This post is part of a series on the possible impacts of Trump’s election on a variety of social justice issues. Click here to read more. • • • by Clifford Welch* The new year had barely begun when the sting of a yet-to-be-installed … Continue reading →
by Tony Platt* Anniversaries provide many opportunities for revisionist and wishful thinking about the past. The 50th anniversary of the Kerner Report is no exception. The new mythology remakes the Kerner Commission as a bastion of liberal democracy and enlightened … Continue reading →
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2009: Issues 115-118 (Vol. 36) Vol. 36: 1 Policing Protest and Youth Vol. 36: 2 Policing, Detention, Deportation, and Resistance Vol. 36: 3 Resisting State Criminality Vol. 36: 4 Activist Scholarship: Possibilities and Constraints of Participatory Action Research 2008: Issues 111-114 (Vol. 35) Vol. … Continue reading →
by Tony Platt* I have been teaching about the history of inequalities in the United States for more than forty years. I started off using oral histories in my curriculum when it was against the grain to do so. I … Continue reading →
2009: Issues 115-118 (Vol. 36) Vol. 36: 1 Policing Protest and Youth Vol. 36: 2 Policing, Detention, Deportation, and Resistance Vol. 36: 3 Resisting State Criminality Vol. 36: 4 Activist Scholarship: Possibilities and Constraints of Participatory Action Research 2008: Issues … Continue reading →
by Bianca Fileborn & Rachel Loney-Howes* The allegations of sexual harassment and sexual assault perpetrated by Harvey Weinstein led to a powerful and widespread social media campaign, with Twitter and Facebook feeds flooded with the hashtag #MeToo. Within 24 hours, … Continue reading →
1989: Issues 35-38 (Vol. 16) Vol. 16: 1 Human Rights and Peoples’ Rights: Views from North and South Vol. 16: 2 Varieties of State and Corporate Crime Vol. 16: 3 The Politics of Empowerment in Australia Vol. 16: 4 Racism, … Continue reading →
by Peter Baird* Editor’s note: As a complement to the following blog, see the in-depth analysis of neoliberal economic change and authoritarianism in Mexico by Job Hernández Rodríguez in “Latin America Revisited,” Vol. 40-4 of Social Justice. During September 1–5, 2014, … Continue reading →
This post is part of a series on the possible impacts of Trump’s election on a variety of social justice issues. Click here to read more. • • • by Michelle Brown* In the days to come under the Trump presidency, … Continue reading →