerable, exploited, and trafficked persons—however those groups are defined at personal, organizational, or legal levels—defer to the tools of the carceral state and ideologies of punishment when navigating their clients’ needs. In Polic...

Researching Gender-Based Violence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 216

Researching Gender-Based Violence

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2022-08-02
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  • Publisher: NYU Press

"This book is a interdisciplinary collection of critical, feminist methodological reflections on interpersonal, gender violence that argues for an embodied knowledge and practice in research and academia"--

Michiganensian
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 632

Michiganensian

None

Cops, Teachers, Counselors
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 305

Cops, Teachers, Counselors

The new edition of Cops, Teachers, Counselors furthers the exploration of forces that shape the contours of frontline work. This line of inquiry is at the heart of street-level bureaucracy research, a field of study cutting across disciplines, including public administration, political science, social work, law and society, education, and criminal justice. The oft-cited 2003 edition pioneered a qualitative method of inquiry using workers’ own voices and storytelling about fairness in the delivery of services. This NSF-supported field research reveals the ways workers engage in moral judgments, more than implementing laws and policies, to account for their decisions and actions. The new edi...

No Real Choice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 167

No Real Choice

In the United States, the “right to choose” an abortion is the law of the land. But what if a woman continues her pregnancy because she didn’t really have a choice? What if state laws, federal policies, stigma, and a host of other obstacles push that choice out of her reach? Based on candid, in-depth interviews with women who considered but did not obtain an abortion, No Real Choice punctures the myth that American women have full autonomy over their reproductive choices. Focusing on the experiences of a predominantly Black and low-income group of women, sociologist Katrina Kimport finds that structural, cultural, and experiential factors can make choosing abortion impossible–especia...

Contained Empowerment and the Liminal Nature of Feminisms and Activisms
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 373

Contained Empowerment and the Liminal Nature of Feminisms and Activisms

Contained Empowerment and the Liminal Nature of Feminisms and Activisms examines the processes by which activist successes are limited and outlines a theoretical framing of the liminal and temporal limits to social justice efforts as “contained empowerment.” With a focused lens on the third wave and contemporary forms of feminism, the author investigates feminist activity from the early 1990s through responses and reactions to the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022 and contrasts these efforts with anti-feminist, white supremacist, and other structural normalizing efforts designed to limit and repress women's, gendered, and reproductive rights. This book includes analyses of celebrity activism, girl power, transnational feminist NGOs, digital feminisms, and the feminist mimicry applied by practitioners of neo-liberal and anti-feminism. Victoria A. Newsom concludes that the contained nature of feminist empowerment illustrates how activists must engage directly with intersectional challenges and address the multiplicities of structural oppressions in order to breach containment.

The Michigan Alumnus
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 740

The Michigan Alumnus

In volumes1-8: the final number consists of the Commencement annual.

Criminology Explains Human Trafficking
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 199

Criminology Explains Human Trafficking

"This book will provide a comprehensive and accessible overview of criminological theory as it applies to the topic of human trafficking. This book uses real-life applications and case studies to highlight the links between theory, research, and policy. This includes applying a diverse range of criminological theory to understand different forms of trafficking, victims versus offenders, the role of migration and globalization, domestic and international law, anti-trafficking efforts, and more. Through the use of discussion questions, activities, and policy boxes, readers will gain a deeper understanding of theory as it applies to the field of human trafficking, including how various levels of analysis from the local to the global are often linked"--

Race and Police
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 190

Race and Police

In the United States, race and police were founded along with a capitalist economy dependent on the enslavement of workers of African descent. Race and Police builds a critical theory of American policing by analyzing a heterodox history of policing, drawn from the historiography of slavery and slave patrols. Beginning by tracing the historical origins of the police mandate in British colonial America, the book shows that the peculiar institution of racialized chattel slavery originated along with a novel, binary conception of race. On one side, for the first time Europeans from various nationalities were united in a single racial category. Inclusion in this category was necessary for citize...