Results 271 to 280 of about 217,309 (335)
A Date with Justice: Mugesera's Inevitable Deportation from Canada
Charles Chernor Jalloh
openalex +1 more source
“You Are Safe Now”: Migrant Youth Constructions of Safety and Schooling in the U.S.
ABSTRACT Drawing on multisited ethnographic research with migrant families from Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras who were detained, separated, or endured prolonged transit due to US immigration policies, we articulate how ideas of “relational safety” are situated in relationships with people, place, and time. Contrasting abundant literature
Michelle J. Bellino, Gabrielle Oliveira
wiley +1 more source
Label free quantitative proteomic analysis reveals the physiological and biochemical responses of Arabidopsis thaliana to cinnamon essential oil. [PDF]
Kaab SB +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
Cuentos (In)Creíbles: Ethnography as Faithful Witnessing for Transborder Epistemologies
ABSTRACT Through the careful analysis of the border‐crossing epistemologies that are collaboratively shared and validated by a fifth grader and ethnographer in liminal classroom spaces, we identify key methodological approaches for researchers working with border crossers to document the co‐production of knowledge among researchers and participants, to
Sarah Gallo, Melissa Adams Corral
wiley +1 more source
Tropical cyclone activity predicts autumn vagrancy of Nearctic birds on a remote North Atlantic island. [PDF]
Monticelli D.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract This article explores the endogenous characteristics of commons within the frameworks of precarity and commons through the urban commons movement in 1970s South Korea. During Korea's compressed capitalist transformation, rural migrants became the urban poor, occupying the lowest position in urban labour hierarchies.
Didi Kyoung‐ae Han, Hyun Bang Shin
wiley +1 more source
Internet Memes as Drivers of Health Narratives and Infodemics: Integrative Review. [PDF]
Carmona Pestaña A +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Covert Borderwork: Managing Borders and Migration through Secrecy
Abstract In this article, we analyse secretive practices of border and migration management we term covert borderwork. Covert borderwork comprises techniques of border and migration management which adopt varying forms and temporalities of secrecy in their design, implementation, and/or performance.
Josh Watkins, Julia Van Dessel
wiley +1 more source

