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Coming soon: eBook by Aya Wat Distinct Features of North American Slavery When Compared to Other Parts of the World

Summary
Enslaved women in North America played essential roles in sustaining the economic activities of society, particularly within the context of plantation agriculture and domestic labor. Their labor was central to the profitability and functioning of slaveholding households and the broader economy, yet their contributions were often overlooked, exploited, and devalued within the oppressive system of slavery.

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AUDIO COURSE HISTORY OF EUGENICS IN CANADA FROM THE VIEWPOINT OF SOCIOLOGY OF LAW

  • Introduction to Eugenics: Global and Canadian Origins
  • Part One: Intellectual and Philosophical Roots of Eugenics
  • Part 2 Theories of Heredity and Evolution
  • Part 3. The Spread and Institutionalization of Eugenics
  • Part 4: Eugenics in Canada: Early Influences and Adoption
  • Part 5: The Legalization of Eugenics: Provincial Laws and Policies
  • Part 6.  Women and Eugenics: Agency and Oppression  
  • Part 7. Women as Targets: Oppression and the Regulation of Reproduction
  • Part 8. The Role of Medical Professionals in Eugenics: Law, Practice, and Case Examples; Physicians and the Ethics of Eugenics; Medical Education and Eugenics
  • The End of Eugenic Laws and Their Legacy

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  • Introduction: Understanding the Risk Society in Legal Terms
  • Part One: Risk & Threat
  • Part Two: Risk Mitigation in the Neoliberal “Risk Society”
  • Part Three: How Private Actors Exploit Risk Privatization to Increase Their Gains
  • Part Four: Manipulation of Risk Discourse
  • Part Five: How this Correlates with Modern Slavery
  • Conclusion: Necessity of Reframing Legal Debate: Why law must re-center real threats, not hypothetical risks, as its primary concern