Studies of Transition States and Society, 10(2), 40-54. Visible solidarities: #Asians4BlackLives and affective racial counterpublics. Racial justice activist hashtags: Counterpublics and discourse circulation. Building an Asian American feminist movement. Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (pp. Whose side are ethics on?: Power, responsibility, and the social good. Abolition cannot wait: Visions for transformation and radical world-building. #FeministAntibodies: Asian American media in the time of Coronavirus. Kuo, R., Zhang, A., Shaw, V., & Wang, C.
Center for Information, Technology, and Public Life. Critical disinformation studies: A syllabus. She is also a co-founder of the Asian American Feminist Collective.
Her writing has appeared in New Media and Society, Journal of Communication, the Routledge Companion to Asian American Media, Teen Vogue, Huffington Post, Open Democracy, and Everyday Feminism. She holds a PhD in Media, Culture, and Communication from New York University. Her current project interrogates the concept of ‘solidarity’ across media objects and platforms and demonstrates how technologies enhance and foreclose possibilities for political organization across uneven racial and class differences. 2013).Conventional risk factors such as age, sex, smoking, cholesterol and hypertension are used to estimate CHD risk (Kullo and Cooper 2010 Wilson et al. She is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Center for Information, Technology, and Public Life in the School of Information and Library Sciences at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of mortality worldwide, imposing a major economic and resource burden on health systems (Finegold et al. Rachel Kuo ( race, social movements, and digital technologies.