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Channels - Refusing necropolitics‐as‐usual: Latina social workers performing care work inside detention facilities for unaccompanied children :: FRELIP Discovery
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Refusing necropolitics‐as‐usual: Latina social workers performing care work inside detention facilities for unaccompanied children
Latina identity and military enlistment: The intersection of race, ethnicity, and gender
War’s Returns: Refugee Archiving, Living, Refusing
Writing from colonial trauma: Land, knowledge, and indigenous refusal
Unaccompanied Minors at the Border: Opinions of Latino Adults
Affective Necropolitics, Procedural Necrorhetorics, and the US–Mexico Border in the Call of Duty Series
Refusal as Instruction
Sex workers' agency and activism in early 1900s Korea
Barriers Facing the Hospitals from Establishing Pulmonary Rehabilitation Programs in the Usual Care of COPD and Respiratory Patients in Saudi Arabia
"The Accompaniment in 'Unaccompanied' Bach: Interpreting the Sonatas and Partitas for Violin," by Stanley Ritchie
Encountering Care
A Latina pursuing her medical dream (MD)
Working Together with Alfred Hornung over the Years
MRI differentiation of usual type endocervical adenocarcinoma and cervical squamous cell carcinoma
Review of Julie Greene's Box 25: Archival Secrets, Caribbean Workers, and the Panama Canal
Upholding the Absolute Prohibition of Torture: AfCHPR on Detention in Tanzania
From Border-Based to Status-Based Mandatory Immigration Detention
A Whole Village Involved in Raising Children
Muscular Fitness Levels of U.S. Children and Adolescents
Street children’s resistance to street removal interventions
Readiness of Nigerian health‑care workers to work during COVID‑19 pandemic
Issue Introduction: The Indispensable Work of the Transnational American Studies Community
Caught in the fire: An accidental ethnography of discomfort in researching sex work
“I need to take care of myself as well”—self‐care strategies of abortion acompañantes in Northern Mexico
The importance of self-concept and how it relates to street children