
Institute FOR ACADEMIC DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION
Faculty Publications
Cultural Diversity
Rabin, J. S.
(2005). Biological exuberance, gaia theory and
ecopsychology: New scientific views of nature as a model of
diversity and creativity. Proceedings of the Towson
University Multicultural Conference, 11, 42-47.
Rothstein, F.
A. (2002). Constructing, destroying, and reconstructing
difference: The Mexican nation and cultural difference.
Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 27(53),
161-168.
Wangari, E. (2002). Reproductive technology from
a third world feminist perspective. In K. Saunders (Ed.),
Feminist post-development thought (pp. 298-312). Zed Books.
Durington,
M. S. (2001). Gated communities. In G. W. McDonogh, R. Gregg &
C. H. Wong. (Eds.),
The encyclopedia of contemporary American
culture (p. 303). Routledge: London and New York.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1999). Declining odds: Kinship, women's employment and
political economy in rural Mexico. American Anthropologist,
101, 579-593.
Dugger,
K. (1998). Social location and gender-role attitudes: A
comparison of black and white women. Gender and Society,
2(4), 425-448. Reprinted in The Social Construction of Gender: Theories,
Research and Practice, edited by Judith Lorber and Susan
Farrell. Sage Publications, 1991. Also reprinted in Common
Bonds, Different Voices: Race, Class, and Gender, edited by
Doris Wilkinson, Maxine Baca Zinn, and Esther Chow, Sage
Publications, 1996.
Haller, B.
A. (1996). Recognizing bias and stereotypes. In K. C.
McAdams & Jan Johnson Elliott (Eds.),
Reaching audiences: A
guide to media writing. Allyn and Bacon.
Rothstein, F. A.
(1996). Flexible accumulation and youth labor in rural Mexico.
Critique of Anthropology, 16, 361-380.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1996). Book review essay. Gender and Society, 10(1),
94-97.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1995). Gender and multiple income strategies in rural
Mexico: A twenty-year perspective. In Edna Acosta-Belen &
Christine Bose (Eds.), Women in the development process in
Latin America: From structural subordination to empowerment.
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1988). Global views and human action in a rural community in
Mexico. Urban Anthropology, 17(4), 363-378.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1986). The new proletarians: Third world reality and first
world categories. Comparative Studies in Society and History,
28, 217-238.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1983). Women and men in the family economy: An analysis of
the relations between the sexes in peasant communities.
Anthropological Quarterly, 56, 10-23.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1982).
Three different worlds: Women, men, and children
in an industrializing community. Westport, Connecticut:
Greenwood Press.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1979). Two different worlds: Gender and industrialization in
a rural community. In M. B. Leons & F. Rothstein (Eds.),
New
directions in political economy: An approach from anthropology.
Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
Rothstein, F.
A. (1979). The class basis of patron-client relations. Latin
American Perspectives, 6, 25-35. Reprinted in
Modern
Mexico: State, economy, & social conflict. Beverly Hills:
Sage Productions (1986).
Rothstein, F.
A. (1975). Differential integration: A comparison of the
economic, political, and social relations of peasants and
factory workers. Ethnology, 14, 395-405.
Rothstein,
F. A., & Polgar, S. (1971). Family planning and conjugal roles
in New York City poverty areas. Social Science and Medicine,
4, 135-139.
Institute for Academic Diversity
and Inclusion
Administration Building, Room 210
Phone: 410-704-3931
Fax: 410-704-6093
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