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1

Mobius, Markus. Trust and social collateral. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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2

Mobius, Markus. Trust and social collateral. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2007.

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3

Collateral damage: Social inequalities in a global age. Polity, 2011.

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4

López-Fernández, Andrée Marie. Corporate social responsibility and business growth: Collateral effects on business and society. Nova Publishers, 2015.

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5

Sapio, George. Collateral damage: Photographs of the Iraqi people, February 2003. Bad Dog! Studios, 2003.

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Sapio, George. Collateral damage: Photographs of the Iraqi people, February 2003. Bad Dog! Studios, 2003.

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7

Sudanese refugees in the United States: The collateral damage of Sudan's Civil War. Edward Mellen Press, 2008.

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8

Bauman, Zygmunt. Collateral Damage: Social Inequalities in a Global Age. Polity Press, 2013.

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9

Bauman, Zygmunt. Collateral Damage: Social Inequalities in a Global Age. Polity Press, 2013.

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10

Schuster, Caroline E. Social Collateral: Women and Microfinance in Paraguay's Smuggling Economy. University of California Press, 2015.

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11

Schuster, Caroline E. Social Collateral: Women and Microfinance in Paraguay's Smuggling Economy. University of California Press, 2015.

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12

Social Collateral: Women and Microfinance in Paraguay's Smuggling Economy. University of California Press, 2015.

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13

Lane, Jeffrey. Going to Jail Because of the Internet. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199381265.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 shows how the law works on the digital street. It reveals a new approach to gang suppression based on the editorial control of suspects’ online content. This chapter addresses a series of gang indictments in which police and prosecutors utilized social media to define and prosecute youth crews under conspiracy law, a practice that emerged as a stop-and-frisk method on the physical street lost legitimacy. The author shows how prosecutors learned to marshal social media as criminal evidence. This chapter explores also the pushback by teenagers whose code-switching strategies evolved to
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14

Strandburg, Katherine J. Users, Patents, and Innovation Policy. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.31.

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Users are important innovators in many fields. Often, they do not need socially costly patent incentives to invent, disclose, and disseminate their inventions. A patent-free user innovation (UI) paradigm is likely to be successful and socially desirable when an invention’s value to users has a substantial non-competitive component. If a user innovator values an invention primarily for providing a competitive edge, the patent-free UI paradigm is not viable. Most such inventions have little social value. Some, however, such as improved manufacturing processes, produce significant collateral valu
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15

Belser, Julia Watts. Opulence and Oblivion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190600471.003.0007.

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This chapter analyzes Bavli Gittin’s self-critical assessment of the ethical failings of the rabbis and other Jewish elites. Through tales of feasting in the shadow of catastrophe, Bavli Gittin articulates striking concerns about the collateral costs of opulent wealth, calling attention to the way that extravagant luxury isolates and insulates those who dine at the fanciest tables from the gritty realities of violence and danger. Key moments in Bavli Gittin’s narrative center around food: the shame of Bar Qamtsa at a feast sparks his eventual betrayal of the Jews, the tale of Marta bat Boethus
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16

Rodriguez, Nancy, and Jillian J. Turanovic. Impact of Incarceration on Families and Communities. Edited by John Wooldredge and Paula Smith. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199948154.013.10.

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This essay describes the implications of confinement for offenders’ families (both children and spouses) and for their communities, including coercive mobility, weakened social controls, family disruption, and stigmatization. The pros and cons of removing criminal fathers are discussed, focusing on possible differences in the implications of removing criminal fathers versus criminal mothers. The dramatically higher incarceration rates of black men from the most disadvantaged urban neighborhoods relative to any other demographic subgroup is discussed in the context of possible implications for
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17

Owen, Gareth, Sir Simon Wessely, and Sir Simon Wessely, eds. Psychosocial assessments with adults. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199661701.003.0002.

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The chapter covers the psychosocial assessment in detail, giving an approach to complex areas such as early life experiences and memories of sexual abuse. Advice is given on how to assess personality, including how to gain collateral history and navigate issues of negative judgement relating to personality disorder as well as issues to do with the separation of personality disorder from normality. The chapter aims to increase doctors’ confidence with how to assess family relationships, structures, and cycles and how to hold family interviews. A scheme for supplanting and extending information
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18

Harris, LaShawn. Black Women, Urban Labor, and New York’s Informal Economy. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040207.003.0002.

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This chapter offers an overview of black women informal workers both as wage earners and entrepreneurs, positioning their experiences at the center of New York's informal labor market. It highlights working-class black women's socioeconomic conditions and the ways in which economic distress coupled with varying perceptions of urban public space and racial uplift motivated some women's attraction to nontraditional modes of labor. New York black women viewed the economic and social opportunities offered by off-the-books labor as a path toward altering the recipe of possibilities for themselves.
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19

Bramoullé, Yann, Andrea Galeotti, and Brian W. Rogers, eds. The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of Networks. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199948277.001.0001.

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This handbook represents the frontier of research into the economics of networks: how and why they form, how they influence behavior, how they help govern outcomes in an interactive world, and how they shape collective decision making, opinion formation, and diffusion dynamics. From a methodological perspective, the authors devote attention to theory, field experiments, laboratory experiments, and econometrics. Theoretical work in network formation, games played on networks, repeated games, and the interaction between linking and behavior are synthesized. A number of chapters are devoted to st
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20

Nakachi, Mie. Replacing the Dead. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190635138.001.0001.

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In 1955 the Soviet Union re-legalized abortion on the basis of women’s rights. However, this fact is not widely known. In the absence of a feminist movement, how did the idea of women’s right to abortion emerge in an authoritarian society, more than a decade before it appeared in the West? The answer is found in the history of the Soviet politics of reproduction after World War II, a devastation in which 27 million Soviet soldiers and civilians perished. This enormous loss of predominantly adult males posed a threat to economic recovery. In order to replace the dead, the Soviet Union introduce
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21

Ortbals, Candice, and Lori Poloni-Staudinger. How Gender Intersects With Political Violence and Terrorism. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.308.

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Gender influences political violence, which includes, for example, terrorism, genocide, and war. Gender uncovers how women, men, and nonbinary persons act according to feminine, masculine, or fluid expectations of men and women. A gendered interpretation of political violence recognizes that politics and states project masculine power and privilege, with the result that men occupy the dominant social position in politics and women and marginalized men are subordinate. As such, men (associated with masculinity) are typically understood as perpetrators of political violence with power and agency
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22

Heyns, Christof, and Tess Borden. Unmanned Weapons. Edited by Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Naomi Cahn, Dina Francesca Haynes, and Nahla Valji. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199300983.013.30.

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This chapter reviews technological advances in weapons systems from a gendered perspective. It describes how unmanned weapons affect women in targeted societies and targeting societies, exploring ways in which traditional gender roles are both exacerbated and relaxed by this weaponry. With respect to masculinity, the chapter discusses the potential for emasculation of traditional male combatants in targeting societies and the dehumanization of men in targeted societies. Drawing on feminist critiques, the chapter closes with a discussion of ethical concerns, including the potential for downplay
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23

Wilson, Mary E. Antibiotics. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780190663414.001.0001.

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A STIRRING EXAMINATION OF A LOOMING CRISIS Virtually everyone has taken antibiotics. They can be lifesavers -- or they can be useless. But what are they? How are they used? And what happens as the effectiveness of antibiotics begins to decline? Antibiotics: What Everyone Needs to Know® examines the personal and societal implications of our planet's most important -- and arguably most overused -- medications. In a question-and-answer format, it unpacks the most complicated aspects of this issue, including: · How antibiotics are used (and overused) in humans, plants, and livestock · The conseque
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24

Fuks, Abraham. The Language of Medicine. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190944834.001.0001.

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The words that physicians use with patients have the power to heal or harm. The practice of medicine is shaped by the potent metaphors that are prevalent in clinical care, and military metaphors and the words of war bring with them unfortunate consequences for patients and physicians alike. Physicians who fight disease turn the patient into a passive battlefield. Patients are encouraged to remain stoic, blamed for “failing” chemotherapy and sadly remembered in heroic obituaries of lost battles. The search for disease as enemy shifts the doctor’s gaze to the computer and imaging technologies th
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