GU Faculty Publications

Braune, J. (2019). Void and idol: a critical theory analysis of the neo-fascist “alt-right.” Journal of Hate Studies15(1), 11-37.

Braune, J. (2019). Who’s Afraid of the Frankfurt School? “Cultural Marxism” as an Antisemitic Conspiracy. Journal of Social Justice, 9,Access Publication Online

Calafell, B. M. (2017). Brown Queer Bodies. Qualitative Inquiry23(7), 511–512. 

Click, M. A. (2019). Anti- Fandom: Dislike and Hate in the Digital Age. New York University Press. 

Click, M. A., Holladay, H. W., Lee, H., & Kristiansen, L. J. (2014). “Let’s hug it out, bitch”: HBO’s Entourage, Masculinity in Crisis, and the Value of Audience Studies. Television & New Media16(5), 403–421. 

Click, M. A., Miller, B., Behm-Morawitz, E., & Aubrey, J. S. (2015). Twi-dudes and twi-guys. Men and Masculinities19(3), 219–239. 

Critchlow. G. (2007). Stopping Genocide Through International Agreement When the Security Council Fails to Act, Georgetown Journal of International Law. 40 (2). 311-344.

Critchow, G. (2006). Where do universal human rights begin?. Journal of Hate Studies, 5 (1), 7-14.  

Critchow. G., Anderson, M. (2020). The Lifter and the Lawyer. A Story of Punishment, Penitence, and Privilege. ISBN: 9781725278370. 

‌Cunningham, C. M., & Crandall, H. M. (2019). Learning the Language of Justice Through Play. Journal of Hate Studies15(1), 183-202.

Donnelly, R. C. (2011). Dark rose: Organized Crime and Corruption in Portland. Settle : University of Washington Press. 

Dunn, S. (2013). Islamophobia, hateful speech, and the need to practice democratic virtues. Journal of Hate Studies, 11(1), 29. 

Dunn, S. (2015). Striving in the path of god: Jihad and martyrdom in Islamic thought. By Asma Afsaruddin. Journal of the American Academy of Religion83(3), 881–883./ 

Dunn, S. (2016). Gender, violence and social justice in Islam: Muslim feminist scholars in the public eye. Journal of Law and Religion31(3), 293–305. 

Eastwood, M. (2007). What is genocide? Journal of Hate Studies, 6 (1), 129-131.  

Eguchi, S., Calafell, B. M., & Files-Thompson, N. (2014). Intersectionality and quare theory: fantasizing African American male same-sex relationships in Noah’s Arc: Jumping the broom. Communication, Culture & Critique7(3), 371–389. 

Emon, A, Aheme, R., & Dunn, S. (2018). Islamic law and human right. In the Oxford Handbook of Islamic Law: Oxford University Press. /

Eppinga, J. (2006). Shining the spotlight on injustice: An interview with Morris Dees. Journal of Hate Studies, 5(1), 119-123

Eppinga, J. (2007). Divided by gender: An interview Swith Jane Elliott. Journal of Hate Studies, 6(1), 117-122.  

Eppinga, J. (2009). From hatred to compassion: An interview with Thupten Phelgye. Journal of Hate Studies, 7(1), 99-102.

Eppinga, J. (2010). Forgiveness: The key to self-healing-An Interview with Eva Mozes-Kor. Journal of Hate Studies, 8(1), 133-141.

‌Eppinga, J. (2011). ‘The antidote to hate is success’: an interview with Izzedine Abuelaish. Journal of Hate Studies9(1), 237-243.

Gambrell, K., Martin, A., & Mungaray, K. R. (2019). Following the 2016 residential election: positive and negative mood affect and the impetus towards activism. Journal of Hate Studies14(1), 153.

Gillmer, J. (2007). Poor whites, benevolent masters, and the ideologies of slavery: The local trial of a slave accused of rape. North Carolina Law Review85 (2), 489-570.

Gillmer, J. (2008). Base wretches and black wenches: A story of sex and race, violence and compassion, during slavery times. Alabama Law Review59. 1501-1554./ 

Gillmer, J. (2010). Lawyers and slaves: A remarkable case of representation from the antebellum south. University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review1, 37- 65.

Gillmer, J. (2010). Race, blood, and what the alligator knows: A review of what blood won’t tell. Southern California Law Review83, 425-440.  Access Publication Online

Gillmer, J. (2011). Crimes of passion: The regulation of interracial sex in Washington, 1855-1950. 91³Ô¹ÏÍø Law Review, 47(2) 393- 428.

Gillmer, J. (2017). Shades of gray: The life and times of a free family of color on the Texas frontier. Law & inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice29(1), 33 -105.

Gollmer, J. (2004). Suing for freedom: Interracial sex, slave law, and racial identity in the post-revolutionary and antebellum south. North Carolina Law Review, 82(2). 537-619.

Hoover, K. F. (2020). Countering Hate: Leadership Cases for Change. Kendall Hunt. ISBN: 978-1-7924-6047;978172460036.  

Holland, B. (2001). Using Excited Utterances to Prosecute Domestic Violence in New York: The Door Opens Wide, or Just a Crack? Cardozo Women’ s LJ, 8. 171.

Holland, B. (20011). Race and ambivalent criminal procedure remedies. 91³Ô¹ÏÍø Law Review. 47. 341.

Holland, B. (2010). Racial profiling and a punitive exclusionary rule. Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review. 20. 29.

Loroz, P.S., Loroz, Pepper, M.B. (2012). Hate Studies in Business: A Course on Recognizing and Combating the Ways Business Organizations Exert Violence on Individuals, Families, and Society. In C. Wankel, A. S. Stanchowicz- Stanusch (Eds), Handbook of Research on Teaching Ethics in Business and Management Education (pp. 253-273).  Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

Maucione, J. (2017). The revelatory racial politics of the sopranos: Black and brown bodies as props and backdrop to the normalization of whiteness. In S. E. Weissinger, E. Watson, D. A. Mack (Eds). Violence against black bodies: An intersectional analysis of how black lives continue to matter (pp. 127-144). New York: Routledge. / 

Maucione, J. (2017).  Teaching literary cartographies of race, space, place, and displacement. In R. Tally (Ed). Teaching space, place, and literature (pp. 49-57). London and New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 

McPhail, B. & Jenness, V. (2005). To charge or not to charge? That is the question: The pursuit of strategic advantage in prosecutional decision-making surrounding hate crime. Journal of Hate Studies, 4 (1), 89-119.

Mohr, J. M. (2007). Hate studies through a constructivist and critical pedagogical approach. Journal of Hate Studies, 6(1), 65-80.

Mohr, J. M. (2009).  Oppression by scientific method: The use of science to "other" sexual minorities. Journal of Hate Studies, 7(1), 21-42.

Pepper, M.B., Leithauser, A., Loroz, P.S., & Steverson, B. (2012). Responding to Hate Speech on Social Media: A Class Leads a Student Movement. Int. J. Cyber Ethics Educ., 2, 45-54.

Rahimiyan, O. R. (2010). My homeland, my diaspora: Iranian Jewish identity in modern times. Journal of Hate Studies, 8(1), 53-86.

‌Rorholm, M., & Gambrell, K. (2019). The pink triangle as an interruptive symbol. Journal of Hate Studies15(1), 63-81.

‌Shepard, J. (2011). In memoriam: Eva Lassman. Journal of Hate Studies9(1), p.bi.

Simpon, S. (2012/13). The Elusive Quest for Equality: Women, Work, and the Next Wave of Humanism. 91³Ô¹ÏÍø Law Review, 48 (2), 279-305.

Tan, A., Tan, G., Avdeyeva, T., Crandall, H., Fukushi, Y., Nyandwi, A., Chin, H., & Wu, C. (2001). Changing negative racial stereotypes: The influence of normative peer information. Howard Journal of Communications, 12(3), 171-180.

Thweatt, E. (2002). Bibliography of hate studies materials. Journal of Hate Studies, 1(1), 167-239.

Wassmuth, B. & Bryant, M. J. (2002). Not in our world: A perspective of community organizing against hate. Journal of Hate Studies, 1(1), 109-131.

Weatherby, G. A.  & Scroggins, B. (2005). A content analysis of persuasion techniques used on white supremacist websites. Journal of Hate Studies, 4(1), 9-31.

Yousuf, S., & Calafell, B. (2018). The imperative for examining anti-Muslim racism in rhetorical studies. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies15(4), 312–318./ 

Zammarchi, E. (2020). ‘If I see a black dot, I shoot it on sight!’: Italian rap between anti- and neo-fascisms. Global Hip Hop Studies1(2), 293-312.