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Introduction: past, present, and future
[pt. 1.] An overview of race, ethnicity, crime, and justice: Introduction, Part I; Intentional inequalities and compounding effects: the state of race and justice theory and research; Ethnicity and crime; Immigration, crime, and victimization in the US context: an overview; Hate crime research in the twenty-first century; Native American crime, policing, and social context; Crime and delinquency among Asian American Youth: a review of the evidence and an agenda for future research; Racial and ethnic threat: theory, research, and new directions; The rise of mass deportation in the United States
[pt. 2.] Theoretical approaches to the study of race, ethnicity, crime, and criminal justice: Introduction, Part II; Racisms and crime: racialized elaborations of general theories of offending; What was old is new again: an examination of contemporary theoretical approaches used in race, ethnicity, crime, and justice research; Racial threat and police coercion; "Fractured reflections" in Cooley's looking glass: nonrecognition of self -presentation as racialized experience; Examining the intersections of gender and sexual orientation within the discipline: a case for feminist and queer criminology


[pt. 3.] Examining the intersections of race, ethnicity, and criminal justice system involvement: Introduction, Part III; Policing race, gender, and ethnicity; Ethnographic reflexivity: geographic comparisons of gangs and policing in the barrios of the southwest; Ethnicity, immigration, and the experience of incarceration; The puzzle of prison towns: race, rurality, and reflexivity in community studies
[pt. 4.] Examining the intersections of race, ethnicity, and gender in the study of crime and criminal justice: Introduction, Part IV; LGBTQ populations of color, crime, and justice: an emerging but urgent topic; Gender and crime: black female crime; Intersectionality, immigration, and domestic violence; A case study: neighborhood factors and intimate and non-intimate aggravated assaults
[pt. 5.] Comparative approaches to studying race, ethnicity, crime, and justice: Introduction, Part V; Repatriation; Mass deportation: forced removal, immigrant threat, and disposable labor in a global context
Conclusion.

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