The Phytochemical Landscape(1st Edition) Linking Trophic Interactions and Nutrient Dynamics (Monographs in Population Biology) by MarkD. Hunter Hardcover, 376 Pages, Published 2016 by Princeton University Press ISBN-13: 978-0-691-15845-7, ISBN: 0-691-15845-2
Crime And Criminality(5th Edition) Causes and Consequences (Criminal Justice Press Project) by Ronald D. Hunter, Mark L. Dantzker Paperback, 237 Pages, Published 2005 by Willow Tree Pr ISBN-13: 978-1-881798-65-1, ISBN: 1-881798-65-8
"Michael Ralph and Maya Singhal (2019) offer a sceptical review of racial capitalism, faulting what they call 'this literature' for imprecision about race and capitalism, a tendency to African-American exceptionalism, and an attention to ..."
The Cobrasnake All Yesterday's Parties by MarkHunter 240 Pages, Published 2021 by Rizzoli International Publications ISBN-13: 978-0-8478-6759-2, ISBN: 0-8478-6759-5
"Under the moniker the Cobrasnake, the photographer Mark Hunter captured the party scenes of Los Angeles and New York during the hipster-glam heyday of the 2000s--and in doing so, defined the look of a generation First with a Polaroid and ..."
Race for Education Gender, White Tone, and Schooling in South Africa by MarkHunter Published 2019 by Cambridge University Press ISBN-13: 978-1-108-57372-6, ISBN: 1-108-57372-X
"Critical Perspectives on Schooling and Fertility in the Developing World. ... 'From
racial to class apartheid: South Africa's frustrating decade of freedom', Monthly
Review 55, no. ... 'Claiming spaces, changing places: political violence and
women's protests in KwaZulu-Natal', Journal of Southern African Studies 26, no.
... Butler, Jeffrey, Robert Rotberg, and John Adams. The Black Homelands of
South Africa: the political and econ ..."
Race for Education Gender, White Tone, and Schooling in South Africa (The International African Library) by MarkHunter Paperback, 320 Pages, Published 2019 by Cambridge University Press ISBN-13: 978-1-108-72763-1, ISBN: 1-108-72763-8
"Following the end of apartheid in 1994, the ANC government placed education at the centre of its plans to build a nonracial and more equitable society. Yet, by the 2010s a wave of student protests voiced demands for decolonised and affordable education. By following families and schools in Durban for nearly a decade, Mark Hunter sheds new light on South Africa's political transition and the global phenomenon of education marketisation. ..."