Dissertations

Author/Title Research Type Related Fields
Rosenberg, Karen (2008). From moderate chastisement to mandatory arrest: Responses to violence against women in Canada and the United States (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (UMI No. 200949969) Graduate, Dissertations
Arora, Alka (2008). The re-enchantment of feminism: Countering fundamentalisms, encountering the sacred (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (UMI No. 0821405) Graduate, Dissertations
Blaser, Brianna (2008). More than just lab partners: Women scientists and engineers married and partnered to other scientists and engineers (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (UMI No. 3318160) Graduate, Dissertations
McGowan, Michelle L. (2007). Stem cells, genetic selection, and strong embryos: A feminist analysis of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (UMI No. 8981263)  Graduate, Dissertations
Maurer, Serena ( 2006). Feminist border praxis: Exploring racialized citizenship, national belonging and gendered reproduction in the Yakima Valley (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (UMI No. 3224258)  Graduate, Dissertations
Henderson, Mae (2006). Fractured mothering: African American mothers at the crossroads of expectations and reality (Doctoral dissertation, University of Washington). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global database. (Accession Order No. AAT 200724009) Graduate, Dissertations
Wang, Yingyi. Cruel Activism: Precarity, Labor, and Affect of Chinese Feminist and LGBT Rights NGOs (Doctoral Dissertation, University of Washington). Forthcoming.  Graduate, Dissertations
Ramirez Arreola, Elizabeth. “Quieren Mi Labor Más No Mi Intelecto (They Want My Hands Not My Brains)” Mapping the Gendered and Racialized Journeys of Adult, English Learner, Immigrant Latin American Women Accessing and Surviving in the U.S. Higher Education System (Doctoral Dissertation, University of Washington). Forthcoming.  Graduate, Dissertations