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Trinity college publications . Political and social science series
No. 1-5 lack sub-title. ; No more published? ; Mode of access: Internet.
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The Unbribable Witness: Image, Word, and Testimony of Crimes against Humanity in Mark Twain's King Leopold's Soliloquy (1905)
In: Genocide studies and prevention: an international journal ; official journal of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, IAGS, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 84-106
ISSN: 1911-9933
Film Review: L'Insulte (The Insult)
In: Genocide studies and prevention: an international journal ; official journal of the International Association of Genocide Scholars, IAGS, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 203-205
ISSN: 1911-9933
Photo elicitation: origins, development, topics and forms
In: Sociologičeskij žurnal: Sociological journal, Band 0, Heft 2, S. 16-42
ISSN: 1684-1581
Queer in translation: sexual politics under neoliberal Islam
In: Perverse modernities
"During the 2000s Turkey experienced both the rise of robust and varied LGBT movements across the country, as well as the rise to power of the "moderate Islamist" Justice and Development Party (AKP). Queer in Translation offers an ethnography of sexual politics under Turkey's AKP regime that analyzes the travel and translation of modern sexual political vocabulary during the conditions of neoliberal Islam"--
Theft is property!: dispossession & critical theory
In: Radical Américas
Drawing on Indigenous peoples' struggles against settler colonialism, Theft Is Property! reconstructs the concept of dispossession as a means of explaining how shifting configurations of law, property, race, and rights have functioned as modes of governance, both historically and in the present. Through close analysis of arguments by Indigenous scholars and activists from the nineteenth century to the present, Robert Nichols argues that dispossession has come to name a unique recursive process whereby systematic theft is the mechanism by which property relations are generated. In so doing, Nichols also brings long-standing debates in anarchist, Black radical, feminist, Marxist, and postcolonial thought into direct conversation with the frequently overlooked intellectual contributions of Indigenous peoples.