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  • Title: Towards an Internormative Hermeneutics for Social Justice

    Towards an Internormative Hermeneutics for Social Justice

    Principles of Justice and Recognition in John Rawls and Axel Honneth
    by Christiana Idika (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Thesis
  • Title: Social Justice and Democracy

    Social Justice and Democracy

    The Relevance of Rawl’s Conception of Justice in Africa
    by Basile Ekanga (Author)
    ©2005 Thesis
  • Title: The False Promises of Constructivist Theories of Learning

    The False Promises of Constructivist Theories of Learning

    A Global and Ecological Critique
    by C. A. Bowers (Author)
    ©2005 Textbook
  • Title: Critical Theory and Pedagogy

    Critical Theory and Pedagogy

    Towards the Reconstruction of Education
    by Douglas Kellner (Author) 2022
    ©2023 Textbook
  • Title: Plato's ideal of the Common Good

    Plato's ideal of the Common Good

    Anatomy of a concept of timeless significance
    by Harald Haarmann (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: The Protection of Fundamental Rights in the Legal Order of the European Union

    The Protection of Fundamental Rights in the Legal Order of the European Union

    With Emphasis on the Institutional Protection of those Rights
    by Manfred A. Dauses (Author)
    ©2010 Others
  • Title: Social Justice Journalism

    Social Justice Journalism

    A Cultural History of Social Movement Media from Abolition to #womensmarch
    by Linda J. Lumsden (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Textbook
  • Title: Narratives of Social Justice Teaching

    Narratives of Social Justice Teaching

    How English Teachers Negotiate Theory and Practice Between Preservice and Inservice Spaces
    by sj Miller (Author) Laura Bolf Beliveau (Author) Peggy Rice (Author) David Kirkland (Author)
    ©2008 Textbook
  • Title: Critical Aesthetic Pedagogy

    Critical Aesthetic Pedagogy

    Toward a Theory of Self and Social Empowerment
    by Yolanda Medina (Author)
    ©2012 Textbook
  • Title: Media and Transnational Climate Justice

    Media and Transnational Climate Justice

    Indigenous Activism and Climate Politics
    by Anna Roosvall (Author) Matthew Tegelberg (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Textbook
  • Title: From Christ’s Death to Jesus’ Life

    From Christ’s Death to Jesus’ Life

    A Critical Reinterpretation of Prevailing Theories of the Cross- Translated by Joyce J. Michael
    by Jakub S. Trojan (Author) 2012
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: Mediating the World in the Novels of Iain Banks

    Mediating the World in the Novels of Iain Banks

    The Paradigms of Fiction
    by Katarzyna Pisarska (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: The U.S. Supreme Court and the Judicial Review of Congress

    The U.S. Supreme Court and the Judicial Review of Congress

    Two Hundred Years in the Exercise of the Court’s Most Potent Power
    by Linda Camp Keith (Author)
    ©2008 Textbook
  • Title: Studying – A Way Towards Justice? A Response to Special Issue: Answering the Question: What Is Studying? PTHE 3(3)
  • Title: Multicentrism as an Emerging Paradigm in Legal Theory

    Multicentrism as an Emerging Paradigm in Legal Theory

    by Marek Zirk-Sadowski (Volume editor) Mariusz Jerzy Golecki (Volume editor) Bartosz Adam Wojciechowski (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Edited Collection
  • Title: The Letter of the Law: Literature, Justice and the Other

    The Letter of the Law: Literature, Justice and the Other

    by Stamatina Dimakopoulou (Volume editor) Christina Dokou (Volume editor) Efterpi Mitsi (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Edited Collection
  • New Visions of the Cosmopolitan

    ISSN: 1664-3380

    New Visions of the Cosmopolitan explores how the forces of contemporary social change release a cosmopolitan energy that dilutes the relevance of the nation-state. The ‘transnational turn’ creates tendencies toward greater world openness. A more pluralist, multi-perspectivist late modernity requires a cosmopolitan research framework capable of illustrating how world histories and futures are intricately connected under these new conditions. This series offers a body of work exploring how cosmopolitan ideas, emerging from encounters between local and global currents, generate impulses towards social, cultural, legal, political and economic transformation. The series invites contributions that focalize this contemporary situation using theories, perspectives and methodologies drawn from multiple disciplines. Of particular, although not exclusive, interest are proposals exploring: transnational visions of justice and solidarity; cosmopolitan publics; researching cosmopolitan worlds; cosmopolitan memory; the cosmopolitics of contemporary global capitalism; borders of the cosmopolitan; cosmopolitanism in the non-western world; security, war and peace in a cosmopolitan age; multiple modernities; divergence and convergence; political culture and multi-level governance. This peer-reviewed series publishes monographs and edited collections.

    6 publications

  • Title: 7. Towards a Moral University: Horkheimer’s Commitment to the “Vicissitudes of Human Fate”
  • Title: Introduction: CRT in Higher Education: Confronting the “Boogeyman” Bans, Censorship, and Attacks on Racial Justice
  • Title: 6 The Attack on Critical Race Theory and Higher Education: A Legal Analysis of the Impact of State Action on Faculty Free Speech
  • Title: 5. Toward an Ethics of Opacity in Higher Education Internationalization
  • Title: Resisting the Ecology of Knowledges, Reclaiming an Ecology of Study: Some Notes on Decolonization in Higher Education
  • Social Justice Across Contexts in Education

    ISSN: 2372-6849

    Social Justice Across Contexts in Education addresses how teaching for social justice, broadly defined, mediates and disrupts systemic and structural inequities across early childhood, K-12 and postsecondary disciplinary, interdisciplinary and/or transdisciplinary educational contexts. This series includes books exploring how theory informs sustainable pedagogies for social justice curriculum and instruction, and how research, methodology, and assessment can inform equitable and responsive teaching. The series constructs, advances, and supports socially just policies and practices for all individuals and groups across the spectrum of our society’s education system. The series provides sustainable models for generating theories, research, practices, and tools for social justice across contexts as a means to leverage the psychological, emotional, and cognitive growth for learners and professionals. It positions social justice as a fundamental aspect of schooling, and prepares readers to advocate for and prevent social justice from becoming marginalized by reform movements in favor of the corporatization and de-professionalization of education. The over-arching aim is to establish a true field of Social Justice Education that offers theory, knowledge, and resources for those who seek to help all learners succeed. It speaks for, about, and to classroom teachers, administrators, teacher educators, education researchers, students, and other key constituents who are committed to transforming the landscape of schools and communities.

    22 publications

  • New Perspectives in Criminology and Criminal Justice

    This book series is a forum for cutting-edge work that pushes the boundaries of the disciplines of criminology and criminal justice, with the aim of exploring eclectic, un- and under-explored issues, and imaginative approaches in terms of theory and methods Although primarily designed for criminology and criminal justice audiences-including, scholars, instructors, and students-books in the series function across disciplines, appealing to those with an interest in anthropology, cultural studies, sociology, political science, and law. This book series is a forum for cutting-edge work that pushes the boundaries of the disciplines of criminology and criminal justice, with the aim of exploring eclectic, un- and under-explored issues, and imaginative approaches in terms of theory and methods Although primarily designed for criminology and criminal justice audiences-including, scholars, instructors, and students-books in the series function across disciplines, appealing to those with an interest in anthropology, cultural studies, sociology, political science, and law. This book series is a forum for cutting-edge work that pushes the boundaries of the disciplines of criminology and criminal justice, with the aim of exploring eclectic, un- and under-explored issues, and imaginative approaches in terms of theory and methods Although primarily designed for criminology and criminal justice audiences-including, scholars, instructors, and students-books in the series function across disciplines, appealing to those with an interest in anthropology, cultural studies, sociology, political science, and law.

    7 publications

  • Critical Studies of Latinxs in the Americas

    ISSN: 2372-6830

    The Latinx presence continues to grow and intersect with every aspect of life in the 21st century. This is evident when one considers the appointment of Sonia Sotomayor as Associate Justice to the United States Supreme Court. As well as the prominence of distinct Latinx individuals in various spheres of social, cultural, and political life such as Mario J. Molina, Nobel Prize winner and recipient of the Medal of the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013; and Jorge Maria Bergoglio (Pope Francis) who has revolutionized the Catholic church since he became the highest ecclesiastical authority of the Catholic world in 2013. Latino Studies, as an academic field of inquiry, began to emerge during the early 1990s surfacing from the more recognized field of Chicano Studies. As such, the major contributions to the field first emerged from Mexican/Chicano scholarship—publications such as Aztlán, the most important journal in the field of Chicano Studies since 1970; Gloria Anzaldúa’’s groundbreaking memoir/essay, Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987); George J. Sanchez’s historical account, Becoming Mexican American: Ethnicity, Culture, and Identity in Chicano Los Angeles, 1900-1945 (1995); and the two volumes of The Chicano Studies Reader: An Anthology of Aztlan, 1970-2010. These are a few examples of the consolidation and the continuing development of Chicano Studies in the United States. In the past two decades, Latino Studies have grown and expanded significantly. There have been a large number of publications about Latinxs in the Midwest and North East; in addition, due to the fast-growing population of Latinxs in the area, new scholarship has emerged about the Latinxs in the New South. Some examples of the emerging field of Latino Studies are the Latinos on the East Coast (2015) edited by Yolanda Medina and Ángeles Donoso Macaya, Global Cities and Immigrants (2015) by Francisco Velasco Caballero and María de los Angeles Torres; the Handbook of Latinos and Education (2010) edited by Enrique Murillo, et al.; Angela Anselmo’s and Alma Rubal-Lopez’s 2004 On Becoming Nuyoricans; David Carey Jr. and Robert Atkinson (2009) Latino Voices in New England; Yolanda Prieto’s case study entitled, The Cubans of Union City: Immigrants and Exiles in a New Jersey Community (2009); and Lawrence La Fontaine-Stokes’ Queer Ricans Cultures and Sexualities in the Diaspora (2009). Critical Studies of Latinxs in the Americas will become the counterpart of the aforementioned research about the Latinx diaspora that deserve equal scholarly attention and will add to the academic field of inquiry that highlights the lived experience, consequential progress and contributions, as well as the issues and concerns that all Latinxs face in present times. This provocative series will offer a critical space for reflection and questioning of what it means to be Latinx living in the Americas, extending the dialogue to include the North and South hemispheric relations that are prevalent in other fields of global studies such as Post-Colonial Theory, Post-Colonial Feminism, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Critical Race Theory, and others. This broader scope can contribute to prolific interdisciplinary research and can also promote changes in policies and practices that will enable today’s leaders to deal with the overall issues that affect us all. Topics that explore contemporary inequalities and social exclusions associated with processes of racialization, economic exploitation, health, education, transnationalism, immigration, identity politics, and abilities that are not commonly highlighted in the current literature as well as the multitude of socio-economic, and cultural commonalities and differences among the Latinxs in the Americas will be at the center of the series. As the Latinx population continues to grow and change, and universities enhance their Latino Studies programs to be inclusive of all types of Latinx identities, a series dedicated to the lived experience of Latinxs in the Americas and a consideration of their progress and concerns in the social, cultural, political, economic, and artistic arenas is of incredible value in the quest for pedagogical practices and understandings that apply a critical perspective to the issues facing scholars in this area of study. Scholars, faculties, and students alike will benefit from this series. Expressions of interest for authored or edited books will be considered on a first come basis. A Book Proposal Guideline is available on request. For individual or group inquiries please contact the Series Editors at ymedina@bmcc.cuny.edu & Margarita.MachadoCasas@UTSA.edu.

    50 publications

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