1
Bauman Z, May T, Askews & Holts Library Services. Thinking sociologically. Second edition. Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishing 2001.
2
Giddens A, Sutton PW. Sociology. Eighth edition. Cambridge: Polity Press 2017.
3
Macionis JJ, Plummer K, Dawson Books. Sociology: a global introduction. Fifth edition. Harlow, Essex: Prentice Hall 2012.
4
McCrone D, Ebooks Corporation Limited. Understanding Scotland: the sociology of a nation. 2nd ed. London: Routledge 2001.
5
Philo G. Contemporary sociology. Cambridge: Polity Press 2015.
6
Hanitzsch T. The handbook of journalism studies. New York: Routledge 2009.
7
Herman ES, Chomsky N. Manufacturing consent: the political economy of the mass media. London: Bodley Head 2008.
8
Curran J, Ebooks Corporation Limited. Media and democracy. Oxford: Routledge 2011.
9
Curran J, Seaton J. Power without responsibility: press, broadcasting and the internet in Britain. Eighth edition. London: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group 2018.
10
Dahlgren P. Media, Knowledge and Trust: The Deepening Epistemic Crisis of Democracy. Javnost - The Public. 2018;25:20–7. doi: 10.1080/13183222.2018.1418819
11
Davies N. Flat Earth news: an award-winning reporter exposes falsehood, distortion and propaganda in the global media. London: Vintage Books 2009.
12
Reese SD, Gandy OH, Grant AE. Framing public life: perspectives on media and our understanding of the social world. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates 2003.
13
Philo G, Miller D. Market killing: what the free market does and what social scientists can do about it. Harlow: Longman 2001.
14
Deuze M. What is journalism? Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism. 2005;6:442–64. doi: 10.1177/1464884905056815
15
Curran J, Gurevitch M. Mass media and society. 4th ed. London: Hodder Arnold 2005.
16
Shoemaker PJ, Reese SD. Mediating the message in the 21st century: a media sociology perspective. 3rd ed. New York, N.Y.: Routledge 2014.
17
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
18
Fishman M. Manufacturing the news. Austin: University of Texas Press 1988.
19
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
20
Beharrell P, Glasgow University Media Group. Bad news. London: Routledge & K. Paul 1976.
21
Schudson M. The sociology of news production. Media, Culture & Society. 1989;11:263–82. doi: 10.1177/016344389011003002
22
Ferguson M. Public communication: the new imperatives : future directions for media research. London: Sage 1990.
23
Allan S, editor. Journalism: critical issues. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press 2005.
24
Tuchman G, Daniels AK, Benét JW. Hearth and home: images of women in the mass media. New York: Oxford University 1978.
25
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
26
Briant E, Watson N, Philo G, et al. Bad news for disabled people: how the newsapapers are reporting disability. 2011.
27
Shoemaker PJ, Reese SD. Mediating the message in the 21st century: a media sociology perspective. 3rd ed. New York, N.Y.: Routledge 2014.
28
Richardson JE. British Muslims in the Broadsheet Press: a challenge to cultural hegemony? Journalism Studies. 2001;2:221–42. doi: 10.1080/14616700120042097
29
Ross K, Carter C. Women and news: A long and winding road. Media, Culture & Society. 2011;33:1148–65. doi: 10.1177/0163443711418272
30
Allan S, editor. Journalism: critical issues. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press 2005.
31
Allan S, editor. Journalism: critical issues. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press 2005.
32
Taylor & Francis Group. The handbook of journalism studies. New York, NY: Routledge, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group 2009.
33
Taylor & Francis Group. Media ethics. London: Routledge 1998.
34
Robinson P, Goddard P, Parry K, et al. Pockets of resistance: British news media, war and theory in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2010.
35
Philo G, Berry M, Dawson Books. More bad news from Israel. London: Pluto Press 2011.
36
Hammond P. Reporting ‘Humanitarian’ Warfare: propaganda, moralism and NATO’s Kosovo war. Journalism Studies. 2000;1:365–86. doi: 10.1080/1461670X.2010.10094088
37
Hoskins A, O’Loughlin B, Ebooks Corporation Limited. War and media: the emergence of diffused war. Cambridge: Polity Press 2013.
38
Keeble RL, Mair J. Afghanistan war and the media: deadlines and frontlines. Bury St. Edmunds: arima publishing 2010.
39
Miller D. Tell me lies: propaganda and media distortion in the attack on Iraq. London: Pluto 2004.
40
Allan S, editor. Journalism: critical issues. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press 2005.
41
Philo G, Glasgow University Media Group. Glasgow Media Group reader: Vol. 2: Industry, economy, war and politics. London: Routledge 1995.
42
Thussu DK, Freedman D. War and the media: reporting conflict 24/7. London: SAGE Publications 2003.
43
Elizabeth M. Perse. Media effects and society. Mahwah, NJ: L. Erlbaum Associates 2001.
44
Hall S, University of Birmingham. Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies. Culture, media, language: working papers in cultural studies, 1972-79. London: Hutchinson 1980.
45
Nightingale V, Ross K. Critical readings: media and audiences. Maidenhead: Open University Press 2003.
46
Ebooks Corporation Limited. Message received: Glasgow Media Group research, 1993-1998. Harlow, Essex: Longman 1998.
47
Ruddock A. Understanding audiences: theory and method. London: SAGE 2001.
48
Strelitz L. Approaches to understanding the relationship between texts and audiences. Communicatio. 2000;26:37–51. doi: 10.1080/02500160008537911
49
Eldridge JET, Kitzinger J, Williams K. The mass media and power in modern Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1997.
50
Hanitzsch T. The handbook of journalism studies. New York: Routledge 2009.
51
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
52
Happer C, Philo G. New approaches to understanding the role of the news media in the formation of public attitudes and behaviours on climate change. European Journal of Communication. 2016;31:136–51. doi: 10.1177/0267323115612213
53
Nightingale V, Ross K. Critical readings: media and audiences. Maidenhead: Open University Press 2003.
54
Gillespie M. Media audiences. Maidenhead, England: Open University Press 2005.
55
Morley D, British Film Institute. The Nationwide audience: structure and decoding. London: British Film Institute 1980.
56
Philo G. Seeing and believing: the influence of television. London: Routledge 1990.
57
EU referendum: Measuring the influence of the media - BBC News. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-36547789
58
Acrimonious and divisive: the role the media played in Brexit - LSE Blogs. http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2017/05/16/acrimonious-and-divisive-the-role-the-media-played-in-brexit/
59
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
60
Allan S. The Routledge companion to news and journalism. Rev. ed. London: Routledge 2012.
61
Curran J, Gurevitch M. Mass media and society. 4th ed. London: Hodder Arnold 2005.
62
Seaton J. Brexit and the Media. The Political Quarterly. 2016;87:333–7. doi: 10.1111/1467-923X.12296
63
Allan S, editor. Journalism: critical issues. Maidenhead, Berkshire: Open University Press 2005.
64
Christie N, Askews & Holts Library Services. A suitable amount of crime. London: Routledge 2004.
65
Newburn T. Key readings in criminology. Cullompton: Willan 2009.
66
Bosworth M, Hoyle C, Oxford University Press. What is criminology? Oxford: Oxford University Press 2011.
67
Brown AP. Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime Control and Social Control. The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice. 2004;43:203–11. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2311.2004.00321.x
68
Cohen S. Crime and Politics: Spot the Difference. The British Journal of Sociology. 1996;47. doi: 10.2307/591113
69
Crowther C. An introduction to criminology and criminal justice. Baskingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan 2007.
70
Hogg R. Criminology, Crime and Politics Before and After 9/11. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. 2007;40:83–105. doi: 10.1375/acri.40.1.83
71
Hulsman, L H C. Critical criminology and the concept of crime. Contemporary Crises. ;10.
72
Karstedt S. Comparing cultures, comparing crime: Challenges, prospects and problems for a global criminology. Crime, Law and Social Change. 2001;36:285–308. doi: 10.1023/A:1012223323445
73
Lynch MJ, Stretesky P, Long MA. Defining crime: a critique of the concept and its implication. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan 2015.
74
Matthews R. False Starts, Wrong Turns and Dead Ends: Reflections on Recent Developments in Criminology. Critical Criminology. 2017;25:577–91. doi: 10.1007/s10612-017-9372-9
75
Hale C. Criminology. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2013.
76
Kitsuse JI, Cicourel AV. A Note on the Uses of Official Statistics. Social Problems. 1963;11:131–9. doi: 10.2307/799220
77
Maguire M, Morgan R, Reiner R. The Oxford handbook of criminology. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1997.
78
Lee M. The Genesis of `Fear of Crime’. Theoretical Criminology. 2001;5:467–85. doi: 10.1177/1362480601005004004
79
Quinn A, Cooke L, Monaghan M. An exploration of the progress of open crime data: how do ongoing limitations with the Police.uk website restrict a comprehensive understanding of recorded crime? Policing and Society. 2019;29:455–70. doi: 10.1080/10439463.2017.1397149
80
Newburn T. Criminology. Third Edition. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 2017.
81
Maguire M, Morgan R, Reiner R. The Oxford handbook of criminology. 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2002.
82
Soares RR. Development, crime and punishment: accounting for the international differences in crime rates. Journal of Development Economics. 2004;73:155–84. doi: 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2002.12.001
83
Spalek B, Campling J. Crime victims: theory, policy and practice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2006.
84
Tonry, M. Why Crime Rates are Falling throughout the Western World. Crime and Justice: A Review of Research. Published Online First: 2014.
85
Maguire M, Morgan R, Reiner R. The Oxford handbook of criminology. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1997.
86
Karstedt S, Lafree G. Democracy, Crime, and Justice. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 2006;605:6–23. doi: 10.1177/0002716206288230
87
Leckman JF, Panter-Brick C, Salah R, editors. Pathways to peace: the transformative power of children and families. Cambridge: The MIT Press 2014.
88
Clarke RV. Opportunity makes the thief. Really? And so what? Crime Science. 2012;1. doi: 10.1186/2193-7680-1-3
89
Gottfredson MR, Hirschi T. A general theory of crime. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press 1990.
90
McLaughlin E, Muncie J, Hughes G. Criminological perspectives: essential readings. 3rd ed. London: SAGE 2013.
91
Merton RK. Social theory and social structure. 1968 enlarged edition. New York: Free Press 1968.
92
Quinney R. Class, state & crime. 2nd ed. New York: Longman 1980.
93
Liebling A, Maruna S, McAra L, editors. The Oxford handbook of criminology. Sixth edition. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press 2017.
94
Young J, Matthews R. Rethinking criminology: the realist debate. London: SAGE Publications 1992.
95
Michalis Lianos and Mary Douglas. Dangerization and the end of deviance: The institutional environment. The British Journal of Criminology. 2000;40:261–78.
96
Dario Melossi. Changing representations of the criminal. The British Journal of Criminology. 2000;40:296–320.
97
McLaughlin E. Criminological perspectives: Essential readings, 14. 3rd edition. London: SAGE Publications 2013.
98
Dunn Cavelty M. From Cyber-Bombs to Political Fallout: Threat Representations with an Impact in the Cyber-Security Discourse. International Studies Review. 2013;15:105–22. doi: 10.1111/misr.12023
99
Churchill D. Security and Visions of the Criminal: Technology, Professional Criminality and Social Change in Victorian and Edwardian Britain. British Journal of Criminology. 2016;56:857–76. doi: 10.1093/bjc/azv092
100
Costelloe MT, Chiricos T, Gertz M. Punitive attitudes toward criminals: Exploring the relevance of crime salience and economic insecurity. Punishment & Society. 2009;11:25–49. doi: 10.1177/1462474508098131
101
Décary-Hétu D, Dupont B. Reputation in a dark network of online criminals. Global Crime. 2013;14:175–96. doi: 10.1080/17440572.2013.801015
102
Griffin T, Stitt BG. Random Activities Theory: The Case for ‘Black Swan’ Criminology. Critical Criminology. 2010;18:57–72. doi: 10.1007/s10612-009-9088-6
103
Gabe Mythen and Sandra Walklate. Criminology and terrorism: Which thesis? Risk society or governmentality? The British Journal of Criminology. 2006;46:379–98.
104
Mythen G, Walklate S. Counterterrorism and the Reconstruction of (In)Security: Divisions, Dualisms, Duplicities. British Journal of Criminology. 2016;56:1107–24. doi: 10.1093/bjc/azw030
105
McLaughlin E, Muncie J, Hughes G. Criminological perspectives: essential readings. 3rd ed. London: SAGE 2013.
106
McLaughlin E, Muncie J, Hughes G. Criminological perspectives: essential readings. 3rd ed. London: SAGE 2013.
107
Christie N. Crime control as industry: towards Gulags, Western style. 3rd ed. London: Routledge 2000.
108
Clear TR, Oxford University Press. Imprisoning communities: how mass incarceration makes disadvantaged neighborhoods worse. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007.
109
Dixon D. Why Don’t the Police Stop Crime? Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. 2005;38:4–24. doi: 10.1375/acri.38.1.4
110
Garland D. The limits of the sovereign state: Strategies of crime control in contemporary society. The British Journal of Criminology. 1996;36:445–71.
111
Garland D. The culture of high crime societies: Some preconditions of recent ‘law and order’ policies. The British Journal of Criminology. 2000;40:347–75.
112
Innes M. Why ‘soft’ policing is hard: on the curious development of reassurance policing, how it became neighbourhood policing and what this signifies about the politics of police reform. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology. 2005;15:156–69. doi: 10.1002/casp.818
113
Klockars CB. The Dirty Harry Problem. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 1980;452:33–47.
114
Rose N. Government and control. The British Journal of Criminology. 2000;40:321–39.
115
Wacquant L. Deadly Symbiosis: When ghetto and prison meet and mesh. Punishment & Society. 2001;3:95–133. doi: 10.1177/14624740122228276
116
Zedner L. Penal subversions: When is a punishment not punishment, who decides and on what grounds? Theoretical Criminology. 2016;20:3–20. doi: 10.1177/1362480615598830
117
Muncie J. Decriminalising Criminology.  British Criminology Conference: Selected Proceedings. Volume 3. Papers from the British Society of Criminology Conference, Liverpool, July 1999. 2000.
118
Hillyard P, Tombs S. From ‘crime’ to social harm? Crime, Law and Social Change. 2007;48:9–25. doi: 10.1007/s10611-007-9079-z
119
Ericson RV. Crime in an insecure world. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press 2007.
120
Freilich JD, Newman GR. Transforming piecemeal social engineering into ‘grand’ crime prevention policy: toward a new criminology of social control. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology.
121
Hillyard P, Crime and Society Foundation (Great Britain). Criminal obsessions: why harm matters more than crime. London: Crime and Society Foundation 2005.
122
O’Malley P. Risk and restorative justice: Governing through the democratic minimisation of harms. Legal Studies Research Paper No 09/88, Sydney Law School.
123
Paoli L, Greenfield VA. Harm: a Neglected Concept in Criminology, a Necessary Benchmark for Crime-Control Policy. European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice. 2013;21:359–77. doi: 10.1163/15718174-21042034
124
Pemberton S. Social harm future(s): exploring the potential of the social harm approach. Crime, Law and Social Change. 2007;48:27–41. doi: 10.1007/s10611-007-9078-0
125
Shearing C. Decriminalizing Criminology: Reflections on the Literal and Topological Meaning of the Term. Canadian Journal of Criminology. 1989;31:169–78.
126
Zedner L. Pre-crime and post-criminology? Theoretical Criminology. 2007;11:261–81. doi: 10.1177/1362480607075851
127
Matthews R. False Starts, Wrong Turns and Dead Ends: Reflections on Recent Developments in Criminology. Critical Criminology. 2017;25:577–91. doi: 10.1007/s10612-017-9372-9
128
Davis W. The wayfinders: why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world. Toronto: House of Anansi Press 2009.
129
Gordon R. Going abroad: traveling like an anthropologist. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group 2016.
130
What is Anthropology 2013 - An Archived Attempt to Explain Anthropology. https://www.livinganthropologically.com/introduction-to-anthropology/what-is-anthropology-2013/
131
Wayfinders why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world - Massey Lectures.
132
The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World on Vimeo.
133
Wade Davis: The Wayfinders - Why Ancient Wisdom Matters In the Modern World - YouTube.
134
Oakes T, Price PL. The cultural geography reader. London: Routledge 2008.
135
Kottak CP. Anthropology: the exploration of human diversity. [1st ed.]. New York: Random House 1974.
136
Benedict R. Anthropology and the Abnormal. The Journal of General Psychology. 1934;10:59–82. doi: 10.1080/00221309.1934.9917714
137
Henry H. Bagish. Confessions of a Former Cultural Relativist. Santas Barbara City College 1981.
138
Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science (Chicago, Ill.), Atomic Scientists of Chicago, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Organization), et al. Bulletin of the atomic scientists.
139
Gardner A, Hoffman DM. Dispatches from the field: neophyte ethnographers in a changing world. Long Grove, Ill: Waveland Press .
140
Malinowski B. Argonauts of the Western Pacific: an account of native enterprise and adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea. London: Routledge 1922.
141
Van Maanen J. Tales of the field: on writing ethnography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1988.
142
Gardner A, Hoffman DM. Dispatches from the field: neophyte ethnographers in a changing world. Long Grove, Ill: Waveland Press .
143
Mintz SW. Worker in the cane: a Puerto Rican life history. New York: W.W. Norton .
144
Gardner A, Hoffman DM. Dispatches from the field: neophyte ethnographers in a changing world. Long Grove, Ill: Waveland Press .
145
Bourgois PI. In search of respect: selling crack in El Barrio. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2003.
146
Paley J. Marketing democracy: power and social movements in post-dictatorship Chile. Berkeley: University of California Press 2001.
147
Sugar Turner, Tracy Bachrach Ehlers. Sugar’s Life in the Hood. University of Texas Press .
148
How Susie Bayer’s T-Shirt Ended Up on Yusuf Mama’s Back - The New York Times.
149
Mann CC. The Dawn of the Homogenocene. Orion Magazine. Published Online First: 26 April 2011.
150
Edelman M, Haugerud A, Dawson Books. The anthropology of development and globalization: from classical political economy to contemporary neoliberalism. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Publishing 2005.
151
Yergin D, Stanislaw J. The commanding heights: the battle between government and the marketplace that is remaking the modern world. New York: Touchstone 1999.
152
Ferguson J, Lohmann L. The anti-politics machine: ‘development’ and bureaucratic power in Lesotho. The Ecologist. ;24:176, – 181.
153
Jonathan Fox. Advocacy Research and the World Bank: Propositions for Discussion. Development in Practice. 2003;13.
154
Schuurman FJ. Beyond the impasse: new directions in development theory. London: Zed Books Ltd 1993.
155
Brautigam D, MyiLibrary. The dragon’s gift: the real story of China in Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2009.
156
The True Cost of Cheap Food: The globalization of the food market has made food cheap, but who is benefitting - Resurgence 259 (March/April). https://www.resurgence.org/magazine/article3035-the-true-cost-of-cheap-food.html
157
Rostow’s stages of growth - Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rostow%27s_stages_of_growth
158
Strangers in a Strange Land - Telluride Magazine.
159
A Dark Continent Brightens: Africa’s Progress Since TED Africa 2007.
160
Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future, by Bill McKibben. http://billmckibben.com/deep-economy.html
161
The Price of Civilization: economics and ethics after the fall - YouTube.
162
"Commanding Heights: The Battle for the World Economy”.
163
Yergin D, Stanislaw J. The commanding heights: the battle for the world economy. [Rev. and updated ed.]. New York: Simon & Schuster 2002.
164
About the Sustainable Development Goals - United Nations Sustainable Development. https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/
165
Kolbert E. Enter the Anthropocene—Age of Man. National Geographic Magazine. Published Online First: 2011.
166
Osorio LAR, Lobato MO, Castillo XÁD. Debates on Sustainable Development: Towards a Holistic View of Reality. Environment, Development and Sustainability. 2005;7:501–18. doi: 10.1007/s10668-004-5539-0
167
McCabe JT. Toward an anthropological understanding of sustainability:  A Preface. Human Organization. 2003;62:91–2. doi: 10.17730/humo.62.2.fg3c8vbnd17y4xqb
168
Conrad P. Kottak. The New Ecological Anthropology. American Anthropologist. 1999;101.
169
Stone MP. Is Sustainability for development anthropologists? Human Organization. 2003;62:93–9.
170
Anderson K. Tending the wild: Native American knowledge and the management of California’s natural resources. Berkeley, California: University of California Press 2013.
171
Matson PA, Clark WC, Andersson K. Pursuing sustainability: a guide to the science and practice. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press 2016.
172
McKibben B. Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math. Rolling Stone Magazine. Published Online First: 2012.
173
Nicholson S, Wapner PK, editors. Global environmental politics: from person to planet. Boulder: Paradigm Publishers 2015.
174
Klein N. Capitalism vs. the Climate. The Nation. Published Online First: 2011.
175
Klein N. Capitalism Killed Our Climate Momentum, Not "Human Nature”. The Intercept. Published Online First: 2018.
176
Danaher K, Burbach R. Globalize this!: the battle against the World Trade Organization and corporate rule. Monroe, Me: Common Courage Press 2000.
177
Hansen J. Climate Change is Here — and Worse Than We Thought. Washington Post. Published Online First: 3 August 2012.
178
Byrne, John1Glover, Leigh2. A Common Future or Towards a Future Commons: Globalization and Sustainable Development since UNCED. International Review for Environmental Strategies. 2002;3:5–25.
179
Agyeman J, Bullard RD, Evans B. Just sustainabilities: development in an unequal world. London: Earthscan 2003.
180
Taylor & Francis Group. Parks in transition: biodiversity, rural development and the bottom line. London: Earthscan Publications 2004.
181
Honey MS. Treading Lightly? Ecotourism’s Impact on the Environment. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development. 1999;41:4–9. doi: 10.1080/00139159909604631
182
Davis A, Goldman MJ. Beyond payments for ecosystem services: considerations of trust, livelihoods and tenure security in community-based conservation projects. Oryx. 2017;1–6. doi: 10.1017/S0030605317000898
183
Davis A. ′Ha! What is the benefit of living next to the park?′ Factors limiting in-migration next to Tarangire National Park, Tanzania. Conservation and Society. 2011;9. doi: 10.4103/0972-4923.79184
184
Agrawal A, Gibson CC. Enchantment and Disenchantment: The Role of Community in Natural Resource Conservation. World Development. 1999;27:629–49. doi: 10.1016/S0305-750X(98)00161-2
185
Brosius JP, Tsing AL, Zerner C. Communities and conservation: histories and politics of community-based natural resource management. Walnut Creek, Calif: AltaMira Press 2005.
186
Haenn N, Wilk RR. The environment in anthropology: a reader in ecology, culture, and sustainable living. New York: New York University Press 2006.
187
Snyder KA, Sulle EB. Tourism in Maasai communities: a chance to improve livelihoods? Journal of Sustainable Tourism. 2011;19:935–51. doi: 10.1080/09669582.2011.579617
188
West P. Tourism as Science and Science as Tourism. Current Anthropology. 2008;49:597–626. doi: 10.1086/586737
189
Haenn N, Wilk RR. The environment in anthropology: a reader in ecology, culture, and sustainable living. New York: New York University Press 2006.
190
J. Peter Brosius. Endangered Forest, Endangered People: Environmentalist Representations of Indigenous Knowledge. Human Ecology. 1997;25.
191
Cruikshank J. Glaciers and climate change: Perspectives from oral tradition. Arctic. ;54:373–93.
192
Moerlein KJ, Carothers C. Total Environment of Change: Impacts of Climate Change and Social Transitions on Subsistence Fisheries in Northwest Alaska. Ecology and Society. 2012;17. doi: 10.5751/ES-04543-170110
193
Shiva V. Staying alive: women, ecology, and development. London: Zed Books 1989.
194
Nightingale A. The Nature of Gender: Work, Gender, and Environment. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space. 2006;24:165–85. doi: 10.1068/d01k
195
Goldman MJ, Davis A, Little J. Controlling land they call their own: access and women’s empowerment in Northern Tanzania. The Journal of Peasant Studies. 2016;43:777–97. doi: 10.1080/03066150.2015.1130701
196
Rocheleau DE, Thomas-Slayter BP, Wangari E. Feminist political ecology: global issues and local experiences. London: Routledge 1996.
197
Turner S. Sugar’s Life in the Hood. New ed. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press 2003.
198
Bamberger J. Woman, culture, and society. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press 1974.
199
Chant S, Gutmann MC. ‘Men-streaming’ gender? Questions for gender and development policy in the twenty-first century. Progress in Development Studies. 2002;2:269–82. doi: 10.1191/1464993402ps041ra
200
Maathai W. Challenge for Africa. Sustainability Science. 2011;6:1–2. doi: 10.1007/s11625-010-0120-2
201
Pfeiffer J, Gimbel-Sherr K, Augusto OJ. The Holy Spirit in the Household: Pentecostalism, Gender, and Neoliberalism in Mozambique. American Anthropologist. 2007;109.
202
Garrett L. The Challenge of Global Health. Foreign Affairs. Published Online First: 2007.
203
Wolf M. Is there really such a thing as "one health”? Thinking about a more than human world from the perspective of cultural anthropology. Social Science & Medicine. 2015;129:5–11. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.06.018
204
Fleshman M. Women: the face of AIDS in Africa. Africa renewal. 2004;18.
205
Nading AM. Humans, Animals, and Health: From Ecology to Entanglement. Environment and Society. 2013;4. doi: 10.3167/ares.2013.040105
206
Pfeiffer J, Nichter M. What Can Critical Medical Anthropology Contribute to Global Health? Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 2008;22:410–5. doi: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2008.00041.x
207
Hinchliffe S. More than one world, more than one health: Re-configuring interspecies health. Social Science & Medicine. 2015;129:28–35. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.07.007
208
Jackson P, Neely AH. Triangulating health. Progress in Human Geography. 2015;39:47–64. doi: 10.1177/0309132513518832
209
Craddock S, Hinchliffe S. One world, one health? Social science engagements with the one health agenda. Social Science & Medicine. 2015;129:1–4. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.11.016
210
Farmer P. Pathologies of power: rethinking health and human rights. American Journal of Public Health. 1999;89.
211
Lock M. Cultivating the Body: Anthropology and Epistemologies of Bodily Practice and Knowledge. Annual Review of Anthropology. 1993;22.
212
Anderson K. Tending the wild: Native American knowledge and the management of California’s natural resources. Berkeley, California: University of California Press 2013.
213
Deloria V. Custer died for your sins: an Indian manifesto. New York, N.Y.: Macmillan 1969.
214
Lutz C, Collins J. The Photograph as an Intersection of Gazes: The Example of National Geographic. Visual Anthropology Review. 1991;7:134–49. doi: 10.1525/var.1991.7.1.134
215
Miner H. Body Ritual among the Nacirema. American Anthropologist. 1956;58.
216
Nicholson S, Wapner PK, editors. Global environmental politics: from person to planet. Boulder: Paradigm Publishers 2015.
217
Jesse C. Ribot. A Poem on Participatory Development. Africa Today. 1997;44.
218
Rich N. Losing Earth: The Decade We Almost Stopped Climate Change - The New York Times. The New York Times Magazine. Published Online First: 2018.
219
Rifkin J. The empathic civilization: the race to global consciousness in a world in crisis. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin 2009.
220
Bernard HR. The human way; readings in anthropology. New York: Macmillan 1975.
221
Seuss. The Lorax. London: HarperCollins Children’s 2012.
222
Back L, Solomos J. Theories of race and racism. 2nd ed. London: Routledge 2009.
223
Highmore B. The everyday life reader. London: Routledge 2002.
224
Goldberg DT. Anatomy of racism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 1990.
225
Castles S, Haas H de, Miller MJ. The age of migration: international population movements in the modern world. Fifth edition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2014.
226
Spencer S. The politics of migration: managing opportunity, conflict and change. Oxford: Blackwell 2003.
227
Outhwaite W. Brexit: sociological responses. London: Anthem Press 2017.
228
Jones H. Go home?: the politics of immigration controversies. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2017.
229
Freedman J, Tarr C. Women, immigration and identities in France. Oxford: Berg 2000.
230
Bryman A. Social research methods. Fifth edition. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press 2016.
231
Liebling A, Maruna S, McAra L, editors. The Oxford handbook of criminology. Sixth edition. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press 2017.
232
Sivanandan A. Communities of resistance: writings on black struggles for socialism. London: Verso 1990.