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Settler Colonial City: Racism and Inequity in Postwar Minneapolis
Revealing the enduring link between settler colonization and the making of modern Minneapolis$25.00Original price was: $25.00.$18.75Current price is: $18.75. -
Race and Class Distinctions Within Black Communities
This book offers both a philosophical and sociological model for understanding the constitution of identity in general, and black social identity in particular, without reverting to either a social or racial deterministic view of identity construction. Using a variant of structuration theory (phenomenological structuralism) this work, against contemporary postmodern and post-structural theories, seeks to offer a dialectical understanding of the constitution of black American and British life within the class division and social relations of production of the global capitalist world-system, while accounting for black social agency.$55.99Original price was: $55.99.$41.99Current price is: $41.99. -
Race in American Television: Voices and Visions That Shaped a Nation
$191.25Original price was: $191.25.$143.44Current price is: $143.44. -
Racism After Apartheid: Challenges for Marxism and Anti-Racism
$35.00Original price was: $35.00.$26.25Current price is: $26.25. -
Racial Reconciliation and the Healing of a Nation: Beyond Law and Rights
$30.00Original price was: $30.00.$22.50Current price is: $22.50. -
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Sickening
An event-by-event look at how institutionalized racism harms the health of African Americans in the twenty-first century$21.95Original price was: $21.95.$16.46Current price is: $16.46. -
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A State-By-State History of Race and Racism in the United States [2 Volumes]
From the initial impact of European settlement on indigenous populations to the racial divides caused by immigration and police shootings in the 21st century, each American state has imposed some form of racial restriction on its residents. The United States proclaims a belief in freedom and justice for all, but members of various minority racial groups have often faced a different reality, as seen in such examples as the forcible dispossession of indigenous peoples during the Trail of Tears, Jim Crow laws' crushing discrimination of blacks, and the manifest unfairness of the Chinese Exclusion Act.$208.00Original price was: $208.00.$156.00Current price is: $156.00. -
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Just Health: Treating Structural Racism to Heal America
$28.95Original price was: $28.95.$21.71Current price is: $21.71. -
Killing With Prejudice
In Killing with Prejudice, R.J. Maratea chronicles the entire litigation process which culminated in what has been called “the Dred Scott decision of our time.” Ultimately, the Supreme Court chose to overlook compelling empirical evidence that revealed the discriminatory manner in which the assailants of African Americans are systematically undercharged and the aggressors of white victims are far more likely to receive a death sentence. He draws a clear line from the lynchings of the Jim Crow era to the contemporary acceptance of the death penalty and the problem of mass incarceration today.$26.00Original price was: $26.00.$19.50Current price is: $19.50. -
Threatening Property
White supremacists determined what African Americans could do and where they could go in the Jim Crow South, but they were less successful in deciding where black people could live because different groups of white supremacists did not agree on the question of residential segregation. In Threatening Property, Elizabeth A. Herbin-Triant investigates early-twentieth-century campaigns for residential segregation laws in North Carolina to show how the version of white supremacy supported by middle-class white people differed from that supported by the elites. Class divides prevented Jim Crow from expanding to the extent that it would require separate neighborhoods for black and white southerners as in apartheid South Africa. Herbin-Triant details the backlash against the economic successes of African Americans among middle-class whites, who claimed that they wished to protect property values and so campaigned for residential segregation laws both in the city and the countryside, where their actions were modeled on South Africa’s Natives Land Act. White elites blocked these efforts, primarily because it was against their financial interest to remove the black workers that they employed in their homes, farms, and factories. Herbin-Triant explores what the split over residential segregation laws reveals about competing versions of white supremacy and about the position of middling whites in a region dominated by elite planters and businessmen. An illuminating work of social and political history, Threatening Property puts class front and center in explaining conflict over the expansion of segregation laws into private property.$34.99Original price was: $34.99.$26.24Current price is: $26.24. -
The Use and Abuse of Police Power in America
$35.95Original price was: $35.95.$26.96Current price is: $26.96.
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Just Health: Treating Structural Racism to Heal America
Original price was: $28.95.$21.71Current price is: $21.71.





























