Now showing items 87-106 of 254

    • Famine, Genocide, and Memory: Ukrainians and the Commemoration of the 1932-1933 Holodomor  Undergraduate

      Schmidt, Taylor (2012-10-01)
      History is political. Never has this been truer than in the former Soviet Union, where the past was subject to incessant ‘revisions.’ Mr. Schmidt takes on the Ukrainian famine, or Holodomor, from an international perspective, ...
    • Fancydancing: the Art of Self  Undergraduate

      Doan, Melissa (2015)
      Visual images of the drunken, vanishing, or stoic Indian are commonplace within the popular imagination. Indigenous films have provided a medium to challenge and refute these stereotypes. As a Native American writer and ...
    • Fatwas and Feminism: How Iran's Religious Leadership Obstructs Feminist Reforms  Undergraduate

      Asokan, Anu S. (2019-04)
      In 2009, a pro-government Basiji militia member shot Neda Agha Soltan in the chest. Neda was a philosophy student who participated in protests against a possibly corrupt election, and her death was the spark that started ...
    • Federalists, Songs, and the Populist Ratification of the Constitution  Undergraduate

      McCullough, Morgan (2015-04-01)
      Despite elitist tendencies of the Federalists they used songs as a way to gain popular support for the Constitution. In order to ensure the ratification of the Constitution, Federalists published and performed songs to ...
    • Freedom rides : success by context  Undergraduate

      Ward, Katrina (2013-11)
    • A Gigantic Shark from the Lower Cretaceous Duck Creek Formation of Texas  Undergraduate

      Frederickson, Joseph A.; Schaefer, Scott N.; Doucette-Frederickson, Janessa A. (2015-06-03)
      Three large lamniform shark vertebrae are described from the Lower Cretaceous of Texas. We interpret these fossils as belonging to a single individual with a calculated total body length of 6.3 m. This large individual ...
    • Going Out: The Globalization of the Chinese Nuclear Sector  Undergraduate

      Madaj, Patrick (2016)
      Over the past decade, the Chinese government has aimed to further incorporate nuclear technology into its plan to meet China’s growing energy needs, and the nation’s major nuclear firms have acted enthusiastically to ...
    • A Grand Evasion: How Corporations Deprive Workers, Government, and Society by Widespread Tax Avoidance  Undergraduate

      Coker, Jesse (2016)
      Corporate tax avoidance is a growing concern for the stability of America. Corporations are able to avoid paying their dues to society and instead extract economics rents from both workers and the government. This paper ...
    • Henry IV: Faith's Power in Politics  Undergraduate

      Miles, Sarah (2015-04-01)
      Until the Protestant Reformation, the Catholic faith of the kings and queens of Europe was an assumption, not a debate. As the fragment grenade of the reformation exploded across Europe, however, what was once assumed was ...
    • Heterogeneous Exiliados, Permanent Exilios, and Imagined Patrias: Modern Exile from Argentina and Chile  Undergraduate

      Dixon, Arthur (2015-04-01)
      Arthur Dixon’s “Heterogeneous Exiliados, Permanent Exilios, and Imagined Patrias: Modern Exile from Argentina and Chile” sheds new light on a subject well known to scholars of Latin America. His detailed analysis demonstrates ...
    • Hugo Falcandus, the History of Tyrants, and the Normalization of Norman Sicily  Undergraduate

      Dixon, Arthur (2014-04-01)
      In “Hugo Falcandus, the History of the Tyrants, and the Normalization of Norman Sicily,” Arthur Dixon tackles a complex period in history with concise analysis and provides unexpected insight. He elucidates the ways in ...
    • Humility  Undergraduate

      Holaday, Ethan (2016-04)
    • Ideology and Reality: Afghans in Iran  Undergraduate

      McAbee, Daniel (2018)
      The Islamic Republic of Iran is a revolutionary state which derives its legitimacy on the basis of revolutionary pan-Islamism. Despite this, as the memory of the revolution recedes into the past, Iranian nationalism and ...
    • The Impact of Failed Lesbian Feminist Ideology and Rhetoric  Undergraduate

      Shannahan, Katy (2013-10-01)
      "The Impact of Failed Lesbian Feminist Ideology and Rhetoric" is a sophisticated analysis of the politics of lesbian feminism. Lesbian feminism, a radical feminist separatist movement that emerged as part of second-wave ...
    • In Memory of Daniel Holland  Undergraduate

      University of Oklahoma. College of International Studies (2017)
      This issue of the Journal of Global Affairs is dedicated in loving memory to Daniel Holland, who passed away while traveling abroad on June 11, 2017. Daniel was a National Merit Scholar earning his bachelor's and master's ...
    • The Indian Removal Act and resulting factions among the Cherokee Nation  Undergraduate

      Talley, Bridgett (2016)
      On May 28, 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, authorizing the forcible relocation of southern Indian tribes to the flatlands of America. While this signature only took a moment, consequences of ...
    • The Influence of Indigenous Artistis in the Maps of the Relaciones Geográficas  Undergraduate

      Brockway, Mark (2012-10-01)
      In the late sixteenth century the Spanish cosmographer López de Velasco ordered maps of cities and towns in America to be produced and returned to Spain to gain a more accurate understanding of Spanish territory in the New ...
    • The Intersection of Slums and Environmental Justice in Morocco  Undergraduate

      Kosta, JoAnne (2016)
      The purpose of this research paper is to address environmental justice in Morocco as it relates to slum life and slum relocation efforts. As such, the paper deals with the kingdom’s waste management activities in both rural ...
    • Intersections of Anarcho-Feminism: Emma Goldman, Mujeras Libres, and the Spanish Civil War  Undergraduate

      Wright, Alexandra (2013-10-01)
      In this paper, Alexandra Wright evokes a feminist movement that flared to life in 1930’s Spain, burned brightly amid the political chaos of the Spanish Civil War, and just as quickly burned out. Emma Goldman’s sexually ...
    • Into the Badlands: Japanese American Incarceration and the Environment  Undergraduate

      Bahr, Julie (2019)
      In the wake of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the United States not only declared war on the Empire of Japan, but also began the forced relocation of thousands of Japanese American citizens from the Pacific ...