In discussions about pornography, the boundary of the harmful and unacceptable is, for many, the lack of consent. But my brief analysis here shows that this is a dangerous simplification. Images of women who accept and even welcome their own humiliation and degradation are deeply destructive, not only for the women portrayed, but for women in general
Library building usage data are weak. Electronic resource usage data are weak. We conduct occasional...
In Challenging Liberalism: Feminism as Political Critique, Lisa Schwartzman brings her sharp interpr...
As gender equality has become a more prominent issue and men and women have become more equal, one w...
Although the proper definition of rape is itself a matter of some dispute, rape is generally underst...
This paper explores the ethical frames and implications of the 2014 leak of a large archive of digit...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
Among the many burning issues of concern to educators and educational ethicists during the past few ...
What happens to a woman at the tipping point under oppression in a patriarchal society? How does she...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
I realize that this title is both provocative and potentially very puzzling in the current environme...
Photographs are often thought to be a record of reality. Rather than being a representation, they se...
Carolyn Cocca is Associate Professor in the Department of Politics, Economics, and Law at the State ...
Digital methodologies are valuable for helping to narrow voluminous potential subjects of historical...
My involvement with the poverty issue was neither as a researcher nor a policy maker. I became invol...
The growing calls for the “securitization of body and property,”[ii] documented by Jonathan Simon in...
Library building usage data are weak. Electronic resource usage data are weak. We conduct occasional...
In Challenging Liberalism: Feminism as Political Critique, Lisa Schwartzman brings her sharp interpr...
As gender equality has become a more prominent issue and men and women have become more equal, one w...
Although the proper definition of rape is itself a matter of some dispute, rape is generally underst...
This paper explores the ethical frames and implications of the 2014 leak of a large archive of digit...
I sometimes feel I’m stuck in an Alice-in-Wonderland world. Other times I feel that someone has crea...
Among the many burning issues of concern to educators and educational ethicists during the past few ...
What happens to a woman at the tipping point under oppression in a patriarchal society? How does she...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
I realize that this title is both provocative and potentially very puzzling in the current environme...
Photographs are often thought to be a record of reality. Rather than being a representation, they se...
Carolyn Cocca is Associate Professor in the Department of Politics, Economics, and Law at the State ...
Digital methodologies are valuable for helping to narrow voluminous potential subjects of historical...
My involvement with the poverty issue was neither as a researcher nor a policy maker. I became invol...
The growing calls for the “securitization of body and property,”[ii] documented by Jonathan Simon in...
Library building usage data are weak. Electronic resource usage data are weak. We conduct occasional...
In Challenging Liberalism: Feminism as Political Critique, Lisa Schwartzman brings her sharp interpr...
As gender equality has become a more prominent issue and men and women have become more equal, one w...