Restricted accessReview articleFirst published online 2016-1
Book Reviews: Philosophies and Practices of Emancipatory Nursing: Social Justice as Praxis. Paula N. Kagan,Marlaine C. Smith,and Peggy L. Chinn,(Eds.) (2014). New York: Routledge
BoutainD. M. (2014). The identity, research, and health dialogic interview: Its significance for social justice-oriented research. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 124-135). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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BrowneA. J.Reimer-KirkhamS. (2014). Problematizing social justice discourses in nursing. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 21-38). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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CanalesM.K.DrevdahlD. J. (2014). Social justice: From educational mandate to transformative core values. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 153-174). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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DoaneG. H. (2014). Cultivating relational consciousness in social justice practice. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 241-250). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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DrevdahlD.KneippS. M.CanalesM. K.DorcyK. S. (2001). Reinvesting in social justice: A capital idea for public health nursing. ANS. Advances in Nursing Science, 24, 19-31.
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Evans-AgnewR. A.SanonM.BoutainD. M. (2014). Critical research methods and social justice issues: A methodological example using Photovoice. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 136-149). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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GeorgesJ. M. (2014). Compassion, biopower and nursing. In KaganP. N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 51-63). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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GlassN.DavisK. (2014). Social justice nursing and children’s rights: A realist and postmodern intersectional feminist analysis of nurses’ reflections on child risk and protection within domestic violence. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 108-123). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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KaganP. N. (2014). Afterword. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 323-326). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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KaganP. N.SmithM.C.ChinnP. L. (Eds.). (2014). Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis. New York, NY: Rutledge.
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KellyU. A (2014). Military sexual trauma and nursing practice in the Veterans Administration. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 285-297). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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MaloneB. (2014). No hiding place: the search for impermeable boundaries. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 71-78). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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MeleisA. I.GlickmanC. G. (2014). A passion in nursing for justice: Toward global health equity. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 309-322). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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PerronA.RudgeT.GagnonM. (2014). Towards an “ethics of discomfort” in nursing: Parrhesia as fearless speech. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 39-50). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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PharrisM. D.PavlishC. P. (2014). Community-based collaborative action research: Giving birth to emancipatory knowing. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 93-107). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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ThorneS. (2014). Nursing as social justice: A case for emancipatory disciplinary theorizing. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 79-90). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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VarcoeC.BrowneA. J.CenderL. M. (2014). Promoting social justice and equity by practicing nursing to address structural inequities and structural violence. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 266-284). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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WatsonJ. (2014). Social/moral justice from a caring science cosmology. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 64-70). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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WhiteJ. (2014). Through a socio-political lens: The relationship of practice, education, research, and policy to social justice. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 298-308). New York, NY: Rutledge.
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WillisD.PerryD. J.Lacoursiere-ZuccheroT.GraceP. (2014). Facilitating humanization: Liberating the profession of nursing from institutional confinement on behalf of social justice. In KaganP.N.SmithM.C.ChinnP.L. (Eds.), Philosophies and practices of emancipatory nursing: Social justice as praxis (pp. 251-265). New York, NY: Rutledge.