A feminist analysis of women's performance and image-enhancing drug use: epistemic injustice and resources for rethinking enhancement harms. [PDF]
Fomiatti R, Stanton K.
europepmc +1 more source
Introduction: Black Reconstruction After 90 Years
ABSTRACT In 1935, W. E. B. Du Bois published one of the most important pieces of historical scholarship from the twentieth century, Black Reconstruction in America: An Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860–1880.
Ali Meghji, José Itzigsohn
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Zootherapy in Asia through the Lens of Museums of Traditional Medicine. [PDF]
Jarosz KR.
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The Scholar Imprisoned: Young‐Bok Shin's Decolonial Thought Against (Sub) Imperialisms in East Asia
ABSTRACT This article reads Young‐Bok Shin (1941–2016) as a decolonial thinker who theorized transformative worldmaking from the standpoint of the oppressed, rooted in the historical experiences of East Asia. Against the (sub)imperial “logic of sameness” that structures colonial modernity in his social world, Shin advances gongbu (studying) as a ...
Veda Hyunjin Kim
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Using feminist methodologies to explore female genital mutilation/cutting and child marriage in low- and middle-income contexts. [PDF]
Jones N, Pincock K, Alheiwidi S.
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Anthropologists Against Sovereignty
Nations and Nationalism, EarlyView.
Chris Hann
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A gentrification stage‐model for London? Through the ‘looking Glass’ of Kensington
Short Abstract Despite the term ‘gentrification’ being coined in London by the British sociologist Ruth Glass, there has not been an attempt to develop a stage model of gentrification for London, nor any up‐to‐date discussion of the different waves of gentrification there in one academic paper or book.
Loretta Lees, Sharda Rozena
wiley +1 more source
Crossroads of consciousness: whose decolonization is it in Nigeria? [PDF]
Olaniyan YD, Martins MO.
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Hide and rule: Accumulation by disappearance and necro‐periurbanisation in Brazil
Short Abstract This paper examines how peri‐urban spaces are governed through concealment and obfuscation. Focusing on the Baixada Fluminense near Rio de Janeiro, it connects land fraud (‘grilagem’) to the obfuscation of violence, proposing the concept of ‘accumulation by disappearance’.
Jan Simon Hutta
wiley +1 more source

