|
original article |
Journal |
Date |
Title |
Authors All Authors |
1 |
[GO] |
The Journal of Intersectionality |
2022―Dec―01 |
Did COVID-19 Make Me an Afro-Pessimist? A Conversation in Three Parts |
Chamara Jewel Kwakye, Jessica Millward |
2 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2022―Nov―15 |
Exposing the Crimes of the Neoliberal State in the Governance of COVID-19 |
Roberto Catello |
3 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2022―Oct―19 |
Teleworking in Portuguese public administration during the COVID-19 pandemic |
César Madureira, Belén Rando |
4 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2022―Jun―22 |
T. J. Coles, Capitalism and Coronavirus: How Institutionalized Greed Turned a Crisis into a Catastrophe, reviewed by Raymond Michalowski |
Raymond Michalowski |
5 |
[GO] |
Zanj The Journal of Critical Global South Studies |
2022―Jun―15 |
Impacts of COVID-19 on Wives of Nepali Migrants and Future Foreign Employment Decision-making |
Anita Ghimire, Priyasha Shrestha, Indu Dhungana |
6 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2022―Apr―04 |
Vaccine nationalism: Competition, EU parochialism, and COVID-19 |
Binoy Kampmark, Petar Kurečić |
7 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2022―Apr―04 |
A historical narrative on pandemic Patterns of behavior and belief |
Gazala Khan, Sazzad Parwez |
8 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
Carceral Politics, Inpatient Psychiatry, and the Pandemic: Risk, Madness, and Containment in COVID-19 |
Berkhout |
9 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
Zoonosis and the Polis: COVID-19 and Frantz Fanon's Critique of the Modern Colony |
Parker |
10 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
COVID-19 and the Disinheritance of an Ableist World |
Flowers |
11 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
Old, Broken, Disposable: Critical Discourse Analysis of the Public Health Narrative About At-Risk Populations During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Costa Rica |
Ramírez |
12 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
Involuntary Psychiatric Commitment in the Era of COVID-19: Systemic Social Oppression and Discourses of Risk in Public Health and Bioethics |
Bergstresser |
13 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Dec―23 |
Introduction: Philosophies of Disability and the Global Pandemic |
Tremain |
14 |
[GO] |
The Journal of Fair Trade |
2021―Sep―22 |
Challenges of COVID-19 for Fair Trade enterprises in attaining Sustainable Development Goals 2030 |
Dangol |
15 |
[GO] |
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies |
2021―Aug―13 |
The Dis-Ease of Body-Politics: “Coronavirus” as a Racial Pandemic in Contemporary India |
Dey |
16 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2021―Aug―05 |
At a crossroads: Uber and the ambiguities of the COVID-19 emergency in Lisbon |
Allegretti |
17 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2021―Aug―05 |
The platform economy and the precarisation of food delivery work in the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from India |
Parwez |
18 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2021―Aug―05 |
Algorithmic work coordination and workers' voice in the COVID-19 pandemic: The case of Foodora/Lieferando |
Schreyer |
19 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2021―Aug―05 |
Urban gig workers in Indonesia during COVID-19: The experience of online ‘ojek’ drivers |
Rachmawati |
20 |
[GO] |
Work Organisation Labour & Globalisation |
2021―Aug―05 |
Digitalisation, labour and the pandemic: Working life in the post-COVID-19 city |
Huws |
21 |
[GO] |
World Review of Political Economy |
2021―Jun―15 |
How China S쳮ded in the COVID-19 Epidemic Prevention and Control: Interview with Associate Professor Leijie Wei, Editor of Waiting for Dawn: 21 Diaries From 16 COVID-19 Frontlines |
Wei |
22 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Neoliberalism and personal freedoms during COVID-19 |
Chalk |
23 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Policing in the pandemic: an investigator's perspective |
Foy |
24 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Policing the pandemic: crisis without boundaries |
Broadhurst |
25 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Security, legitimacy and crisis in the aftermath of colonialism and in the midst of a pandemic: the role of state organs |
Hamourtziadou |
26 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Has the COVID-19 pandemic manoeuvred policing in England and Wales towards a single national police organisation? |
Duckworth |
27 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Power, politics and policing: how the pandemic has highlighted
fractures and fault lines in our society |
Jarman |
28 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2021―May―17 |
Policing the pandemic: the legitimacy of the police and the potential for civil unrest; a personal commentary |
Lewis |
29 |
[GO] |
Socialist Lawyer |
2021―Feb―16 |
Only a statutory inquiry into the handling of Coronavirus will do |
Abrahamson |
30 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―31 |
The Harms of State, Free-Market Common Sense and
COVID-19 |
Coleman |
31 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―31 |
COVID-19 and the U.S. Health Care Industry: Towards a “Critical
Health Criminology” within State Crime Studies |
Friedrichs |
32 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―31 |
The COVID-19 Pandemic in Puerto Rico: Exceptionality, Corruption and
State-Corporate Crimes |
Atiles Osoria |
33 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―31 |
Amplified Vulnerabilities and Reconfigured Relations: COVID-19,
Torture Prevention and Human Rights in the Global South |
Jefferson |
34 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―20 |
Violating Food System Workers' Rights in the Time of COVID-19: The
Quest for State Accountability |
Elver |
35 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―13 |
State Crime, Native Americans and COVID-19 |
Finley |
36 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2021―Jan―06 |
Do Prisoners' Lives Matter? Examining the Intersection of Punitive
Policies, Racial Disparities and COVID-19 as State Organized Race
Crime |
Bradshaw |
37 |
[GO] |
State Crime Journal |
2020―Dec―30 |
State Crime, Structural Violence and COVID-19 |
Gordon |
38 |
[GO] |
Socialist Lawyer |
2020―Dec―28 |
The coronavirus credit crunch: how can we avert the debt crisis? |
Bradley |
39 |
[GO] |
Socialist Lawyer |
2020―Dec―28 |
Villains of the pandemic |
Blowe |
40 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
The pandemic surveillance state: an enduring legacy of COVID-19 |
Kampmark |
41 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
“A test of our values”: The Moldovan experience with COVID-19 |
Whitman |
42 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
COVID-19 and the myth of security |
Hamourtziadou |
43 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
Neoliberal economic model and austerity have made us helpless in the face of the COVID-19 crisis |
|
44 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
Dealing with COVID-19 in the European periphery: between securitization and “gaslighting” |
Vankovska |
45 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
Domestic violence through the window of the COVID-19 lockdown: a
public crisis embodied/exposed in the private/domestic sphere |
Krishnadas |
46 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
Why were the UK and USA unprepared for the COVID-19 pandemic? The systemic weaknesses of neoliberalism: a comparison between the UK, USA, Germany, and South Korea |
Mellish |
47 |
[GO] |
Journal of Global Faultlines |
2020―Oct―08 |
Do we support our governments to use strict surveillance methods in the fight against the coronavirus? |
Akhigbemen |
48 |
[GO] |
Policy Perspectives |
2020―Jul―13 |
Pakistan's Economy Amidst Pandemic |
Almas |
49 |
[GO] |
Socialist Lawyer |
2020―Jun―11 |
Human Rights and Access to Justice During Covid-19 |
Webb |