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:The Blood of Government: Race, Empire, the United States, and the Philippines

Glenn Anthony May
- 01 Aug 2008 - 
- Vol. 77, Iss: 3, pp 524-525
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This article is published in Pacific Historical Review.The article was published on 2008-08-01. It has received 175 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Empire & Government.

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American Mirror: The United States And The Empire Of Brazil In The Age Of Emancipation

Roberto Saba
TL;DR: Hahn et al. as mentioned in this paper traced the triumph of free labor in the two largest slave societies of the nineteenth-century western world: the United States and Brazil, and concluded that free labor had strengthened capitalism in Brazil and United States, making American industrialists and Brazilian planters more powerful than ever before.
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The American West and the World: Transnational and Comparative Perspectives

Janne Lahti
TL;DR: The American West and the World as mentioned in this paper provides a synthetic introduction to the transnational history of the American West, discussing exploration, expansion, migration, violence, intimacies, and ideas.

Unfading Halo: The Untold Progressivism of Elihu Root

TL;DR: Little and Kerstetter as discussed by the authors uncovered the rather unlikely progressive credentials of a highly influential lawyer, diplomat, and statesman, Elihu Root, who represented a minority of internationally progressive lawyer-diplomats who sought to bring order to the interactions of states, reduce global conflicts and introduce worldwide institutions comprised of more nations than ever before.
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Perils of Degeneration: Reform, the Savage Immigrant, and the Survival of the Unfit

TL;DR: This article focused on settlement house work and social reform as efforts to reconcile concerns about the survival of the unfit with the desire for reform and charity, and found that reformers still worried that their efforts were also preserving the unfit who, in a more savage society, would have perished.
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‘They Think We are Just Caregivers’: The Ambivalence of Care in the Lives of Filipino Medical Workers in Singapore

TL;DR: This paper explored how Filipino migrants narrate and experience ambivalent notions of care as they move across borders and found that their labour is fraught with ambiguity as they distance themselves from ideas of care in their working lives.
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Vanishing natives and Taiwan’s settler-colonial unconsciousness

TL;DR: In this paper, the implications of recovering settler colonialism as a mode of domination that fundamentally shaped Taiwan's history are discussed. But this is not to say that a settler-colonial studies lens should replace a colonial one.
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Covering Legal Mobilization: A Bottom-Up Analysis of Wards Cove v. Atonio

TL;DR: This paper developed a political history of Wards Cove v. Atonio (1989) to show how Robert Cover's concepts of jurisgenesis and jurispathy can enrich the legal mobilization framework for understanding law and social change.