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RELEVANT articles and chapters

Claire Moon

Moon, Claire and Javier Treviño-Rangel (2020) ‘“Involved in something (involucrado en algo)”: denial and stigmatization in Mexico’s ‘war on drugs’’, British Journal of Sociology, 71/4: 722-740.

Moon, Claire (2020) ‘Extraordinary deathwork: new developments and the social significance of forensic humanitarian action’ in Roberto C. Parra, Sara C. Zapico and Douglas H. Ubelaker (eds.) Humanitarian Forensic Science: Interacting with the Dead and the Living. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.

Moon, Claire (2020) ‘What remains? Human rights after death’ in Kirsty Squires, David Errickson and Nicholas Márquez-Grant (eds.) Ethical Challenges in the Analysis of Human Remains. New York: Springer.

Renshaw, Layla, Marina Álamo Bryan, Zuzanna Dziuban and Claire Moon (2020) ‘Tools in the search for human remains’ in The Secret Life of Objects, ISRF Bulletin XXI.

Moon, Claire (2020) ‘Los derechos humanos de los muertos’, Observatorio del Desarollo. Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas. 25/26. 

Moon, Claire (2018) ‘Politics, deathwork and the rights of the dead’, Humanity, 9 November.

Moon, Claire (2017) ‘The biohistory of atrocity and the social life of human remains’ in Christopher M. Stojanowski and William N. Duncan (eds.) Studies in Forensic Biohistory: Anthropological Perspectives (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press): 267-287.

Moon, Claire (2016) ‘Human rights, human remains: Forensic humanitarianism and the human rights of the dead’, International Social Science Journal, 65/215-216: 49-63.

Moon, Claire (2013) ‘Interpreters of the dead: Forensic knowledge, human remains and the politics of the past’, Social and Legal Studies, 22/2: 149-169.

Javier Treviño-Rangel

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2020) ‘“Cheap merchandise”: atrocity and undocumented migrants in transit in Mexico’s war on drugs’, Critical Sociology. September 2020. doi:10.1177/0896920520961815

Treviño-Rangel, Javier and Laura Atuesta (2020) “La muerte es un negocio”. Miradas cercanas a la violencia criminal en América Latina. Mexico City: CIDE University Press.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2020) ‘Negocios colaterales: Transmigrantes, mexicanos de a pie, y violencia criminal en la guerra contra las drogas’ in Javier Treviño-Rangel and Laura Atuesta (eds.) “La muerte es un negocio”. Miradas cercanas a la violencia criminal en América Latina. Mexico City: CIDE University Press.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2019) ‘Magical Legalism. Human Rights Practitioners and Undocumented Migrants in Mexico and Central America’, International Journal of Human Rights, 23/5: 843-861.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2019) ‘Superfluous Lives: Undocumented Migrants Traveling in Mexico’ in Barbara Frey and Alejandro Anaya (eds.) Mexico’s Human Rights Crisis. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania University Press.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2018) ‘Silencing grievance: responding to human rights violations in Mexico’s war on drugs’, Journal of Human Rights, 17/4: 485-501.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2018) ‘Ante las justicias transicionales de México in Eva Leticia Orduña, Ralph Sprenkels and Jorge Juárez (eds.) La justicia transicional en perspectiva comparada: Centroamérica y México. Mexico City: National University of Mexico.

Treviño-Rangel, Javier (2016) ‘What Do We Mean When We Talk About the Securitization of International Migration in Mexico? A Critique?’, Global Governance, 22/2: 289 - 306.

Laura Tradii

Tradii, Laura [2020] (2019c). ‘Their dear remains belong to us alone’ soldiers’ bodies, commemoration, and cultural responses to exhumations after the Great War. First World War Studies, 10(2–3), 245–261. https://doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2020.1779777

Tradii Laura (2019a) Death Denial. In: Gu D., Dupre M. (eds) Encyclopaedia of Gerontology and Population Aging. Springer, Cham.

Tradii, Laura (2019b). ‘Death, Knowledge, and the Anthropologist in Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain’ in  A. Teodorescu (ed.) Death within the Text: Social, Philosophical and Aesthetic Approaches to Literature. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Tradii, Laura and Robert, M. (2017 - online) ‘Do we deny death? II. Critiques of the death-denial thesis’, Mortality, pp. 1–12. doi: 10.1080/13576275.2017.1415319.

Robert, M. and Tradii, Laura (2017 – online) ‘Do we deny death? I. A genealogy of death denial’, Mortality, pp. 1–14. doi: 10.1080/13576275.2017.1415318

Tradii, Laura, 2016. Immune to death: humanity and human remains in the context of a research facility. Mortality, 21(2), pp.112–129.

Aimee Middlemiss

Middlemiss, Aimee (2020) Pregnancy remains, infant remains, or the corpse of a child? The incoherent governance of the dead foetal body in England. Mortality. Open Access at: doi.org/10.1080/13576275.2020.1787365

Middlemiss, Aimee (2020) ‘It Felt like the Longest Time of my Life’: Using Foetal Dopplers at Home to Manage Anxiety about Miscarriage. In Kilshaw, S and Borg, K (Eds) Navigating miscarriage: Social, medical and conceptual perspectives (pp 160-183). Oxford, New York: Berghahn.

Middlemiss, Aimee (2018) The Fetal Dopplers Bill is based on limited evidence about pregnant women’s use of the device, LSE British Politics and Policy Blog.