Silent Victims

  • Silent Victims: Hate Crimes Against Native Americans
    By Barbara Perry

    In C. Rittner, J. Roth, and J. Smith (eds.), Will genocide ever end? (pp. 91–98). St. Paul, Minn.: Paragon House. Robbins, R. (1992). Self-Determination and subordination: The past, present and future of American Indian governance.

  • Silent Victims: God's Light in a Child's World of Incarceration
    By Scottie Barnes, Sandi Huddleston-Edwards, Tom and Betsy Black

    Preventing an at-risk child from turning to gangs, drugs, and crime is one of the most important ways to make our communities safe and productive for our children in the future.

  • Silent Victims: Hate Crimes Against Native Americans
    By Barbara Perry

    Silent Victims is a unique contribution to the literature on hate crime. Because most extant literature treats hate crimesÑeven racial violenceÑrather generically, this work breaks new ground with its findings.

  • Silent Victims
    By Lynda La Plante

    Krimi. A sixteen-year-old rent boy lies in an older man's apartment, engulfed in flames.

  • Silent Victims: The Plight of Arab & Muslim Americans in Post 9/11 America
    By Aladdin Elaasar

    " Whenever people face sadness and tragedy then complimenting something that comes out of it becomes harder. This book provides the nation with a rich detailed lived history, which did not begin with September 11, 2001.

  • Silent victims
    By Lynda La Plante

    Silent victims

  • Silent Victims: Recognizing and Stopping Abuse of the Family Pet
    By Tom Flanagan, Pamela Carlisle-Frank

    Silent Victims offers students, professionals, and laypersons an overview of the most critical scientific and anecdotal findings about the factors surrounding animal abuse. Presented in a user-friendly style, the book...

  • Silent Victims: Arab and Muslim Americans Post 9/11
    By Aladdin Elaasar

    To many Arab and Muslim Americans (about three million Arab-Americans and seven million Muslim-Americans), 9-11 represented a turning point in how America is struggling to accept them as a community with a distinct religious identity.