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By Our Faculty

Positioning Women in Conflict Studies: How Women's Status Affects Political Violence

Positioning Women in Conflict Studies book cover: A woman looks across the horizon at the tops of trees and buildings.

Author: Sabrina Karim and Daniel W. Hill, Jr.

By Our Faculty

The catch-all term “gender equality” can mask important discrepancies in women’s status that are correlated with more or less violent societies, Sabrina Karim, associate professor of government in the College of Arts and Sciences, argues in a new book, “

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110.00

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  • Book

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Publication Year: 2024

ISBN: 9780197757932

Explaining Refugee Employment Declines: Structural Shortcomings in Federal Resettlement Support

Men working in a field

Author: A Nicole Kreisberg, Els de Graauw, and Shannon Gleeson

By Our Faculty

In the United States, the integration experiences of immigrants depend partly on whether they are recognized as refugees or economic migrants. Unlike economic migrants, refugees receive federal resources to help find employment, raising important questions about the role of such government support in migrants’ labor market integration.

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  • Article

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Publication Year: 2022

Multi-stakeholder Perspectives on Digital Tools for U.S. Asylum Applicants Seeking Healthcare and Legal Information

stethoscope next to computer that someone is typing on

Author: Aparajita Bhandari, Diana Freed, Tara Pilato, Faten Taki, Gunisha Kaur, Stephen Yale-Loehr, Jane Powers, Tao Long, and Natalya N. Bazarova

By Our Faculty

There is a concerning lack of clear and accurate information around accessing public benefits for asylum applicants in the United States (U.S.), which has been shown to negatively affect their healthcare engagement. Digital tools such as websites and mobile applications can be a potentially promising way to disseminate public benefits information to asylum applicants. The goal of this study is to understand the current informational needs of asylum applicants in the U.S. seeking legal information and resources regarding their individual rights to public health benefits and services.

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  • Article

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Publication Year: 2022

Journal: Association for Computing Machinery

The World We Became: Map Quest 2350, A Speculative Atlas Beyond Climate Crisis

Map of Indigenous land.

Author: Tao Leigh Goffe, Shannon Gleeson, Atif Khan, Austin Kocher, Christin Washington , Judith Salcido , Rewa Phansalkar , Ryan Persadie , Anisa Jackson, Elspeth Iralu, Erica Violet Lee, Hashem Abushama, Nisrin Elamin, Randa Tawil, et al.

By Our Faculty

Tackling how racial justice and climate crisis are entangled, this essay introduces a speculative cartography experiment entitled The World We Became: Map Quest 2350. A collaboration between a collective of artists, poets, academics, curators, architects, and activists, this digital humanities project maps global ecological crises and shared Black, Asian, Pacific, Middle Eastern, Latin American, Caribbean, and Indigenous futures.

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  • Article

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Publication Year: 2022

Journal: Brill

Publication Number: 2352-3085

How to Model the Weather-migration Link: A Machine-learning Approach to Variable Selection in the Mexico-U.S. Context

Mexican flag

Author: Mario D. Molina, Nancy Chau, Amanda D. Rodewald, and Filiz Garip

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A growing body of research investigates how changes in weather shape individual choices about migration, yet highly variable results continue to challenge our understanding of the weather-migration nexus. We use a data-driven approach to identify which weather variables best predicted migration decisions of 54,986 individuals originating in Mexico between 1989 and 2016.

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  • Article

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Publication Year: 2022

Journal: Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies

Fuzzy Borders: Media, Migration Brokerage, and State Bureaucracy

silhouette of person carrying backpack at orange sunset

Author: Natasha Raheja

By Our Faculty

In the western Indian city of Jodhpur, computer typists provide migration brokerage services to Pakistani Hindu refugee-migrants and Indian immigration officers. Such encounters and their interpretations contrast with the Indian state's emphasis on governmental proximity and immediate state-subject relations. Though computer typists—who I am calling brokers—are essential mediators, their acts of mediation are underrecognized.

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  • Article

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Publication Year: 2023

Journal: American Ethnologist Journal of the American Ethnology Society

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