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Cover for 9781522694564 Cover for 9781522669500 Cover for 9780415855013 Cover for 9781138202054 Cover for 9781250073006 Cover for 9781595585509 Cover for 9781440843570 Cover for 9781138101722 Cover for 9780307957320 Cover for 9780307947611 Cover for 9781479809127 Cover for 9781620970751 Cover for 9781454872238 Cover for 9781784783167 Cover for 9781522601562 Cover for 9781614389750 Cover for 9781634250368 Cover for 9780691044446 Cover for 9780691634548 Cover for 9780691002415 Cover for 9780691605609 Cover for 9781107135024 Cover for 9780198769279 Cover for 9781137455734 Cover for 9780415529723 Cover for 9781138683266
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By Barrie Buckner (narrator)

CD/Spoken Word:

9781522694564 | Mp3 una edition (Audible Studios on Brilliance audio, June 21, 2016), cover price $9.99

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By Andi Arndt (narrator)

CD/Spoken Word:

9781522669500 | Mp3 una edition (Audible Studios on Brilliance audio, June 21, 2016), cover price $9.99

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Hardcover:

9780415855013 | Routledge, July 7, 2014, cover price $145.00

Paperback:

9781138202054 | Reprint edition (Taylor & Francis, June 18, 2016), cover price $49.95

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Hardcover:

9781250073006 | Thomas Dunne Books, June 14, 2016, cover price $27.99

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Product Description: In the 20 years between 1895 and 1915, two key leaders―Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois―shaped the struggle for African American rights. This book examines the impact of their fierce debate on America's response to Jim Crow and positions on civil rights throughout the 20th century―and evaluates the legacies of these two individuals even today...read more

Hardcover:

9781440843570 | Praeger Pub Text, May 31, 2016, cover price $73.00 | About this edition: In the 20 years between 1895 and 1915, two key leaders―Booker T.

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Product Description: While gender-based violence occurs in all societies irrespective of the level of development or cultural setting, whether in conflict or peacetime, the challenges for legal responses to gender-based violence are particularly acute in Asia...read more
By Joy L. Chia (editor)

Hardcover:

9781138101722 | Routledge, June 7, 2016, cover price $145.00 | About this edition: While gender-based violence occurs in all societies irrespective of the level of development or cultural setting, whether in conflict or peacetime, the challenges for legal responses to gender-based violence are particularly acute in Asia.

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A provocative, timely assessment of the state of free speech in America With his best seller The Working Poor, Pulitzer Prize winner and former New York Times veteran David K. Shipler cemented his place among our most trenchant social commentators. Now he turns his incisive reporting to a critical American ideal: freedom of speech. Anchored in personal stories—sometimes shocking, sometimes absurd, sometimes dishearteningly familiar—Shipler’s investigations of the cultural limits on both expression and the willingness to listen build to expose troubling instabilities in the very foundations of our democracy. Focusing on recent free speech controversies across the nation, Shipler maps a rapidly shifting topography of political and cultural norms: parents in Michigan rallying to teachers vilified for their reading lists; conservative ministers risking their churches’ tax-exempt status to preach politics from the pulpit; national security reporters using techniques more common in dictatorships to avoid leak prosecution; a Washington, D.C., Jewish theater’s struggle for creative control in the face of protests targeting productions critical of Israel; history teachers in Texas quietly bypassing a reactionary curriculum to give students access to unapproved perspectives; the mixed blessings of the Internet as a forum for dialogue about race. These and other stories coalesce to reveal the systemic patterns of both suppression and opportunity that are making today a transitional moment for the future of one of our founding principles. Measured yet sweeping, Freedom of Speech brilliantly reveals the triumphs and challenges of defining and protecting the boundaries of free expression in modern America.

Hardcover:

9780307957320 | Alfred a Knopf Inc, May 12, 2015, cover price $28.95 | About this edition: A provocative, timely assessment of the state of free speech in America With his best seller The Working Poor, Pulitzer Prize winner and former New York Times veteran David K.

Paperback:

9780307947611 | Reprint edition (Vintage Books, April 19, 2016), cover price $18.00

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Product Description: How policing became the major political issue of our timeCombining firsthand accounts from activists with the research of scholars and reflections from artists, Policing the Planet traces the global spread of the broken-windows policing strategy, first established in New York City under Police Commissioner William Bratton...read more
By Jordan T. Camp (editor) and Christina Heatherton (editor)

Paperback:

9781784783167 | Verso Books, May 24, 2016, cover price $19.95 | About this edition: How policing became the major political issue of our timeCombining firsthand accounts from activists with the research of scholars and reflections from artists, Policing the Planet traces the global spread of the broken-windows policing strategy, first established in New York City under Police Commissioner William Bratton.

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By Robin Bloodworth (narrator)

CD/Spoken Word:

9781522601562 | Mp3 una edition (Audible Studios on Brilliance audio, May 10, 2016), cover price $9.99

cover image for 9781634250368

Paperback:

9781634250368 | 2 edition (Amer Bar Assn, May 7, 2016), cover price $129.95
9781614389750 | Pap/cdr edition (Amer Bar Assn, April 7, 2014), cover price $129.95

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Product Description: In Suburbs under Siege Charles Haar argues passionately that all people--rich or poor, black or white--have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right...read more

Hardcover:

9780691634548 | Princeton Univ Pr, April 19, 2016, cover price $102.50 | About this edition: In Suburbs under Siege Charles Haar argues passionately that all people--rich or poor, black or white--have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right.
9780691044446 | Princeton Univ Pr, June 1, 1996, cover price $40.00 | About this edition: In Suburbs under Siege Charles Haar argues passionately that all people--rich or poor, black or white--have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right.

Paperback:

9780691605609 | Princeton Univ Pr, July 14, 2014, cover price $40.95 | About this edition: In Suburbs under Siege Charles Haar argues passionately that all people--rich or poor, black or white--have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right.
9780691002415 | Princeton Univ Pr, September 1, 1998, cover price $23.95 | About this edition: In Suburbs under Siege Charles Haar argues passionately that all people--rich or poor, black or white--have a constitutional right to live in the suburbs and that a socially responsible judiciary should vigorously uphold that right.

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Product Description: High hopes were placed in the ability of the European Convention and the Court of Human Rights to help realise fundamental freedoms and civil and political rights in the post-communist countries. This book explores the effects of the Strasbourg human rights system on the domestic law, politics and reality of the new member States...read more
By Ineta Ziemele (editor)

Hardcover:

9781107135024 | Cambridge Univ Pr, April 30, 2016, cover price $140.00 | About this edition: High hopes were placed in the ability of the European Convention and the Court of Human Rights to help realise fundamental freedoms and civil and political rights in the post-communist countries.

Paperback:

9783631669839 | Peter Lang Pub Inc, April 11, 2016, cover price $75.95

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Product Description: In an epoch of transnational armed conflict, global environmental harm, and rising inequality, the extraterritorial application of human rights law has become a pressing and controversial legal issue. Human rights are invoked to address a number of global-scale problems, such as trans-border environmental harm, social and economic development, global inequality, the repression of piracy in ungoverned spaces, and military occupation and armed conflict in the territory of a third state...read more
By Nehal Bhuta (editor)

Hardcover:

9780198769279 | Oxford Univ Pr, April 25, 2016, cover price $99.95 | About this edition: In an epoch of transnational armed conflict, global environmental harm, and rising inequality, the extraterritorial application of human rights law has become a pressing and controversial legal issue.

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This book explores the role human rights law plays in the formation, and protection, of our personal identities. Drawing from a range of disciplines, Jill Marshall examines how human rights law includes and excludes specific types of identity, which feed into moral norms of human freedom and human dignity and their translation into legal rights. The book takes on a three part structure. Part I traces the definition of identity, and follows the evolution of, and protects, a right to personal identity and personality within human rights law. It specifically examines the development of a right to personal identity as property, the inter-subjective nature of identity, and the intercession of power and inequality. Part II evaluates past and contemporary attempts to describe the core of personal identity, including theories concerning the soul, the rational mind, and the growing influence of neuroscience and genetics in explaining what it means to be human. It also explores the inter-relation and conflict between universal principles and culturally specific rights. Part III focuses on issues and case law that can be interpreted as allowing self-determination. Marshall argues that while in an age of individual identity, people are increasingly obliged to live in conformed ways, pushing out identities that do not fit with what is acceptable. Drawing on feminist theory, the book concludes by arguing how human rights law would be better interpreted as a force to enable respect for human dignity and freedom, interpreted as empowerment and self-determination whilst acknowledging our inter-subjective identities. In drawing on socio-legal, philosophical, biological and feminist outlooks, this book is truly interdisciplinary, and will be of great interest and use to scholars and students of human rights law, legal and social theory, gender and cultural studies.

Hardcover:

9780415529723 | Routledge, June 6, 2014, cover price $160.00 | About this edition: This book explores the role human rights law plays in the formation, and protection, of our personal identities.

Paperback:

9781138683266 | Routledge, April 21, 2016, cover price $49.95

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