Interdisciplinary Community-Engaged Research for Health series
The Interdisciplinary Community-Engaged Research for Health (ICERH) series aims to bridge the gap between researchers and practitioners to facilitate the development of collaborative, equitable research and action. The reality of persistent health disparities and structural inequalities highlights the need for new to solve real world problems. The series showcases the outcomes of the Interdisciplinary Research Leaders program by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Working Together for Change
Collaborative Change Researchers, Evaluators, and Designers,
Lisa M. Vaughn, Sara Neyer and Kathie Maynard (Editors)
Working Together for Change is a framework and collection of participatory practices that engage people and the systems around them to drive community outcomes. This framework emerged out of the recognition that deep participation is frequently missing in
community members are viewed as valuable owners and experts instead of being seen as Collaborative Change Researchers, Evaluators, and Designers (CCRED) is a social action process with dual goals of collective empowerment and the deepening of social knowledge. Executed successfully, CCRED has the potential to increase the rigor, reach, and relevance of research, evaluation, and design translated to meaningful action.
Lisa M. Vaughn is professor of pediatrics at the University of Cincinnati College of
educational studies community-based action research at the University of Cincinnati. Sara Neyer is the managing editor of the Journal of Participatory Research Methods. Kathie Maynard is the associate dean of the College of Education, Criminal Justice, Human
Paperback, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602786
Community-Engaged Research for Resilience and Health
Volume 4
Kelli E. Canada and Clark M. Peters (Editors)
Community-Engaged Research for Resilience and Health
community-driven concept by highlighting community-based solutions and sources of resilience to address issues. Editors Canada and Peters present six scholar-practitioner teams who promote resilience in communities facing health crises and structural barriers to health care access for opioid addiction, domestic violence, trauma, and cultural discrimination. This research aims to increase communities’ internal support while reducing barriers to healthcare access by showcasing examples of Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) practices where the community participates in every aspect of the research process alongside interdisciplinary research teams. The outcome results in improved health through resilience-focused programs and interventions.
Kelli E. Canada is an associate professor of social work at the University of Missouri. Clark M. Peters is an associate professor of social work at the University of Missouri.
Engaging the Intersection of Housing and Health
Mina Silberberg (Editor)
Engaging the Intersection of Housing and Health are interdisciplinary, stakeholder-engaged and intentionally designed for “translation” into practice. There are numerous ways in which housing and health are intertwined. This intertwining is lived daily by the children whose asthma is exacerbated by mold in their homes, the adults whose mental illness increases their risk for homelessness and whose homelessness worsens their mental and physical health, the seniors whose home environment enhances their risk of falls, and the families who must choose between paying for housing and paying for healthcare.
Mina Silberberg is an associate professor in the department of family medicine and community health at Duke University.
Paperback, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602816
Paperback, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602724
Creating Culture Through Health Leadership
Lina Svedin (Editor)Creating Culture Through Health Leadership leaders to address challenges in health, wellness, and equity in the US. The book features and the arts, who share transformative leadership skills to promote health and equity. The volume highlights the importance of community engagement and building a culture of and managers to lead change at their organization, regional system, and beyond.
Lina Svedin is an associate professor of political science at the University of Utah.
Community-Academic Partnerships for Early Childhood Health
Volume 1
Farrah Jacquez and Lina Svedin (Editors)Community-Academic Partnerships for Early Childhood Health features results from teams of researchers and community partners who utilized applied research to create measurable change in healthcare and health outcomes for young children. The book’s economics, medicine, nutrition, and geography, and share seven cases of collaborative nonmedical needs of women in Mississippi, WIC programs in Puerto Rico, and children’s advocacy in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Farrah Jacquez is professor and assistant head of the department of psychology at the University of Cincinnati. Lina Svedin is an associate professor of political science at the University of Utah.
Paperback, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602601
Paperback, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602687
Chasing Success
Judith Van Ginkel
chronicles the based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Written by former Every Child Succeeds executive director, Judy Van Ginkel, this book serves
Using lessons learned from her two decades of leadership with Every Child Succeeds, Van Ginkel shares details of the triumphs and challenges of launching and sustaining local and regional NPO’s. It also sheds light on the impact of changing policies and reality for many smaller organizations across the country.
Judith Van Ginkel is the retired founding director of Every Child Succeeds.
It Was Always About the Work
Melvin Grier with Molly Kavanaugh
Melvin Grier’s memoir, It Was Always About the Work, recounts
that led him to tell stories through the camera. The book features over 100 of his photographs, including images from his most famous exhibitions and news stories. Grier’s work captures community, humanity, fear, war, elegance, art, and the beauty of unexpected. Despite the lack of diversity in the news industry,
Cincinnati in the early 2000’s. After the Post’s closure in 2007, Grier continued his career as an independent artist. His work has been featured in exhibitions such as White People and Clothes Encounter
it was always about the work.
Hardcover,
10 x 10
American Values, Religious Voices
Letters of Hope from People of Faith, Volume 2
Andrea L. Weiss (Editor) Lisa M. Weinberger (Editor)Religious scholars and leaders engage in a nonpartisan social media letter-writing campaign following the 2021 Presidential inauguration.
Renewing their 2016 social media campaign, in 2021, Weiss and Weinberger invited religious scholars and leaders to address President Biden, Vice President Harris, and members of the 117th Congress in their national letter-writing and social media
letter a day to elected leaders in Washington. These letters bring an array of religious texts and teachings to bear on our most pressing contemporary issues. Arranged chronologically, volume 2 of American Values, Religious Voices: Letters of Hope from People of Faith features over 60 new contributing letter writers, new artwork, and original essays suggesting how the letters can be incorporated into speeches, homilies, and classrooms.
American Values, Religious Voices
100 Days, 100 Letters
Andrea Weiss (Editor) Lisa Weinberger (Editor)American Values, Religious Voices: 100 Days, 100 Letters is a collection of letters written by religious scholars in response to the 2016 US presidential election. The book features 100 letters, four supplemental essays, and illustrations that highlight American values and the role of religion in addressing the nation’s challenges. While the letters are addressed to political leaders, they speak to a broader audience seeking guidance and support during a divisive time in American history. This unique volume
texts that pertain to contemporary issues. It models how people reminding us of the enduring values that make America great.
The Bone Doctor’s Concerto
Music, Surgery, and the Pieces in Between
Alvin CrawfordIn 1960, he began his ground-breaking medical career with his entrance into the University of Tennessee College of Medicine, continued his education in medicine during his time in the Navy, practicing medicine for his country across borders around the
his experiences led to his eventual move to Cincinnati, where he established the world class Comprehensive Pediatric Orthopedic Clinic at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. After serving as the Director of Orthopaedic Surgery for 29 years Dr. Crawford retired and poetically returned to his love music. Actively performing, teaching, and supporting music in Cincinnati, Crawford continues to teach the next generation of medical and music students in Cincinnati. Underlying this story are the systemic and very personal incidents of racism he experienced throughout his life. It is a personal account of segregation, integration, ambition, hard work, and taking risks. With grace, wit, and a little bit of humor, Dr. Crawford weaves together his story of African American success in a world designed to put him down.
Race, Ethnicity, and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Melvin Thomas (Editor) Loren Henderson (Editor) Hayward Derrick Horton (Editor)Race, Ethnicity, and the COVID-19 Pandemic provides a datadriven overview of the consequences of COVID-19 on racial and ethnic minorities in the US. Volume editors, Thomas, Henderson, and Horton provide a sociological examination of the connection between systemic racism and the outcome of COVID-19 in Black, Native American, and Latinx communities
and service industry professionals who couldn’t stay home to
of all socioeconomic levels, the editors and contributors, expose the inequity and colonialism actions that led to stark disparities in outcomes. Using data from a pandemic that hit a global population at precisely the same moment, contributing sociologists dig into institutional inequity and amplify the voices that call for systemic change and healing.
Melvin E. Thomas is an associate professor in the deprtment of sociology and anthropology at North Carolina State University. Loren Henderson is an assistant professor in the department of sociology and anthropology at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Hayward Derrick Horton is an associate professor of sociology at the University at Albany, SUNY.
Hardcover, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602878
An Equal Share of Freedom
American Jews, Zionism, and World War I
Mark Raider (Editor) Zohar Segev (Editor) Gary Phillip Zola (Editor)An Equal Share of Freedom sheds new light on several important and interrelated dimensions of American, Jewish, and world history in the World War I era. Paying close attention to the Balfour Declaration as a hub around which to explore the period’s unfolding and turbulent social, cultural, and political developments, this collection of essays covers a diverse range of topics including Jewish doughboys, Zionist women authors, and political elites such as Golda Meir and Woodrow Wilson. The volume demonstrates the complex nature of Jewish ethnonational consciousness in the American setting and the impact of Zionism on US wartime and postwar activity.
Mark A. Raider is professor of modern Jewish history at the University of Cincinnati. Zohar Segev is a professor of history at the University of Haifa. Gary Phillip Zola is the executive director of the Jacob Rader Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives and professor of the American Jewish Experience at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati.
Imagining Central America
Short Histories
Serena Cosgrove
Isabeau J. Belisle DempseyGiven the strategic location of Central America, its importance to US foreign policy, and the migration from the region to other parts of the world, this succinct summary of the countries of Central America is an essential resource for those working in, studying, writing about, or traveling to the region. Promoting increased understanding of the region’s governance, economics, and structures of power, Imagining Central America highlights the many ways that Central American countries are connected to the foreign policy.
Central America—Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama—and includes a map, regional introduction, timeline, and history of each country. The enhanced open access edition includes an interactive online map with illustrations and video to provide readers with additional understanding of culture and milestones in each country’s history.
Serena Cosgrove is an associate professor in international studies and director of the Latin American and Latinx studies program at Seattle University. Isabeau J. Belisle Dempsey graduated from and Spanish.
Best-Laid Plans
The Promises and Pitfalls of the New Deal Greenbelt Towns
the United States government embarked on a New Deal program to construct new suburban towns for the working class.
In Best-Laid Plans, creation at minimal cost, exquisite town planning that would provide modest residences for low-income families, progressive innovation that would serve to honor and reinforce traditional American values. Yet the Greenbelt program succeeded in one respect—providing new homes in well-planned communities that continue to welcome residents.
Town planning and suburbanization did not follow the blueprint of the Greenbelt model and instead took a turn toward the suburban sprawl we know today. The Greenbelt Towns may represent an unrealistic dream, but they show an imagined way of American life that continues to appeal and hint at what might have been possible.
Julie D. Turner is a retired history professor from the University of Cincinnati.
Social Media, Social Justice and the Political Economy of Online Networks
James Jaehoon LeeSocial Media, Social Justice and Our Digital Futures series
While social network analyses often demonstrate the usefulness domination and manipulation of social networks by more powerful ways in which social media conversations about race turn politically charged, and in many cases, ugly.
Looking at millions of tweets surrounding the Ferguson protests and the Black Lives Matter movement, the 2016 presidential election, and the rise of fake news, this book presents data visualization
resulting volume provides new insight into social media, legacy
In collaboration with the University of Cincinnati Digital Scholarship Center, the open access enhanced edition provides readers with the opportunity to manipulate the data points to create their own visualization of the events. Also included is a conversation with the authors, and a narrated and animation of how to create data visualization for your own research question using the same machine learning techniques used by Blevins and Lee.
Paperback, E-book, Open Access Print ISBN 9781947602847
science at the University of Cincinnati. James Jaehoon Lee is an associate professor of digital humanities, director of the digitial scholarship center, and the associate vice provost for digital scholarship at the University of Cincinnati.
Humanizing Brain Tumors
Strategies for You and Your Physician
Jonathan A. Forbes, MD (Editor) Abdelkader Mahammedi, MD (Editor) Soma Sengupta, MD (Editor)Humanizing Brain Tumors
caring for, or treating patients with brain tumors, emphasizing the partnership between doctors, patients, and caregivers. Using clinical presentations and imagery, the book explores our understanding of brain tumors and summarizes modern treatments, from a patient-centric perspective. This resource provides valuable insights to the hundreds of thousands of people
Jonathan A. Forbes is an assistant professor and program director for the University of Cincinnati’s department of neurosurgery. Abdelkader Mahammedi is an assistant professor neuroradiology at the University of Cincinnati and the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute. Soma Sengupta is the chair of molecular therapeutics and associate director of the University of Cincinnati Brain Tumor Center.
6 x 9
Equity and Inclusion in Higher Education
Strategies for Teaching
2022 Choice Outstanding Book in Education
2022 Silver Award, Midwest Independent Book Association for Education and Learning
Rita Kumar (Editor) Brenda Refaei (Editor)Americans’ perception of college students does not match the reality of rich diversity on university campuses. The book Equity and Inclusion for Higher Education: Strategies for Teaching, modules. The contributors highlight the intersectionality of race, age, socioeconomic status, and ability in the classroom, and provide resources for instructors to create equity-based learning environments. They challenge Eurocentric curriculums and promote intercultural competence, while embracing collaboration between students and instructors. The book and companion community page provide tools for intentional practice of an inclusive curriculum and promote respect for diversity.
Rita Kumar is the executive director of the Faculty Enrichment Center at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash Campus. Brenda Refaei is a professor of English and communication at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash Campus.
Paperback, E-book, Open Access Print ISBN 9781947602991
Collective Bargaining and the Battle for Ohio
The Defeat of Senate Bill 5 and the Struggle to Defend the Middle Class, Enhanced Edition
John T. McNay Foreword by Sherrod Brownto impede the labor movement, particularly targeting unionized professors. Collective Bargaining and the Battle for Ohio is the
“We Are Ohio,” a historic coalition of unions and progressive have a voice in the workplace. A massive political struggle ensued, pitting the labor movement against powerful corporate forces, and on election day, Ohioans defended the middle class by repealing
Historian John McNay continues to advise and testify on matters of education labor policy in Ohio and Washington. The new open access enhanced edition is published on the tenth anniversary of embedded throughout the OA version to give readers a greater understanding of the union-busting legislation that challenged democracy and America’s response.
John T. McNay is professor of history at the University of Cincinnati. He currently serves as government relations committee chair of the American Association of University Professors.
Paperback, E-book, Open Access Print ISBN 9781947602960
Culture as Judicial Evidence
Expert Testimony in Latin America
Leila Rodriguez (Editor)by anthropologists has been applied in the civil law systems
antropológicos culturales, this testimony can come in the form bridges of intercultural dialogue, which overcome language and cultural barriers that have historically limited equal access to
Culture as Judicial Evidence: Expert Testimony in Latin America summarizes the current state of this work in six countries: Mexico, Costa Rica, Peru, Chile, Colombia, and Uruguay, and lays out the challenges and dilemmas involved in the creation and use of cultural expert testimony. Organized into three sections, the book advances a framework for the use of cultural evidence, and presents readers with nine case studies based on trials in six individual countries.
6 x 9
Bicycling Through Paradise
Historical Rides Around Cincinnati
Midwest Independent Publishers Association Silver Award for Recreation
Bicycling Through Paradise: Historical Rides Around Cincinnati is in the Cincinnati area. Written by a history professor and an architect, and landscapes. Tours range from 20 to 80 miles and are designed for all levels of cyclists. Along the way, riders will discover Native American historic sites, early settler homesteads, and encounter unique landmarks, such as a castle on the Little Miami River, and a replica of the tomb of Jesus. Whether you are an experienced cyclist through Paradise. Turn-by-turn directions are available online and can be downloaded. Open access tours bring cyclists together as a community for updates and interaction with the authors.
Kathleen Smythe is a professor of history at Xavier University. Chris Hanlin is an architect, amateur historian, photographer, and cyclist.
The Speaking Stone
Stories Cemeteries Tell
The Speaking Stone: Stories Cemeteries Tell is a literary love on a novel, author and longtime Cincinnati resident Michael
the nation’s third-largest cemetery. Soon he began taking they led. The result is this fascinating collection of essays that emerge from chance encounters with an interesting headstone, odd epitaph, unusual name, or quirk of memory. Researching
uncovers stories of race, feminism, art, and death.
The Speaking Stone examines what endures and what does leave monuments that last. In doing so, it beautifully weaves connections born out of the storyteller’s inquisitive mind.
is a professor of English at the University of Cincinnati Paperback, E-book
Surveying in Early America
The Point of Beginning, An Illustrated History
2022 Gold Award, Midwest Independent Publishers Association
In Surveying in Early America: The Point of Beginning, An Illustrated History, award-winning photographer Dan Patterson and American historian Clinton Terry vividly examine the profession of surveying in the US in the eighteenth century. Retracing the steps that George Washington and other surveyors took to map the Ohio River Valley, readers are immersed in historically accurate details of early surveying techniques and practices. Terry’s narrative describes the practice of land and survey measurement—methods that did not substantially change until the invention of GPS technology 200 years later. Working with the Department of Geography, Patterson restages actual expeditions, brilliantly displaying the techniques and instruments Washington would have employed 260 years ago. Through the lens of Patterson’s camera and Terry’s accompanying narrative, readers see what Washington saw as he learned his trade, explored the vast American wilderness, and occasionally laid personal claim to great expanses of land along the way.
Dan Patterson is a photographer, graphic designer, and Clinton Terry teachers American history and liberal studies at Mercer University in Georgia.
For submissions, contact
Surviving the Americas
Garifuna Persistence from Nicaragua to New York City
2022 Silver Award, Midwest Independent Publisher Association
2021 Social Science/Political Science and Culture
Serena Cosgrove José Idiáquez
Leonard Joseph Bent and Andrew Gorvetzian
The Garifuna, a Central American Afro-Indigenous group, are descendants of West Africans and local Indigenous people from the Caribbean island of St. Vincent. Despite experiencing oppression, exile, and diaspora for over 200 years, their experiences in Nicaragua, have been largely undocumented.
In Surviving the Americas: Garifuna Persistence from Nicaragua to New York City, the authors shed light on what it means to be Garifuna
in Garifuna communities in the Pearl Lagoon on the southern Caribbean coast of Nicaragua and in New York City. The resulting ethnography illustrates the unique social issues of the Nicaraguan Garifuna and how their culture, traditions, and reverence for their ancestors continues to persist.
Serena Cosgrove is an associate professor in international studies and director of the Latin American and Latinx studies program at Seattle University. José Idiáquez is an anthropologist and president of the Universidad Centroamericana in Managua, Nicaragua.
Leonard Joseph Bent is a retired Garifuna sociologist who Andrew
Gorvetzian is a grduate student in anthropology at the University of New Mexico.
Paperback, E-book
Media Contact: ucpressmktg@ucmail.uc.edu
Sales inquiries: ucincypressmktg2@ucmail.uc.edu
University of Cincinnati
University of Cincinnati Langsam Library
2911 Woodside Drive
Image Attribution
Catalog designed by Cristelle
ucincinnatipress@ucmail.uc.edu
ucpressmktg@ucmail.uc.edu
Digital Community Engagement
ucincypressmktg2@ucmail.uc.edu
Partnering Communities with the Academy
Press contact information: Press
Catalog designed by Cristelle Mathews.
2021 Best Book, National Council on Public History
Rebecca Wingo (Editor)
Jason Heppler (Editor)
Paul Schadewald (Editor)
and create new primary sources, collapse barriers, and spark new dialogue. Digital Community Engagement: Partnering Communities with the Academy “lifts the hood” and presents nine examples of digital collaborations from constructing a public response to police violence, to creating digital stories of homelessness, to young activists united around local people in the Deep South to build a grassroots movement for social change.
Wingo, Heppler and Schadewald bring together cutting-edge
The case studies, authored by academics and their community partners, explore models for digital community engagement that leverage new media through reciprocal partnerships. The contributions to this volume stand at the crossroads of digital humanities, public history, and community.
Rebecca Wingo is an assistant professor of history and director of public history at the University of Cincinnati.
Jason Heppler is an assistant professor and digital engagement librarian at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.
Paul Schadewald is the associate director of the Civic Engagement Center in the Institute for Global Citizenship at Macalester College.
Jim Crow Sociology
The Black and Southern Roots of American SociologyEarl Wright II
Jim Crow Sociology: The Black and Southern Roots of American Sociology explores the origin, growth, and
African American sociologists at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). This book highlights the scholarly activist approach of Black Sociology, which prioritizes research that impacts real-world conditions of African Americans. Earl Wright debunks the notion that early African American sociology lacks scholarly excellence and demonstrates how HBCUs, including Tuskegee Institute and Fisk University, pioneered the applied programs of rural and urban sociology, respectively. The book extends our knowledge of W.E.B. DuBois’s Atlanta Sociological Laboratory and acknowledges sociology. Jim Crow Sociology challenges contemporary scholars to examine why early African American sociologists and HBCUs are not canonized and provides evidence that sociology began in earnest in the United States as a Black and southern enterprise.
Exploring the Architecture of Place in America’s Farmers Markets
Kathryn Clarke AlbrightExploring the Architecture of Place in America’s Farmers Markets is a book that explores the architecture of public and farmers markets in America. It highlights three types of markets, including heritage building, open-air pavilion, and pop-up canopy, through a mix of historical observations and interviews with market managers, vendors, and shoppers. The book also includes illustrations, such as photos and diagrams, that use eight scales of measure to view each market through an architectural lens. These scales include the hand, the container, the person, the stall, a grouping of stalls, the street, the block, and the market’s situation within the neighborhood. Albright insightfully shows how farmers markets foster social interaction and community engagement, and
still sharing characteristics of its architectural typology.
Kathryn Clarke Albright is a professor in the School of Architecture and Design at Virginia Tech.
Across the Color Line
Reporting 25 Years in Black Cincinnati
Mark Curnutte
Across the Color Line: Reporting 25 Years in Black Cincinnati presents newspaper reporter Mark Curnutte’s stories published in The Cincinnati Enquirer
reporting, Curnutte describes experiences of African-Americans explorations of community institutions, historical perspectives, and issue stories. The anthology tells a sweeping narrative of
growing pains and increased racial sophistication and diversity. These stories are complimented by excerpts from Curnutte’s man and reporter making the intentional decision to work and live across the color line.
Mark Curnutte is an instructor in the department of sociology and gerontology at Miami University.
Cloth, E-book Print ISBN 9781947602014
Let’s Be Boldy Bearcat
Kimberlee DobbsIn Let’s Be Boldly Bearcat, the University of Cincinnati Bearcat mascot takes young readers on a visual tour of the University of Cincinnati’s campus, pausing at each of the 14 colleges and
found at the end of the book and to draw pictures to share their ideas about how they would help, teach, build, and keep healthy. A child-friendly campus map and a Bearcat coloring activity page complete the book, making this an ideal gift for alumni to share with their young friends and family.
Kimberlee Dobbs is a University of Cincinnati alumnus, retired kindergarten teacher, and childrens’ book author
Paperback
Rethinking America’s Past
Voices from the Kinsey African American Art and History Collection
Tim Gruenewald
American collection, Rethinking America’s Past: Voices from the Kinsey African American Art and History Collection both chronicles the reach of this important cultural collection and contributes to artists, such as Loïs Mailou Jones and Beauford Delaney, to important to individuals whose experiences might be lost to history but for the Rethinking America’s Past demonstrates how the African American story, from slavery through the present, is represented and can be actively remembered through the act of collecting.
Tim Gruenewald is an assistant professor and director of American Cloth, E-book
Maria Longworth Storer
From Music and Art to Popes and Presidents
Constance Moore
Nancy Broermann
Maria Longworth Storer: From Music and Art to Popes and Presidents is the most comprehensive biography of this one-of-a-kind Cincinnatian.
the United States, Rookwood Pottery, Longworth Storer was passionate about women’s rights, her city, and issues of poverty and the arts. She owned Rookwood pottery for nine years, and then transferred ownership after earning recognition at the Exhibition of American Art Industry in Philadelphia and receiving a gold medal at the Exposition Universelle in Paris. Aside from her success with Rookwood, Longworth Storer
today. Although the rest of her life was no less remarkable as the wife of notorious diplomat Bellamy Storer, later embroiled in the famous Roosevelt-Storer scandal, little has been written about her contributions of-the-twentieth-century political leaders.
Constance Moore is a Theodore Roosevelt researcher from El Paso, Texas. Nancy Broermann is an archivist for the Ursuline Sisters at St. Ursula Academy.
Leaving a Legacy
Lessons from the Writings of Daniel Drake
Philip DillerLeaving a Legacy: Lessons from the Writings of Daniel Drake is a selective collection of excerpts from the vast writings of the nineteenth-century doctor and medical pioneer Daniel Drake. From Drake’s life, readers hear his own words excerpted from and letters to his children. Readers learn about the scope of his accomplishments in medicine, contributions to his community, and dedication to his family. Diller goes beyond biography to contextualize Drake’s life choices and what made him a role model for today’s physicians. Diller selected 180 thematically arranged guide the reader through thought-provoking prompts. In doing so, Diller presents the lessons from Drake’s remarkable life and work as a guide for others who wish to build an enduring legacy.
Philip Diller is the senior associate dean for the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. He also practices hospital palliative care medicine.
Cloth, E-book
Print ISBN 9781947602427
From the Temple of Zeus to the Hyperloop
University of Cincinnati Stories
Greg Hand (Editor)From the Temple of Zeus to the Hyperloop: University of Cincinnati Stories celebrates the university’s bicentennial and showcases its
Ohio Governor Bob Taft and Broadway star Faith Prince, who share their unique experiences and connections to UC. From the Temple of Zeus to the Hyperloop can be a part of its future.
Greg Hand is the retired associate vice president for public relations at the University of Cincinnati. He is also the proprietor of the “Cincinnati Curiosities” blog.
In Service to the City
A History of the University of Cincinnati
David StradlingIn Service to the City: A History of the University of Cincinnati, the evolving, complex relationship between UC and the city of Cincinnati. In Service to the City casts an unvarnished lens on the details of student demographics, faculty research, curricular changes, and athletic controversy to challenges associated with campus architecture and planning, neighborhood relations, regional and national consequences of urban decline, and the roles of municipal, state, and federal governments within American higher education.
David Stradling is the associate dean for humanities and professor of urban history at the University of Cincinnati.
Cloth, E-book Print ISBN 9781947602076
These Oppressions Won’t Cease
An Anthology of the Political Thought of the Cape Khoesan, 1777-1879
Robert Ross
being dispossessed of their land and forced to work for European refuge in the mission stations of the Western and Eastern Cape, where they articulated a continuous critique of colonial oppression through petitions, speeches, and letters. They demanded equality before the law, opposed vagrancy legislation, and distrusted British settlers while hoping for benevolence from the British government in London. These Oppressions Won’t Cease is a collection of 98 texts that contains the
See No Evil
New Zealand’s Betrayal of the People of West Papua
Maire LeadbeaterSee No Evil: New Zealand’s Betrayal of the People of West Papua issues a challenge to New Zealanders. The book begins by relating the little-known history of West Papua, but its focus is on the impact of New Zealand’s foreign policy on the indigenous self-determination for the former Dutch colony, but in 1962 opted to back Indonesia as it took over the territory. Delving deep into historical government archives, many of them obtained under uncovers the untold story of New Zealand’s unprincipled and often hypocritical diplomacy. The consequences of repressive Indonesian rule have been tragic for the West Papuan people, who are experiencing ‘slow genocide’. West Papua remains largely
change, but so far New Zealand has opted for caution and collusion to preserve a ‘business as usual’ relationship with Indonesia. See No Evil is a shocking account by one of New Zealand’s most
the people of West Papua.
Inspiring Student Success - Then, Now, Always
Robert Gioielli
doors in the fall of 1967. Built upon a mission to make higher milestones, people, and events in the history of the college. Over
while simultaneously maintaining high academic standards and remaining committed to an open access, open door policy.
Robert Gioielli is an associate professor of history at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash Campus.
Paperback Print ISBN 9781947602007
Looking East
William Howard Taft and the 1905 Diplomatic Mission to Asia: the Photographs of Harry Fowler Woods
Margo Taft Stever
James Taft Stever
Hong Shen
Kevin Grace (Editor)
US-Asian relations have been shaped by a complex history of trade
Japan, and the Philippines to strengthen America’s interests and to learn about its new partners. Looking East by Margo Taft Stever, James Taft Stever, and Hong Shen tells the story of this mission through historical analyses and photographs captured by Harry Fowler Woods. The authors and descendants of Taft and Woods endeavors and their impact on US-Asian relations.
Margo Taft Stever is the founder of The Hudson Valley Wristers’ Center and current co-editor of Slapering Hol Press. James Taft Stever is the great-great grandson of Harry Fowler Woods and a relative of both William Howard Taft and Nicholas Longworth. Hong Shen
China. Kevin Grace (Editor) is the former head of the archives and Rare Books at the University of Cincinnati Library.
Journals at the University of Cincinnati Press
Journal of Research and Practice in College Teaching
University of Cincinnati, Blue Ash Teaching and Learning Center
The JRPCT promotes scholarly teaching and the scholarship of teaching and learning and publishes articles focused on promoting student learning. Articles should address themes
Subject: Format: Founded: Published: Annually
Focus on German Studies
University of Cincinnati, Arts and Science
Focus on German Studies
Studies, which is run and published exclusively by graduate students at the University of Cincinnati. Focus on German Studies publish only writing submitted by other graduate students and includes articles on German Studies, German literature, interviews with German-speaking authors, and book reviews of contemporary literature.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published: Annually
ISSN: eISSN:
Music Research Forum
University of Cincinnati, CCM
Music Research Forum is published annually by the graduate students of the University of performance practice, music and culture, music criticism, and electronic media. Music Research Forum provides an opportunity for scholars in music-related studies to publish
2016 and online since 2018.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published: Annually
ISSN: 1042-1262
Children, Youth and Environments (CYE)
University of Cincinnati, CECH
The CYE values the capacity of children and young people to meaningfully participate in the processes that shape their lives and publishes papers from distinct viewpoints, varied approaches, and diverse cultures and regions around the world.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published:
eISSN:
Journal of the American Leather Chemists Association
American Leather Chemists Association
The Journal of the American Leather Chemists Association is published monthly by The American Leather Chemists Association. The Journal of the American Leather Chemists Association publishes manuscripts on all aspects of leather science, engineering, the industry. Examples: hide/skin quality or utilization, leather production methods/ equipment, tanning materials/leather chemicals, new and improved leathers, collagen studies, leather by-products, impacts of changes in leather products industries, process and industry economics.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published: Monthly
ISSN: 0002-9726
Visible Language
University of Cincinnati, DAAP
Visible Language research, and practice of visual communication design to enhance the human experience. Published by the Myron E. Ullman Jr. School of Design at the University of Cincinnati, Visible Language balances artfulness with science, innovation with respect for human patterns of use, evidence-based research with intuitive exploration, and technology with humanity.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published:
ISSN: eISSN:
Issues in Race and Society
Association of Black Sociologists
Issues in Race & Society is a double-blind, peer-reviewed comprehensive, and global examination of the increasingly racial and racialized world that connects us all. It provides a space where all voices can be heard and diverse conversations can occur about the relationship and interconnections between race, power, privilege, and location operating across cultures and societies.
Subject: Format: Founded: Published: 2 times a year
ISSN:
Contact and Ordering Information
University of Cincinnati Press books are distributed through The University of Chicago Press and Chicago Distribution Center (CDC).
Chicago Distribution Center Policies
Except as noted, the following information applies for all CDC customers and all of CDC’s client publishers. CDC will ship an order of any size, whether it contains books from one or multiple client publishers. For the convenience of customers, CDC can information on discount schedules.) Upon request, CDC will combine backorder titles on one invoice/shipment.
How to Order
Address for orders: Customer Service Chicago Distribution Center Chicago IL 60628
SAN:
Phone orders:
Fax orders: (800)621-8476 (USA and Canada)
E-mail orders: orders@press.uchicago.edu
Special sales, corporate sales: Titles published by the University of Cincinnati Press are available for corporate, premium, and special sales. Please direct inquiries to the Business hours: following about your account and the books you are ordering.
•Customer account number
•Purchase order number
•Customer phone and fax numbers
•Customer SAN
•For each book being ordered: ISBN, title, author, and quantity desired
•Any special shipping instructions
Shipping
will be sent by priority mail unless otherwise requested. Canadian shipments are consolidated twice weekly. Once they are inside Canada, packages are shipped to the customer via FedEx Ground. Overseas shipments go surface or international airmail, as designated by the customer. Other shipping arrangements are available upon request. Any claims for shipping discrepancies, shortages, or damages must be made within thirty
Credit Terms
Orders placed before credit has been established must be paid in advance. For all accounts with established credit, payment is due within thirty
Chicago Distribution Center
ATTN: Accounts Receivable
Chicago, IL 60628 USA
If you have questions about this process, e-mail Cynthia Bastion: cab9@uchicago.edu
CDC Payments
CDC accepts VISA, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover. All checks must be in US funds drawn on a US bank. Electronic fund and wire transfers should be directed to:
The Northern Trust Chicago IL 60670
Discount Schedules
Each CDC client publisher determines its own discount schedule. For information on its discount policy and schedule, contact the marketing manager at the individual publisher. To request a list of these individuals and their contact information, click here: custserv@press.uchicago.edu
Returns Policy
All books returned to CDC must be in saleable condition. CDC will return to the customer shelf-worn and stickered books, along with a charge for return postage. Titles that are out of print may be returned for six months after the OP date. CDC’s database maintains line item sales detail for all of its customers. Credit will be issued based upon the latest purchase information available. If no purchase information is available, CDC will issue credit at the maximum discount allowed if purchase was made through the CDC.
For information on discount policies, press inquiries and general questions, please contact: ucincypressmktg2@ucmail.uc.edu.