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FROM THE SQUARE
April 7, 2021. —Myra Marx Ferree. This lovely collection by Rita Stephan and Mounira Maya Charrad highlights the voices of the challengers and their perspectives on what must change and how to create a democracy in which they are full participants. TRUE CRIME AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE: A READING LIST —Michael Nest and Deanna Reder. Researching and writing about true crime in Indigenous communities is different. First, what is defined as a crime can be confusing. For example, early in the twentieth century, in an effort to estrange First Nations children from their cultures and communities, the Canadian government enforced attendance at residential school. THE UNITED STATES’ LONG HISTORY OF CRIMINALIZING In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the United States, laws against vagrancy—which were borrowed from English precedent in the colonial era, defined a vagrant as a person who was homeless, poor, a beggar, and/or a transient, and criminalized many of the activities that people experiencing poverty needed or chose to carry out inpublic.
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLICING Here at NYU Press, we rounded up a few experts on the topic, including co-editors Stephen K. Rice and Michael D. White and contributors Amanda Geller, Matthew Hickman, Robert Kane, William Parkin, and Ronald Weitzer of Race, Ethnicity, and Policing: New and Essential Readings (NYU Press, 2010). One of the responses to the recentpolice-involved
THE ORIGINS OF THE WOMEN’S SELF-DEFENSE MOVEMENT Wendy L. Rouse teaches United States History and social science teacher preparation at San Jose State University.Her research interests include childhood, family, and gender history during the Progressive Era. She is the author of Her Own Hero: The Origins of the Women’s Self-Defense Movement (NYU Press, 2017). THE LINKS BETWEEN SLAVERY, POLICING, AND RACISM Jim Crow referred to the various state laws that established different rules for Blacks and Whites in Southern and border states between 1877 and the mid-1960s. From slave patrols and Slave Codes to Black Codes and Jim Crow laws, racially biased legislation was enforced for nearly 250 years. Blacks have endured a legacy of vicious violent THE FOUNDERS CHIC OF HAMILTON The Founders Chic of. Hamilton. Hamilton is the hottest ticket on Broadway. Anyone who’s been lucky enough to see it or hear it (here’s the soundtrack, for now) knows it’s thrilling. But Founders Chic, the recent worshiping of our illustrious nation-building heroes, has little to do with its success. Hamilton portrays the founders as LORCA'S SLEEPLESS CITY (BROOKLYN BRIDGE NOCTURNE) where the bear’s teeth wait, where the mummified hand of a child waits. and the camel’s fur bristles with a violent blue chill. Out in the sky, no one sleeps. No one, no one. No one sleeps. But if someone closes his eyes, whip him, my children, whip him! Let there be a panorama of open eyes. THE FORGOTTEN JEWISH ELEMENT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION The complex identities of both Jewish women’s liberationists and identified Jewish feminists should be recognized as important parts of the histories of feminism and Judaism. HOW KATZ’S DELICATESSEN BECAME A NEW YORK ICON How Katz’s Delicatessen became a New York icon. When I was growing up on Long Island in the 1970s, school field trips meant being schlepped on a bus to the McGraw-Hill building on Sixth Avenue, to a multimedia film called the “New York Experience,” in which a kaleidoscopic montage of New Yorkers of different stripes celebratedboth past
FROM THE SQUARE
April 7, 2021. —Myra Marx Ferree. This lovely collection by Rita Stephan and Mounira Maya Charrad highlights the voices of the challengers and their perspectives on what must change and how to create a democracy in which they are full participants. TRUE CRIME AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE: A READING LIST —Michael Nest and Deanna Reder. Researching and writing about true crime in Indigenous communities is different. First, what is defined as a crime can be confusing. For example, early in the twentieth century, in an effort to estrange First Nations children from their cultures and communities, the Canadian government enforced attendance at residential school. THE UNITED STATES’ LONG HISTORY OF CRIMINALIZING In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the United States, laws against vagrancy—which were borrowed from English precedent in the colonial era, defined a vagrant as a person who was homeless, poor, a beggar, and/or a transient, and criminalized many of the activities that people experiencing poverty needed or chose to carry out inpublic.
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLICING Here at NYU Press, we rounded up a few experts on the topic, including co-editors Stephen K. Rice and Michael D. White and contributors Amanda Geller, Matthew Hickman, Robert Kane, William Parkin, and Ronald Weitzer of Race, Ethnicity, and Policing: New and Essential Readings (NYU Press, 2010). One of the responses to the recentpolice-involved
THE ORIGINS OF THE WOMEN’S SELF-DEFENSE MOVEMENT Wendy L. Rouse teaches United States History and social science teacher preparation at San Jose State University.Her research interests include childhood, family, and gender history during the Progressive Era. She is the author of Her Own Hero: The Origins of the Women’s Self-Defense Movement (NYU Press, 2017). THE LINKS BETWEEN SLAVERY, POLICING, AND RACISM Jim Crow referred to the various state laws that established different rules for Blacks and Whites in Southern and border states between 1877 and the mid-1960s. From slave patrols and Slave Codes to Black Codes and Jim Crow laws, racially biased legislation was enforced for nearly 250 years. Blacks have endured a legacy of vicious violent THE FOUNDERS CHIC OF HAMILTON The Founders Chic of. Hamilton. Hamilton is the hottest ticket on Broadway. Anyone who’s been lucky enough to see it or hear it (here’s the soundtrack, for now) knows it’s thrilling. But Founders Chic, the recent worshiping of our illustrious nation-building heroes, has little to do with its success. Hamilton portrays the founders as LORCA'S SLEEPLESS CITY (BROOKLYN BRIDGE NOCTURNE) where the bear’s teeth wait, where the mummified hand of a child waits. and the camel’s fur bristles with a violent blue chill. Out in the sky, no one sleeps. No one, no one. No one sleeps. But if someone closes his eyes, whip him, my children, whip him! Let there be a panorama of open eyes. THE FORGOTTEN JEWISH ELEMENT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION The complex identities of both Jewish women’s liberationists and identified Jewish feminists should be recognized as important parts of the histories of feminism and Judaism. HOW KATZ’S DELICATESSEN BECAME A NEW YORK ICON How Katz’s Delicatessen became a New York icon. When I was growing up on Long Island in the 1970s, school field trips meant being schlepped on a bus to the McGraw-Hill building on Sixth Avenue, to a multimedia film called the “New York Experience,” in which a kaleidoscopic montage of New Yorkers of different stripes celebratedboth past
AN INTRODUCTION TO BIOCRIMINOLOGY The Background. Biocriminology, or biosocial criminology, emerges from the shadows of eugenics and social Darwinism, long condemned as pseudoscientific and vilified for stoking the German Nazi movement. In the late 19th century, the Italian “father of criminology,” Cesare Lombroso, claimed he could prove scientifically that criminality was THE #1 FIRST LADIES CLUB She is the author of First Ladies of the Republic: Martha Washington, Abigail Adams, Dolley Madison, and the Creation of an Iconic American Role (NYU Press, 2018) and Revolutionary Medicine: The Founding Fathers and Mothers in Sickness and in Health (NYU Press, 2013). Feature image: Five U.S. first ladies in 2013 by White House/LawrenceJackson.
THE SOCIAL LIFE OF VAPING The Social Life of Vaping. When my book, Lighting Up: The Rise of Social Smoking on College Campuses, was published in 2015, the popularity of e-cigarettes was showing early but steady growth among the young adult market. Having first entered the U.S. market in 2007, sales of e-cigarettes began to double each year due in part toaggressive
FEARING THE BLACK BODY: INTRODUCTION Read the introduction to Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings. Use coupon STRINGS30 on nyupress.org to order the book at 30% off! “Actually Starving! A Prominent New York Man Dies in Sight of Food. Why Could This Be So!” This dramatic if slightly awkward headline appeared in the February 16, 1894, edition of the New York Times, atop an article that THE FOUNDERS CHIC OF HAMILTON The Founders Chic of. Hamilton. Hamilton is the hottest ticket on Broadway. Anyone who’s been lucky enough to see it or hear it (here’s the soundtrack, for now) knows it’s thrilling. But Founders Chic, the recent worshiping of our illustrious nation-building heroes, has little to do with its success. Hamilton portrays the founders as THE ORIGINS OF THE WOMEN’S SELF-DEFENSE MOVEMENT Wendy L. Rouse teaches United States History and social science teacher preparation at San Jose State University.Her research interests include childhood, family, and gender history during the Progressive Era. She is the author of Her Own Hero: The Origins of the Women’s Self-Defense Movement (NYU Press, 2017). AN INTERVIEW WITH JANE WARD Jane Ward is Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies at University of California Riverside, where she teaches courses in feminist, queer, and heterosexuality studies.She is the author of Respectably Queer: Diversity Culture in LGBT Activist Organizations, as well as Not Gay: Sex Between Straight White Men and The Tragedy of Heterosexuality, both available from NYU Press.FEAR OF IMMIGRATION
Immigrants are a drain on the economy. Immigrants bring diseases into the United States. Police should be allowed to raid businesses and homes in order to find undocumented workers. Deportation is a good solution for immigration issues. Creating a “pathway to citizenship” will encourage illegal immigration. THE TIME IS NOW! REMOVING DECEPTION FROM POLICE The Time Is Now! Removing Deception from Police Interrogation. We live in interesting times. Although both of us have long advocated for addressing the systematic racism in the criminal justice system (as well as in K-12 and higher education, healthcare, residential real estate markets, and elsewhere), this moment appears to present HOW RACISM CAME TO BE CALLED A MENTAL ILLNESS How racism came to be called a mental illness — and why that’s a problem. In 1981, Anthony Simon, an elderly white man in Kansas, shot his Chinese American neighbor Steffen Wong, as Wong was entering his own home. In his trial, Simon’s defense rested upon a claim of “anxiety neurosis”: Simon said he was afraid of “Orientals”and
FROM THE SQUARE
April 7, 2021. —Myra Marx Ferree. This lovely collection by Rita Stephan and Mounira Maya Charrad highlights the voices of the challengers and their perspectives on what must change and how to create a democracy in which they are full participants. TRUE CRIME AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE: A READING LIST —Michael Nest and Deanna Reder. Researching and writing about true crime in Indigenous communities is different. First, what is defined as a crime can be confusing. For example, early in the twentieth century, in an effort to estrange First Nations children from their cultures and communities, the Canadian government enforced attendance at residential school. THE LINKS BETWEEN SLAVERY, POLICING, AND RACISM Jim Crow referred to the various state laws that established different rules for Blacks and Whites in Southern and border states between 1877 and the mid-1960s. From slave patrols and Slave Codes to Black Codes and Jim Crow laws, racially biased legislation was enforced for nearly 250 years. Blacks have endured a legacy of vicious violent THE SOCIAL LIFE OF VAPING The Social Life of Vaping. When my book, Lighting Up: The Rise of Social Smoking on College Campuses, was published in 2015, the popularity of e-cigarettes was showing early but steady growth among the young adult market. Having first entered the U.S. market in 2007, sales of e-cigarettes began to double each year due in part toaggressive
THE UNITED STATES’ LONG HISTORY OF CRIMINALIZING In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the United States, laws against vagrancy—which were borrowed from English precedent in the colonial era, defined a vagrant as a person who was homeless, poor, a beggar, and/or a transient, and criminalized many of the activities that people experiencing poverty needed or chose to carry out inpublic.
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLICING Here at NYU Press, we rounded up a few experts on the topic, including co-editors Stephen K. Rice and Michael D. White and contributors Amanda Geller, Matthew Hickman, Robert Kane, William Parkin, and Ronald Weitzer of Race, Ethnicity, and Policing: New and Essential Readings (NYU Press, 2010). One of the responses to the recentpolice-involved
THE FOUNDERS CHIC OF HAMILTON The Founders Chic of. Hamilton. Hamilton is the hottest ticket on Broadway. Anyone who’s been lucky enough to see it or hear it (here’s the soundtrack, for now) knows it’s thrilling. But Founders Chic, the recent worshiping of our illustrious nation-building heroes, has little to do with its success. Hamilton portrays the founders as THE OPT-OUT REVOLUTION, TEN YEARS LATER —Bernie D. Jones. Photo credit: Infrogmation via Wikimedia Commons. Ten years ago, the New York Times Magazine published Lisa Belkin’s controversial (and now infamous) article, “The Opt-Out Revolution.” In it, Belkin argued that young women were increasingly disinterested in feminist gains in LORCA'S SLEEPLESS CITY (BROOKLYN BRIDGE NOCTURNE) where the bear’s teeth wait, where the mummified hand of a child waits. and the camel’s fur bristles with a violent blue chill. Out in the sky, no one sleeps. No one, no one. No one sleeps. But if someone closes his eyes, whip him, my children, whip him! Let there be a panorama of open eyes. THE FORGOTTEN JEWISH ELEMENT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION The complex identities of both Jewish women’s liberationists and identified Jewish feminists should be recognized as important parts of the histories of feminism and Judaism.FROM THE SQUARE
April 7, 2021. —Myra Marx Ferree. This lovely collection by Rita Stephan and Mounira Maya Charrad highlights the voices of the challengers and their perspectives on what must change and how to create a democracy in which they are full participants. TRUE CRIME AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE: A READING LIST —Michael Nest and Deanna Reder. Researching and writing about true crime in Indigenous communities is different. First, what is defined as a crime can be confusing. For example, early in the twentieth century, in an effort to estrange First Nations children from their cultures and communities, the Canadian government enforced attendance at residential school. THE LINKS BETWEEN SLAVERY, POLICING, AND RACISM Jim Crow referred to the various state laws that established different rules for Blacks and Whites in Southern and border states between 1877 and the mid-1960s. From slave patrols and Slave Codes to Black Codes and Jim Crow laws, racially biased legislation was enforced for nearly 250 years. Blacks have endured a legacy of vicious violent THE SOCIAL LIFE OF VAPING The Social Life of Vaping. When my book, Lighting Up: The Rise of Social Smoking on College Campuses, was published in 2015, the popularity of e-cigarettes was showing early but steady growth among the young adult market. Having first entered the U.S. market in 2007, sales of e-cigarettes began to double each year due in part toaggressive
THE UNITED STATES’ LONG HISTORY OF CRIMINALIZING In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the United States, laws against vagrancy—which were borrowed from English precedent in the colonial era, defined a vagrant as a person who was homeless, poor, a beggar, and/or a transient, and criminalized many of the activities that people experiencing poverty needed or chose to carry out inpublic.
RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLICING Here at NYU Press, we rounded up a few experts on the topic, including co-editors Stephen K. Rice and Michael D. White and contributors Amanda Geller, Matthew Hickman, Robert Kane, William Parkin, and Ronald Weitzer of Race, Ethnicity, and Policing: New and Essential Readings (NYU Press, 2010). One of the responses to the recentpolice-involved
THE FOUNDERS CHIC OF HAMILTON The Founders Chic of. Hamilton. Hamilton is the hottest ticket on Broadway. Anyone who’s been lucky enough to see it or hear it (here’s the soundtrack, for now) knows it’s thrilling. But Founders Chic, the recent worshiping of our illustrious nation-building heroes, has little to do with its success. Hamilton portrays the founders as THE OPT-OUT REVOLUTION, TEN YEARS LATER —Bernie D. Jones. Photo credit: Infrogmation via Wikimedia Commons. Ten years ago, the New York Times Magazine published Lisa Belkin’s controversial (and now infamous) article, “The Opt-Out Revolution.” In it, Belkin argued that young women were increasingly disinterested in feminist gains in LORCA'S SLEEPLESS CITY (BROOKLYN BRIDGE NOCTURNE) where the bear’s teeth wait, where the mummified hand of a child waits. and the camel’s fur bristles with a violent blue chill. Out in the sky, no one sleeps. No one, no one. No one sleeps. But if someone closes his eyes, whip him, my children, whip him! Let there be a panorama of open eyes. THE FORGOTTEN JEWISH ELEMENT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION The complex identities of both Jewish women’s liberationists and identified Jewish feminists should be recognized as important parts of the histories of feminism and Judaism. THE SOCIAL LIFE OF VAPING The Social Life of Vaping. When my book, Lighting Up: The Rise of Social Smoking on College Campuses, was published in 2015, the popularity of e-cigarettes was showing early but steady growth among the young adult market. Having first entered the U.S. market in 2007, sales of e-cigarettes began to double each year due in part toaggressive
LABOR-VALUE COMMODITY CHAINS: THE HIDDEN ABODE OF GLOBAL Labor-value chains involve a form of unequal exchange based on a worldwide hierarchy of wages, in which global capital (firms headquartered in the global North) captures value from the South through the over- or superexploitation of the labor of workers who manufacture the goods. In essence, more labor is obtained for less. THE OPT-OUT REVOLUTION, TEN YEARS LATER —Bernie D. Jones. Photo credit: Infrogmation via Wikimedia Commons. Ten years ago, the New York Times Magazine published Lisa Belkin’s controversial (and now infamous) article, “The Opt-Out Revolution.” In it, Belkin argued that young women were increasingly disinterested in feminist gains in THE TIME IS NOW! REMOVING DECEPTION FROM POLICE The Time Is Now! Removing Deception from Police Interrogation. We live in interesting times. Although both of us have long advocated for addressing the systematic racism in the criminal justice system (as well as in K-12 and higher education, healthcare, residential real estate markets, and elsewhere), this moment appears to present FEARING THE BLACK BODY: INTRODUCTION Read the introduction to Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings. Use coupon STRINGS30 on nyupress.org to order the book at 30% off! “Actually Starving! A Prominent New York Man Dies in Sight of Food. Why Could This Be So!” This dramatic if slightly awkward headline appeared in the February 16, 1894, edition of the New York Times, atop an article that THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG—VICTOR M. RIOS ON POLICE BRUTALITY Victor M. Rios is Associate Dean of Social Science and Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.Punished was named the 2012 Best Book Award, Latino/a Sociology Section, presented by the American Sociological Association, was a 2012 Finalist, C. Wright Mills Book Award presented by the Study of Social Problems, and noted as an Honorable Mention for THE ORIGINS OF THE WOMEN’S SELF-DEFENSE MOVEMENT Wendy L. Rouse teaches United States History and social science teacher preparation at San Jose State University.Her research interests include childhood, family, and gender history during the Progressive Era. She is the author of Her Own Hero: The Origins of the Women’s Self-Defense Movement (NYU Press, 2017). THE FORGOTTEN JEWISH ELEMENT OF THE WOMEN'S LIBERATION The complex identities of both Jewish women’s liberationists and identified Jewish feminists should be recognized as important parts of the histories of feminism and Judaism. WHAT IS IT TO BE MULTIRACIAL? — Miri Song. For many people, becoming parents can engender a re-evaluation of their own identities, and what they may (or may not) want to pass down to their children, including particular ethnic and cultural traits and practices. THE EVERGREEN PROFITS OF INSULIN The Evergreen Profits of Insulin. Angie Summers had health insurance. But it didn’t begin to cover the astronomical cost of the two insulins that she injected every day. The price, after insurance, was $800-$1000 per insulin. And that was far more than she could afford.Skip to content
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EXPLORE THE EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD: AN EBOOK SPECIAL As Mother’s Day approaches, join us in exploring the complex experiences of mothers around the world. Browse the eBooks below to find personal accounts, studies, and analyses on motherhood, pregnancy,… READ MORE CELEBRATE WITH PRIDE: AN EBOOK SPECIAL This month, while we celebrate Pride and the LGBTQ+ community, we’re getting caught up on important works of LGBTQ+ history, sociology, literature, and more. WHEN THE WALLS OF THE CITY ARE SHAKEN: THINKING WITH ANN SNITOW’S FEMINIST VOICE OF UNCERTAINTY —Katheryn M. Detwiler Snitow was always updating, questioning, and revising her own formulations—working in the mode of thought and action she described as the “feminism of uncertainty.” NATIONAL NURSES WEEK: LET’S THANK THE HEALERS AMONG US Author Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier shares a series of stories about taking action in times of crisis from The House on Henry Street: The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement. GILDED AGE COCKTAILS: Q&A WITH CECILIA TICHI We caught up with author Cecilia Tichi about the inspiration and research behind her fascinating new book, as well as her own favorite Gilded Age cocktails. EXPLORE THE EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD: AN EBOOK SPECIAL As Mother’s Day approaches, join us in exploring the complex experiences of mothers around the world. Browse the eBooks below to find personal accounts, studies, and analyses on motherhood, pregnancy,… READ MORE CELEBRATE WITH PRIDE: AN EBOOK SPECIAL This month, while we celebrate Pride and the LGBTQ+ community, we’re getting caught up on important works of LGBTQ+ history, sociology, literature, and more. WHEN THE WALLS OF THE CITY ARE SHAKEN: THINKING WITH ANN SNITOW’S FEMINIST VOICE OF UNCERTAINTY —Katheryn M. Detwiler Snitow was always updating, questioning, and revising her own formulations—working in the mode of thought and action she described as the “feminism of uncertainty.” NATIONAL NURSES WEEK: LET’S THANK THE HEALERS AMONG US Author Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier shares a series of stories about taking action in times of crisis from The House on Henry Street: The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement. GILDED AGE COCKTAILS: Q&A WITH CECILIA TICHI We caught up with author Cecilia Tichi about the inspiration and research behind her fascinating new book, as well as her own favorite Gilded Age cocktails. EXPLORE THE EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD: AN EBOOK SPECIAL As Mother’s Day approaches, join us in exploring the complex experiences of mothers around the world. Browse the eBooks below to find personal accounts, studies, and analyses on motherhood, pregnancy,… READ MORE* 1
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CELEBRATE WITH PRIDE: AN EBOOK SPECIALJune 1, 2021
This month, while we celebrate Pride and the LGBTQ+ community, we’re getting caught up on important works of LGBTQ+ history, sociology, literature, and more. WHEN THE WALLS OF THE CITY ARE SHAKEN: THINKING WITH ANN SNITOW’S FEMINIST VOICE OF UNCERTAINTYMay 10, 2021
—Katheryn M. Detwiler Snitow was always updating, questioning, and revising her own formulations—working in the mode of thought and action she described as the “feminism of uncertainty.” NATIONAL NURSES WEEK: LET’S THANK THE HEALERS AMONG USMay 6, 2021
Author Ellen M. Snyder-Grenier shares a series of stories about taking action in times of crisis from The House on Henry Street: The Enduring Life of a Lower East Side Settlement. GILDED AGE COCKTAILS: Q&A WITH CECILIA TICHIMay 5, 2021
We caught up with author Cecilia Tichi about the inspiration and research behind her fascinating new book, as well as her own favorite Gilded Age cocktails. EXPLORE THE EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERHOOD: AN EBOOK SPECIALMay 3, 2021
As Mother’s Day approaches, join us in exploring the complex experiences of mothers around the world. Browse the eBooks below to find personal accounts, studies, and analyses on motherhood, pregnancy,… READ MORE REMEMBERING THE BATTLE OF NEGRO FORTApril 27, 2021
—Matthew J. Clavin As we continue to struggle with the power and history of racism, it is instructive to remember the United States’ role in the destructionof Negro Fort.
COMMENTARY ON WOMEN RISING: IN AND BEYOND THE ARAB SPRINGApril 7, 2021
—Myra Marx Ferree
This lovely collection by Rita Stephan and Mounira Maya Charrad highlights the voices of the challengers and their perspectives on what must change and how to create a democracy in which they are fullparticipants.
AGENCY, RESISTANCE, RESILIENCE, IDENTITYApril 5, 2021
—Shirley Hune and Gail M. Nomura How can all of us better challenge falsehoods of Asian American and Pacific Islander women’s docility and call attention to the complexities of their past and present experiences in the United States and elsewhere?POSTS NAVIGATION
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