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Interview with Vietnamese Dissident Journalist and Author Huy Đức

Nov 28 2024
On June 1, 2024, Trương Huy San (Huy Đức) was arrested ​for violating Article 331—an overly broad statute frequently used to silence peaceful critics of the Vietnamese government.
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A Q&A with CPCS Associate Editor Paulina Pospieszna

Nov 26 2024
It’s a crucial time to be researching these topics, and I look forward to contributing to the understanding of how deliberative democracy can shape the region’s future.
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Q&A with Camilo Sanz, author of "Cancer Intersections"

Nov 25 2024
Author Camilo Sanz discusses his book "Cancer Intersections," on access to neoliberal, market-based oncological treatments in Colombia, a country where all patients are legally guaranteed access to medical services.
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A Late Antiquity on its Own Terms: New Material Perspectives on Late Antique Urbanism

Nov 21 2024
A special issue of "Studies in Late Antiquity" explores debates about urban development in the Mediterranean from the late third to seventh century.
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"Beyond the Binary" reveals early Muslim jurists' ideas of gender

Nov 20 2024
Read an excerpt from "Beyond the Binary," an exploration of early Hanafi legal thought that reveals early Muslim jurists imagined a world built not on a binary distinction between male and female but on multiple intersecting hierarchies of gender, age, enslavement, lineage, class, and other social roles.
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Free trade’s legacy of grief for families of the disappeared in Mexico

Nov 11 2024
In Mexico today, thousands of families are searching for loved ones who have disappeared amid the violence associated with “the war on drugs.” Trade agreements like NAFTA created conditions that allowed criminal organizations to thrive—and ordinary people have paid the price.
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Building Farming Resilience with Climate-Smart Intervention

Nov 08 2024
Rural communities and livelihoods can be transformed into more resilient entities by focusing on knowledge transfer, better resource management, and livelihood diversification.
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Q&A with Joe William Trotter, Jr., author of "Building the Black City"

Nov 08 2024
In "Building the Black City," Joe William Trotter, Jr., traces the growth of Black cities and political power from the preindustrial era to the present.
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Q&A with Joy H. Calico and Daniel K. L. Chua, series editors of “California Studies in Global Musicology”

Nov 08 2024
We’re thrilled to announce our new California Studies in Global Musicology series, led by series editors Joy H. Calico and Daniel K. L. Chua! In this interview, Calico and Chua introduce the series, describe the types of projects they’re looking for, and provide advice for scholars hoping to submit to the series.
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Prisons are Still Making COVID-19 Era Mistakes

Nov 07 2024
Unless considerable prisons reforms are made now—like an aggressive 50% reduction in prison population—the next epidemic will provoke calamities similar to COVID-19.
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