Hepatitis C virus genotypes in population of prisoners and intravenous drug addicts in Croatia
J. Vranes +5 more
doaj +1 more source
Making Mining Licit: Gold, Commodification, and the Everyday Performance of Law in Colombia
ABSTRACT Ethnographies of resource‐making have shown that the extraction of resource value from objects is premised on obviating the emplaced lifeworlds that surrounded objects before they traveled to consumer markets. Much of this literature looks at such supply‐chain disentanglement from the viewpoint of corporate and formal regulatory practices ...
Jesse Jonkman
wiley +1 more source
Equitable palliative care in prisons: integrating advanced care planning. [PDF]
W Tallentire J, E Tallentire R.
europepmc +1 more source
The Vicissitudes of the Nafs: Madness, Paralysis, and the Work of Transgression in Sufi Ethics
ABSTRACT How should we theorize Sufi ethics when the practice of zikr (remembrance) that leads to spiritual enlightenment (tazkiyya) might also bring one to the brink of majzubiyat (madness)? What forms of regulation or restraint are imagined or enacted by practitioners to prevent spiritual boundlessness from perverting into its underside of paralysis (
Muhammad Osama Imran
wiley +1 more source
Prevalence and Factors Associated With Hepatitis C in Danish Prisons, 2022-2024: A Multicentre Cross-Sectional Study. [PDF]
Demant J +10 more
europepmc +1 more source
What It Was Like, What Happened, What It Is Like Now: Liminal Spaces and the Pedagogy of Recovery
ABSTRACT Addiction recovery is frequently interpreted through biomedical or punitive frameworks that overlook its cultural, ritual, and pedagogical dimensions. This article offers a theoretical and interpretive analysis of peer‐led, meeting‐based recovery communities in North America, particularly those organized around mutual‐aid traditions such as ...
Patrick L. Pellett
wiley +1 more source
Mental illness, forced labour, and colonial biopower in Kabba Province of Northern Nigeria, 1900-1947. [PDF]
Itodo UF.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Purpose Fania (Fanny) Kaplan (1890–1918), who was reportedly visually impaired, confessed to the attempted assassination of Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924) in 1918 by shooting him with a pistol. The precise nature of her visual loss is unknown and raises doubts about whether she had sufficient visual function to perform the act ...
Stephen G. Schwartz +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Exploring medication safety in prisons: a scoping review. [PDF]
Alsuwat M, Shaw J, Keers RN.
europepmc +1 more source

