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Notes
1. Ersilasun and Ersilasun, The Uyghur Community, VI–VII.
2. Brophy, Tending to Unite, 70; Bovingdon, The Uyghurs, 19; and Berlie, Islam in China, 114–158.
3. Berlie, Islam in China, 114–158; and Roberts, “Imagining Uyghurstan,” 364; Bovingdon, The Uyghurs, 19.
4. Clarke, “China, Xinjiang …,” 213–229; and Smith Finley, “Why Scholars and Activists …,” 348–370.
5. Roberts, The War on the Uyghurs, 5–6, 15–16.
6. Ibid., 10–13.
7. Ibid., 20.
8. Ibid., 22–51.
9. Ibid., 52–53.
10. Ibid., 53–79.
11. Ibid., 61.
12. Ibid., 80–108.
13. Ibid., 109–134.
14. Ibid., 109.
15. Ibid., 135–146.
16. Ibid., 146–166.
17. Ibid., 167.
18. Ibid., 170–199.
19. Ibid., 200–205.
20. Ibid., 205–207.
21. Ibid., 207–209.
22. Roberts, “The Biopolitics of China’s …,” 232–258.
23. Roberts, The War on the Uyghurs, 211.
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Porkkodi Ganeshpandian
Porkkodi Ganeshpandian completed her M.A. in Political Science from Madras Christian College and is now a Ph.D. student with the School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. Her research interests include the manifestations of totalitarianism, North Korean Politics and the increasing state surveillance.