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Sherene Razack [4]Sherene H. Razack [3]
  1.  31
    Settler Colonialism, Policing and Racial Terror: The Police Shooting of Loreal Tsingine.Sherene H. Razack - 2020 - Feminist Legal Studies 28 (1):1-20.
    On 27 March 2014, Loreal Tsingine, a 27-year-old Navajo woman was shot and killed by Austin Shipley, a white male police officer, also 27 years old, who said he was trying to apprehend her for a suspected shoplifting. Shipley was never charged, and the Department of Justice declined to investigate the Winslow police on the matter. This article explores Shipley’s killing of Loreal Tsingine and the police investigation of the shooting as quotidian events in settler colonial states. Police shootings of (...)
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  2. A Violent Culture or Culturalized Violence?Sherene Razack - 2003 - Studies in Practical Philosophy 3 (1):80-104.
  3. Forum on the war on terrorism.Bat-Ami Bar On, Claudia Card, Drucilla Cornell, Alison M. Jaggar, Maria Pia Lara, Constance Mui, Julien S. Murphy, Sherene Razack, Sara Ruddick & Iris Marion Young - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):157.
     
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  4.  51
    Those who "witness the evil".Sherene Razack - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):204 - 211.
    : For the better part of the last decade, Canadian peacekeepers have been encouraged to frame their activities in Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and Croatia as encounters with "absolute evil." Peacekeeping is seen as a moral project in which the North civilizes the South. Using the Canadian peacekeeping context, I reflect on President Bush's use of the phrase "axis of evil" in the New World Order. I argue that this phrase reveals an epistemology structured by notions of the civilized (White) (...)
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  5.  15
    Those Who “Witness the Evil”.Sherene Razack - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):204-211.
    For the better part of the last decade, Canadian peacekeepers have been encouraged to frame their activities in Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and Croatia as encounters with “absolute evil.” Peacekeeping is seen as a moral project in which the North civilizes the South. Using the Canadian peacekeeping context, I reflect on President Bush's use of the phrase “axis of evil” in the New World Order. 1 argue that this phrase reveals an epistemology structured by notions of the civilized North and (...)
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  6.  83
    Imperilled Muslim Women, Dangerous Muslim Men and Civilised Europeans: Legal and Social Responses to Forced Marriages. [REVIEW]Sherene H. Razack - 2004 - Feminist Legal Studies 12 (2):129-174.
    How is it possible to acknowledge and confront patriarchal violence within Muslim migrant communities without descending into cultural deficit explanations (they are overly patriarchal and inherently uncivilised) and without inviting extraordinary measures of stigmatisation, surveillance and control so increased after the events of September 11, 2001? In this paper, I explore this question by examining Norway's responses to the issue of forced marriages. I argue that social and political responses to violence against women in Muslim communities have been primarily culturalist. (...)
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  7.  42
    The 'Sharia Law Debate' in Ontario: The Modernity/Premodernity Distinction in Legal Efforts to Protect Women from Culture. [REVIEW]Sherene H. Razack - 2007 - Feminist Legal Studies 15 (1):3-32.
    The normative figure in Western feminism remains the liberal autonomous individual of modernity. ‹Other’ women are those who have their freedom to choose restricted. Typically, ‹other’ women are those burdened by culture and hindered by their communities from entering modernity. If we remain in the terrain of thinking about women as vulnerable or imperilled, and some women as particularly imperilled, as we generally do of Muslim women, we remain squarely within the framework of patriarchy understood as abstracted from all other (...)
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