Academic literature on the topic 'Abolitionist'

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Journal articles on the topic "Abolitionist"

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King, Rachael Scarborough. "Ephemeral Improvement: Interactive Print and the Material Texts of Early Abolitionism." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 139, no. 2 (2024): 220–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/s0030812924000166.

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AbstractThis article argues that a reliance on material texts tied to the concept of improvement—such as picturesque engravings, diagrams, and account books—pushed the early abolitionist movement toward a reforming, ameliorationist ethic that disavowed revolutionary action and immediate emancipation. Although the term improvement had broad social applicability by the late eighteenth century, its original connections to land management made it an especially important concept for the abolitionist debate. Integrating book history with studies of enslavement and abolition, I show how abolitionists
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Perry, Kennetta Hammond. "Black Futures Not Yet Lost." South Atlantic Quarterly 121, no. 3 (2022): 541–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00382876-9825976.

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This essay explores how the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement’s public visibility during the summer of 2020 opened critical space to reconsider and critique entrenched narratives of British abolitionism that render the fate of post-emancipation Black futures inconsequential. It highlights some of the contestations within a British historiographical tradition that has co-opted abolitionism as a means to engender and fortify mythologies of a liberal and progressive white nation to the detriment of even conceiving of Black freedom as a requisite to emancipation. Black political thinke
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Salib, Peter. "Abolition by Algorithm." Michigan Law Review, no. 123.5 (2025): 800. https://doi.org/10.36644/mlr.123.5.abolition.

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In one sense, America’s newest abolitionist movement—advocating the elimination of policing and prison—has been a success. Following the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, a small group of self-described radicals convinced a wide swath of ordinary liberals to accept a sweeping claim: Mere reforms cannot meaningfully reduce prison and policing’s serious harms. Only elimination can. On the other hand, abolitionists have failed to secure lasting policy change. The difficulty is crime. In 2021, following a nationwide uptick in homicides, liberal support for abolitionist proposals collapsed. Despite
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Landels, Tye. "John Newton, Collective Shame, and the Repentant Imagination of British Abolitionism." Eighteenth-Century Studies 58, no. 4 (2025): 419–36. https://doi.org/10.1353/ecs.2025.a964986.

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Abstract: This article argues for the significance of shame within British abolitionism. Close reading of the autobiographical writings of John Newton, an enslaver-turned-abolitionist and evangelical minister, reveals how changing ideas of shame shaped British responses to slavery in the late eighteenth century. I focus in particular on the idea of collective shame, through which Newton and other abolitionists claimed that slavery represented a source of shame for the entire British nation. Attending to Newton's sense of the shame of slavery, I show, yields fresh answers to longstanding histor
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Guerini, Anna. "Ambivalent Democracies. Uses and Misuses of Tocqueville Within the Abolitionist Debate (1839–1865)." Tocqueville Review 45, no. 1 (2024): 247–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ttr.45.1.247.

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In this essay, I investigate the ways in which abolitionists and pro-slavery forces use Tocqueville before and during the Civil War, drawing on the major black and white abolitionist newspapers ( The Liberator, National Anti-Slavery Standard, The National Era, The North Star, and The Colored American). By focusing on the dissemination of Tocqueville’s ideas within a specific audience of white abolitionists, and on the impact of blacks’ criticism on this process, I challenge Tocqueville’s abolitionist arguments. Thus, using Tocqueville as a prism through which to discuss some of the key issues
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Palen, Marc-William. "FREE-TRADE IDEOLOGY AND TRANSATLANTIC ABOLITIONISM: A HISTORIOGRAPHY." Journal of the History of Economic Thought 37, no. 2 (2015): 291–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1053837215000103.

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This essay seeks to trace the many—and often conflicting—economic ideological interpretations of the transatlantic abolitionist impulse. In particular, it explores the contested relationship between free-trade ideology and transatlantic abolitionism, and highlights the understudied influence of Victorian free-trade ideology within the American abolitionist movement. By bringing together historiographical controversies from the American and British side, the essay calls into question long-standing conceptions regarding the relationship between free trade and abolitionism, and suggests new avenu
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Haspel, Michael. "The Image of God and Immediate Emancipation: David Walker’s Theological Foundation of Equality and the Rejection of White Supremacy." Harvard Theological Review 117, no. 1 (2024): 138–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017816023000445.

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AbstractIn the 1820s it was predominantly Black abolitionists who opposed gradualist abolitionism and the concept of colonization, while, in general, White abolitionists opposed slavery, viewing it as seductive or as sin in itself, but did not want full emancipation for Blacks. Therefore, David Walker’s Appeal from 1829 is a central document in that it calls for immediate and full emancipation as well as opposition to racism and White supremacy. This article argues that the shift in political aim of Black radical abolitionists correlates with an innovation in theological foundation. Walker gro
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Carrera, Dashiel, Ufuoma Ovienmhada, Safa Hussein, and Robert Soden. "The Unseen Landscape of Abolitionism: Examining the Role of Digital Maps in Grassroots Organizing." Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 7, CSCW2 (2023): 1–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3610214.

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Prison and police abolition has become a major political philosophy in North American discourse following the 2020 George Floyd protests. The philosophy remains divisive, and North American abolitionists seeking to coalition-build, provide resources for vulnerable populations and garner public support continue to experience challenges. We explore current usage of digital tools among abolitionists and the potential of a digital mapping tool to address these challenges. We conduct an interview study with 15 abolitionist organizations to understand activists' perspectives on the value of digital
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Zhaivoronok, D.V. "Anxiety, translation and the dream of a common language: on feminists' discussion of commercial sex." Sociology of Power, no. 1 (June 7, 2019): 33–59. https://doi.org/10.22394/2074-0492-2018-1-33-59.

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Debates about commercial sex occupy a prominent place on the agenda of both global and Russian-language feminist communities. Sex wars have a major impact on the organization and political imagination of the feminist movement. On the other hand, some sex workers and their representatives consider some feminists (neo-abolitionists) to be one of the biggest enemies in the struggle for their rights. Trying to understand this contradiction, the article raises issue on how neo-abolitionist discourse is designed and what political impact it produces. The author proceeds under the assumption that the
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Abdurakhmanova-Pavlova, Daria V. "Sister Ruth’s Stories, or, Evenings with John Woolman (1865) and Juvenile Literature of Domestic Abolitionism." Literature of the Americas, no. 13 (2022): 367–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.22455/2541-7894-2022-13-367-382.

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Juvenile literature of “domestic abolitionism” seems to be one of the most interesting, yet under-researched branches of American abolitionist literature. Domestic abolitionist authors were usually women, who often published their texts anonymously or assuming pseudonyms. Diverse as they are in terms of genre, these texts share a set of common features. Among these features, according to Deborah De Rosa, is employment of three overarching images: the abolitionist mother-historian, the slave child, the white child. The mother-historian tells stories to foster “a change of hearts” of her young l
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Abolitionist"

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Fritz, Meaghan Morrissa. "Traveling abolitionism and female editorship performing the gift book genre in nineteenth-century abolitionist culture /." Connect to Electronic Thesis (CONTENTdm), 2010. http://worldcat.org/oclc/650074209/viewonline.

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Ferreira, Andressa Capucci. "Ninguém quis prescindir da glória de ter tomado parte na façanha\": abolicionismo em Jacareí na década de 1880." Universidade de São Paulo, 2011. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/8/8138/tde-23042012-141738/.

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O presente trabalho tem como objetivo reconstituir e investigar algumas ações abolicionistas ocorridas no município de Jacareí na década de 1880, especialmente através da atuação de indivíduos que protagonizaram dois marcos da história desse movimento na localidade: o ato de expulsão de abolicionistas ocorrido em 26 de novembro de 1883 e a fundação do Clube Abolicionista em agosto de 1887. A partir da análise de fontes documentais produzidas pela Polícia, pela Justiça, em suas instâncias municipais e provinciais, e por escravocratas e abolicionistas da localidade podemos identificar as distint
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Rattner, Ashley. "Embodied Abolitionism: Benjamin Lundy and the Antislavery Print Sphere." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2019. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/5478.

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Costa, Ana Lúcia Correira da. "The abject-other in the abolitionist feminist discourse on prostitution." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, 2022. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/673892.

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This work analyses the abolitionist feminist discourse on prostitution as elaborated by second-wave feminists in the last decades of the twentieth century. Its aim is to deconstruct such a discourse, to locate the point at which its system of values is transgressed and its coherence collapses. While abolitionist feminism embodies a claim to be in strict opposition to the patriarchal discourse on prostitution, this work attempts to demonstrate that is not the case by uncovering the points at which both discourses overlap. Patriarchal notions of female sexuality which culminate in the essentiali
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Thompson, Ki'Amber. "Prisons, Policing, and Pollution: Toward an Abolitionist Framework within Environmental Justice." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2018. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/pomona_theses/185.

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Environmental Justice defines the environment as the spaces where we live, work, and play. The Environmental Justice (EJ) Movement has traditionally used this definition to organize against toxics in communities. However, within EJ work, prisons or policing have often not been centralized or discussed. This means that the approximately 2.2 million people in prison are excluded from the conversation and movement. Additionally, communities and activists are identifying police and prisons as toxics in their communities, but an analysis of policing and prisons is largely missing in EJ scholarship.
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Sheaffer, Anne Auburn. "Taking a Knee to "Whiteness" in Teacher Education: An Abolitionist Stance." Cleveland State University / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=csu1610484537076832.

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El, Vilaly Audra Elisabeth, and Vilaly Audra Elisabeth El. "Reassembling the Subject: The Politics of Memory, Emotion, and Representation in Abolitionist Mauritania." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625676.

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This study explores an emancipatory politics of being human by asking what is at stake for a world predicated on the human being as subject. I commence with a critique of modernity and its tenet of human exceptionalism as the logical basis for our separation from social, ecological, and material others. Inextricable from these others, humans, I argue, are assemblages that merit representation as such. I demonstrate this by recruiting two human faculties conventionally considered evidence for both our human exceptionalism, or separation from perceived others, and its correlate of subjectivity:
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Keller, Megan. "The Two Conversions of John Newton: Politics & Christianity in the British Abolitionist Movement." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2018. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1873.

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This thesis interrogated the relationship between abolition and the evangelical revival in Britain through the life of John Newton. Newton, though not representative of every abolitionist, was a vital figure in the movement. His influence on Hannah More and William Wilberforce along with his contributions to the Parliamentary hearings made him a key aspect of its success. How he came to fulfill that role was a long and complex journey, both in terms of his religion and his understanding of slavery. He began his life under the spiritual direction of his pious, Dissenting mother, became an athei
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Padilioni, James Patrick. ""For How Could We Do without Sugar and Rum?": The Semiotics of Abolitionist Aesthetics." W&M ScholarWorks, 2014. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539626746.

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Williams, Emma Peyton. "Dreaming of Abolitionist Futures, Reconceptualizing Child Welfare: Keeping Kids Safe in the Age of Abolition." Oberlin College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=oberlin1592141173476542.

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Books on the topic "Abolitionist"

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Landau, Elaine. The abolitionist movement. Children's Press, 2004.

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Delbanco, Andrew. The abolitionist imagination. Harvard University Press, 2012.

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Brackett, Virginia. John Brown, abolitionist. Chelsea House Publishers, 2001.

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James, Tackach, ed. The abolitionist movement. Greenhaven Press, 2005.

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Eckert, Rivka. Into Abolitionist Theatre. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003385165.

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Mattern, Joanne. Sojourner Truth: Early abolitionist. PowerKids Press, 2003.

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Harvey, Robert S. Abolitionist Leadership in Schools. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003133414.

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1941-, Ripley C. Peter, ed. The Black abolitionist papers. University of North Carolina Press, 1985.

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Whalin, Terry. Sojourner Truth: American abolitionist. Chelsea House Publishers, 1999.

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Whalin, Terry. Sojourner Truth: American abolitionist. Chelsea House Publishers, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Abolitionist"

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Shehk, Mohamed. "Abolitionist reforms." In The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429425035-6.

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Bulla, David W. "Abolitionist Editors." In The Antebellum Press. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429242588-6.

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Tharaud, Jerome. "Abolitionist Mediascapes." In Apocalyptic Geographies. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691200101.003.0003.

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This chapter traces how American abolitionists took up evangelical media strategies in the mid- and late 1830s, launching circulating antislavery libraries that adapted evangelical space to the geographies of slavery. It mentions that the American Anti-Slavery Society urged readers to extend their “ethical horizon” beyond the local. It also details how the Society used events in the Caribbean and elsewhere to refocus evangelical zeal from Asia to the U.S. South, which transformed the world missionary enterprise into a model for national reform in the process. The chapter shows how abolitionist
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Newman, Richard S. "3. The time is now." In Abolitionism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780190213220.003.0004.

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Organized abolitionism had been in operation for nearly fifty years when it took a radical turn during the 1830s. “The time is now: The rise of immediate abolition” describes how a new generation of Anglo-American abolitionists made immediate emancipation the movement’s standard, spawning wide-ranging debates about abolitionist radicalism. Led by a diverse and multicultural constellation of activists, abolition’s second wave embraced a crusading brand of reform that refused to defer to slaveholders’ or politicians’ concerns. Experimenting with new tactics—from mail campaigns that bombarded sla
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Newman, Richard S. "4. The abolitionist crossroads." In Abolitionism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780190213220.003.0005.

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After the turbulent 1830s, doubt and discord haunted the antislavery ranks. Facing opposition in the North and South, immediate abolitionists quarrelled not only with their opponents but also with each other. A series of questions loomed: Should abolitionists moderate their protest or become even more radical? Should they form a political party or separate from corrupt civil and religious institutions? Should they aid fugitive slaves or embrace nonviolence? Should women and African Americans take more or less prominent roles in the antislavery movement? “The abolitionist crossroads” explains h
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"Creating Antislavery Petitions." In New York's Burned-over District, edited by Spencer W. McBride and Jennifer Hull Dorsey. Cornell University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501770531.003.0058.

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This chapter talks about the abolitionists across the United States who agreed that consciousness raising was a necessary first step in the goal of ending slavery. It recounts how the abolitionists purchased and established printing presses to publish newspapers about abolitionism and testimonials of former slaves. It also highlights the abolitionists' governmental petition drives of unprecedented scope, which flooded the Congress with petitions calling for the end of slavery in the United States. The chapter emphasizes the critical role abolitionist newspapers played in coordinating political
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Krohn, Raymond James. "Antislavery Sanctified." In Abolitionist Twilights. Fordham University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531505592.003.0005.

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This chapter focuses on Parker Pillsbury’s 1883 movement memoir, Acts of the Anti-Slavery Apostles. Although the publication appeared at a time in which the fate of the 1875 Civil Rights Act hung in the balance, neither an impending Supreme Court decision nor the precarious status of equal Black rights mobilized the commemorator into action. Instead, the postbellum misinformation surrounding genuine abolitionism compelled him to revisit and resume an antebellum struggle against the nation’s allegedly conservative, corrupt, and proslavery Christian establishment. Exposing the widespread and dia
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Christ, Birte. "New Abolitionism, New Genre." In Imagining the American Death Penalty. Oxford University PressOxford, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780198935117.003.0006.

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Abstract The chapter introduces the stance of so-called “new abolitionism” as the ideological-argumentative framework for the TV legal series of that period. New abolitionists do not argue against the death penalty on principle, but argue that within a faulty, human system, the margin of error is just too big and the death penalty should therefore be abolished. Increased DNA testing and the work of the Innocence Project contribute to the climate in which the new abolitionism thrives from the 1990s onward. Moreover, an increasing awareness of racism in the penal system leads to the new abolitio
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Krohn, Raymond James. "What Was Antislavery For?" In Abolitionist Twilights. Fordham University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531505592.003.0008.

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This chapter opens with a discussion of the 1870 disbandment of the American Anti-Slavery Society, thereby bookending the introductory section’s consideration of how the AASS dissolution issue had emerged and intensified during the Civil War. After summarizing key findings from each of the previous chapters, it additionally focuses on such late-in-life chroniclers and commemorators of abolitionism as Elizabeth Buffum Chace (Anti-Slavery Reminiscences, 1891); Lucy N. Colman (Reminiscences, 1891); Sarah H. Southwick (Reminiscences of Early Anti-Slavery Days, 1893); and Laura Smith Haviland (A Wo
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"New York Governor William L. Marcy Denounces Abolitionism." In New York's Burned-over District, edited by Spencer W. McBride and Jennifer Hull Dorsey. Cornell University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501770531.003.0054.

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This chapter talks about the governor of New York, William L. Marcy, who championed several popular democratic reforms but opposed abolitionism. It explores Marcy's objections to abolitionism, which likely stemmed from his political experience first as New York State comptroller and then as a United States senator. The chapter includes excerpts of Governor Marcy's 1836 address to the New York State legislature, wherein he denounced New York abolitionists as a threat to state and national security. It mentions his suggestion that those who shared his views should assist in regulating the radica
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Conference papers on the topic "Abolitionist"

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Ivey, Allison. "Abolitionist Computer Science Teaching: (Re)Conceptualizing the Field." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1683992.

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Martin, Jennifer. "Abolitionist Literacy in Urban Education: Resisting Scripted Literacy." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1682827.

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Lewis, Jennifer. "Lesson Study in Mathematics as Laboratory for Abolitionist Teaching." In 2021 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1690484.

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Rosenbloom, Leah Namisa. "A Living Framework for Abolitionist Teaching in Computer Science." In CompEd 2023: ACM Global Computing Education Conference 2023. ACM, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3576882.3617923.

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Ivey, Allison, Stephany RunningHawk Johnson, Max Skorodinsky, Jimmy Snyder, and Joanna Goode. "Abolitionist Computer Science Teaching: Moving from Access to Justice." In 2021 Conference on Research in Equitable and Sustained Participation in Engineering, Computing, and Technology (RESPECT). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/respect51740.2021.9620652.

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Coopilton, Matthew. "Abolitionist and Afro-Futurist Game Design Pedagogies (Poster 4)." In AERA 2024. AERA, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/ip.24.2103888.

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Kulick, Kachine. "Antiracist and Abolitionist Teacher Education: Going in to Act Out." In 2022 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1894558.

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Toma-Harrold, Dani. "Centering Antiracism in Environmental and Place-Based Education: Toward Abolitionist Teaching." In 2022 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/1892742.

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Louis, Vanessa. "Reimagining Science Teacher Preparation Through Abolitionist Teaching: A Narrative Inquiry Study." In 2023 AERA Annual Meeting. AERA, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/2016048.

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Love, Bettina, and Kamau Bobb. "Punished for Dreaming: The Case for Abolitionist Teaching and Educational Reparations." In RESPECT 2024: Conference for Research on Equitable and Sustained Participation in Engineering, Computing, and Technology. ACM, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3653666.3656096.

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Reports on the topic "Abolitionist"

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Figueroa, Valentín, and Vasiliki Fouka. Structural Transformation and Value Change: The British Abolitionist Movement. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w31708.

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Futamura, Madoka. Death penalty abolitionists hit their hardest converts to date. Edited by Reece Hooker. Monash University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54377/7983-c62f.

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Brock, Andrea, and Nathan Stephens-Griffin. Policing Environmental Injustice. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/1968-2021.130.

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Environmental justice (EJ) activists have long worked with abolitionists in their communities, critiquing the ways policing, prisons, and pollution are entangled and racially constituted (Braz and Gilmore 2006). Yet, much EJ scholarship reflects a liberal Western focus on a more equal distribution of harms, rather than challenging the underlying systems of exploitation these harms rest upon (Álvarez and Coolsaet 2020). This article argues that policing facilitates environmentally unjust developments that are inherently harmful to nature and society. Policing helps enforce a social order rooted
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