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History Strikes Back
In: The journal of holocaust research, Band 37, Heft 1, S. 80-87
ISSN: 2578-5656
SSRN
History without engines
In: New perspectives: interdisciplinary journal of Central & East European politics and international relations, Band 30, Heft 4, S. 406-409
ISSN: 2336-8268
In Conversation with History
In: Small axe: a journal of criticism, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 85-100
ISSN: 1534-6714
This interview with acclaimed Trinbagonian Canadian author M. NourbeSe Philip offers an insight into her creative process, particularly in relation to Zong! As Told to the Author by Setaey Adamu Boateng. It delves into the critical querying and ethical concerns guiding this work and others and features a unique and rare insight into Philip's recordkeeping of her literary papers, as well as her long-time engagement with African diasporic histories and the archive of the slave trade. Philip also discusses the Black Lives Matter uprisings in the summer of 2020, following the killing of George Floyd, and the profitability of amnesia in our capitalist societies. In this interview, readers can also access a recent poem, "When the looting starts . . . ," which Philip dedicates to African American activist Tamika D. Mallory.
POLICING IN AMERICAN HISTORY
In: Du bois review: social science research on race, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 189-195
ISSN: 1742-0598
AbstractThis article examines the historical evolution of policing in America with a focus on race. Specifically, it is argued that racial bias has deep roots in American policing, and reforms in policing and American society have not eliminated the detrimental experiences of Blacks who encounter the police. Historical information and contemporary empirical research indicate that, even when legal and other factors are equal, Blacks continue to experience the coercive and lethal aspects of policing relative to their non-Black counterparts.
Learning from history
In: Journal of Public Health Policy
The ways historians assemble primary material from which to learn how industry has failed to protect workers and the environment is changing dramatically. Increasingly, historians focus concern on the evolution of the internet and the demise of paper records. The authors of "Monsanto, PCBs," and the Creation of a "World-Wide Ecological Problem" (2018) are also founders of ToxicDocs.org. This web-based resource provides an entirely new degree of transparency. Readers of their article may look at any document they cite by clicking on the reference. Those with or without expertise in science can now judge these authors' analysis, and much more: entertain new lines of inquiry, ask new questions, obtain new insights, and publish well-documented pieces that offer new knowledge and insight to enrich our understanding, not only of the PCB story, but also industry's general behavior when using or marketing toxic substances.