Redefining refugees: Interpretive control and the bordering work of legal categorization in US asylum law CS Gorman Political Geography 58, 36-45, 2017 | 59 | 2017 |
Feminist legal archeology, domestic violence and the raced-gendered juridical boundaries of US asylum law CS Gorman Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 51 (5), 1050-1067, 2019 | 31 | 2019 |
Defined by the flood: Alarmism and the legal thresholds of US political asylum CS Gorman Geopolitics 26 (1), 215-235, 2021 | 23 | 2021 |
Invasion and colonization: Islamophobia and anti-refugee sentiment in West Virginia CS Gorman, K Culcasi Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space 39 (1), 168-183, 2021 | 17 | 2021 |
Containing Kassindja: Detention, gendered threats and border control in the United States CS Gorman Gender, Place & Culture 23 (7), 955-968, 2016 | 17 | 2016 |
Singled out: Scaling violence and social groups as legal borderwork in US Asylum law CS Gorman Geographical review 109 (4), 487-506, 2019 | 9 | 2019 |
Contemporary Refugee‐Border Dynamics and the Legacies of the 1919 Paris Peace Conference⋆ K Culcasi, E Skop, C Gorman Geographical Review 109 (4), 469-486, 2019 | 5 | 2019 |
After the raid: feminist geolegality and the spaces of encounters in a US poultry town CS Gorman, BR Wilson Gender, Place & Culture 29 (4), 502-523, 2022 | 4 | 2022 |
From recognition to regulation: flood fears, gender violence and asylum law in the United States CS Gorman Rutgers University-Graduate School-New Brunswick, 2013 | 2 | 2013 |
Book Review: Refuge Lost: Asylum Law in an Interdependent World CS Gorman International Migration Review 53 (4), 1265-1266, 2019 | | 2019 |