Racism and anti-racism in placement reports
In: Social work education, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 29-43
ISSN: 1470-1227
27222 Ergebnisse
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In: Social work education, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 29-43
ISSN: 1470-1227
In: Political studies, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 129
ISSN: 0032-3217
In: Center for Migration Studies special issues, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 81-86
ISSN: 2050-411X
Cardinal Bernardin examines the prejudice and racism that are still alive and strong in our world. Racism manifests itself in problems such as inadequate housing, unemployment, of job forced choice, poor education, and distance between people of different ethnic and racial backgrounds. In worst cases, it can take the form of open hostility and violence. There will be no end to acute racial crises if we do not defy chronic problems of racism in all parts of the world. Racism can also manifest itself economically, making one's economic status as determining as the color of one's skin.People feel a sense of helplessness – Cardinal Bernardin continues – when they lack control over their own destiny. Each one of us is hostage of racism and needs to free ourselves from it. Catholics must not forget that they, too, have experienced discrimination and rejection which, the Archbishop of Chicago asserts, must not be repeated. Racism must be seen as an attack on Christianity at its roots, and as an insidious sin.Different colors of skins or different races cannot exist for Christians since all human beings are one in Christ. In our own fight against racial problems, Cardinal Bernardin calls us to examine the example provided by Martin Luther King, who prophetically illuminated the moral issues of his own time. Dr. King knew that the problem of racism required profound changes not only in people's thought but also in political attitudes. Dr. King began an important process that the present generation must continue.
Cover -- Half-Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- Who was Wilhelm Reich? -- How can racist beliefs become part of common sense? -- Part I -- 2 The Language Racist -- Sitting in a walled house -- My language, my nation - i'm lovin' it -- My language - keep it pure -- Why can't they all learn the standard language? -- Why do they speak in unintelligible accents? -- My mother tongue is my identity -- Our language and their integration -- Help! My language and my culture are dying -- Bilingual education harms the children -- No Babel, please
Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- PART I: The Reds and the Blacks -- PART II: Decline and Fall of the Civil Rights Movement -- 1 Memories in Memphis -- 2 Clarence Page's Race Problem, and Mine -- 3 Black History Lesson -- 4 Farrakhan and the Right -- 5 A Washer Woman Shall Lead Them -- 6 Alternative to Affirmative Action -- 7 Progressives Support Racial Divisions -- 8 Johnnie's Other O.J. -- 9 When "Civil Rights" Become Civil Wrongs -- 10 An Academic Lynching -- 11 Choke Your Coach, Become a Cause -- 12 "Liberals" Want a Racial Monologue -- 13 Hate Crimes Are Multicultural, Too
In: Mapping global racisms
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In: Political affairs: pa ; a Marxist monthly ; a publication of the Communist Party USA, Band 80, Heft 5, S. 13-17
ISSN: 0032-3128
Explores connections between the fight for democracy and the fight against racism, as presented in Gus Hall's 1985 book, "Fighting Racism".
Argues that antiracism movements in the African-Brazilian population must first acknowledge race as a factor in Brazilian culture. The notion that Brazil is an antiracist nation is contradicted by the racial usage of color & class. Although it is posited by some scholars that there is no clear classification of race in Brazil, it is argued that physical appearance -- ie, color -- serves as a surrogate for race. It is advocated that the antiracist movement illustrate the institutionalism of racism in the public, private, & educational sectors. 37 References. M. Greenberg
In: Public affairs quarterly: PAQ, Band 12, Heft 1, S. 23-50
ISSN: 0887-0373
Develops a philosophical understanding of the nature of racism, which ought to be legally prohibited, using African-Americans in the US as a primary, though not exclusive example. Cognitive-behavioral theory of racism, ethnic prejudice, and moral status of racism.
This work offers a discussion of racism in America focusing on how white people have been affected by their own racism and how it impacts upon relations between blacks and whites. It draws attention to how racism is different from race and shows how whites have maintained a white racist America