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 Almond Paradox Cracking Open the Politics of What Plants Need Emily Reisman
The Master-Servant Doctrine How Old Legal Rules Haunt the Modern Workplace Elizabeth Chika Tippett
Archipelagic Cinemas Screening Southeast Asian Modernity Dag S. Yngvesson
Fear of God Practicing Emotion in Late Antique Monasticism Daniel Eastman An
Monsoon Voyagers An Indian Ocean History Fahad Ahmad Bishara
Pan-African Futurism Ghana and the Paradox of Technology for Development Reginold A. Royston
The Composer's Black Box Making Music in Cybernetic America Theodore Gordon
Gender Violence in Late Antiquity Male Fantasies and the Christian Imagination Jennifer Barry
Death by Design Producing Racial Health Inequality in the Shadow of the Capitol Sanyu A. Mojola
We Are Internationalists Prexy Nesbitt and the Fight for African Liberation Martha Biondi
Nile Nightshade An Egyptian Culinary History of the Tomato Anny Gaul
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