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Founded in 1893 by the University of California faculty, the press is dedicated to shaping the public dissertation. A highly progressive publisher, the press aspires for change by seeking out diverse authors, nurture a greater understanding of the world we live in today, and altering the way people think. This nonprofit publishing branch of the University of California is one of the six largest university publishers in the United States. Collaboration with librarians, authors, faculty and students, allows for the Press to stay in advance of today’s information ultimatums and mold the future of publishing.

Subjects
The Power of Chinatown Searching for Spatial Justice in Los Angeles Laureen D. Hom
To Be an Actress Labor and Performance in Anna May Wong's Cross-Media World Yiman Wang
Encoding Bioethics AI in Clinical Decision-Making Charles Binkley, Tyler Loftus
Almost Futures Sovereignty and Refuge at World's End Thu-huong Nguyen-vo
The Pregnancy Police Conceiving Crime, Arresting Personhood Grace E. Howard
Inclusive Socratic Teaching Why Law Schools Need It and How to Achieve It Jamie R. Abrams
Rot and Revival The History of Constitutional Law in American Political Development Anthony Michael Kreis
The Map in the Machine Charting the Spatial Architecture of Digital Capitalism Luis F. Alvarez Leon
Fatal Denial Racism and the Political Life of Black Infant Mortality Annie Menzel
Life at the Center Haitians and Corporate Catholicism in Boston Erica Caple James
Feminist Cyberlaw Meg Leta Jones
Disabled Ecologies Lessons from a Wounded Desert Sunaura Taylor
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