Introduction: race relations and demographic change -- Open doors: race and immigration in the twentieth century -- Closed gates: the rise of local enforcement -- Racializing Mexicans: new Latinos -- Making minorities: the African American embrace and minority linked fate -- The new South: new minority coalitions and white retrenchment -- Conclusion: making race: conflict and color lines
Existing paradigms of immigrant incorporation fruitfully describe immigrants' upward or downward mobility across generations. Yet we know very little about intragenerational change. Drawing on a case in which upwardly mobile Latino immigrants see their gains reversed, I model what I call intragenerational reverse incorporation. In doing so, I theorize how incorporation gains can be undone through institutional closure and shifts in reception attitudes spurred by securitization and intensified immigration enforcement. Drawing on data gathered in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, I show how these changes both marginalized and racialized Latino immigrants, who in turn internalized and politicized their new status.
To solve complex problems such as poverty, nonprofit leaders must think in increasingly complex ways. Research on philanthropy has not yet explored the complexity of philanthropists' thinking while making philanthropy‐related decisions. Developmental psychology indicates that adults develop an increasingly complex mental map over the course of a lifetime and that this map emerges as a series of successive stages. This study asked: How, if at all, does this mental map inform philanthropy? This four‐phase mixed‐methods multi‐case study (n = 11) used constructive developmental theory to empirically assess philanthropists' developmental levels and, then, compare identified levels with data about the donor's philanthropic activities such as donations and board memberships. The contributions of the study are twofold: (a) the findings suggest philanthropists' developmental levels are related to their thinking processes about charitable giving and the rationales they employ to make decisions about their philanthropic activities (specifically, how they form ideas about the problem and how they engage in empathy), and (b) this study makes a methodological contribution by demonstrating a novel (and apparently useful) approach to researching philanthropic giving. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Cover -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Abbreviations -- A Note on Language -- Introduction -- Part I. Black Civil Rights Organizations and Sexual Exclusion in Early Cold War America -- 1. To Stand upon My Constitutional Rights: The NAACP Veterans' Affairs Bureau and World War II-Era Sexual Exclusion, 1945-1950 -- 2. These Attempts of Our Enemies to Blacken My Character: The National Urban League and the Political Uses of Homophobia, 1956-1957 -- Part II. The Sexual Deployments of White Supremacists -- 3. Freedom March Makes Queers Bed Fellows: Sexual Rumors and the 1965 Alabama Voting Rights Demonstrations -- 4. Nobody Has the Right to Turn Us into a Nation of Queers: Race and Homosexuality in White Supremacist Propaganda,1961-1975 -- Part III. Gay Political Visions and the Politics of Estrangement -- 5. Civil Rights and Moral Wrongs: The Politics of Gay Visibility in Atlanta, 1976-1989 -- 6. Saving the RACE: The SCLC/WOMEN and Ambivalent Approaches to HIV/AIDS, 1986-1993 -- Epilogue -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y.
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