Racism in the United States has been a major issue
since the colonial era. Historically, the country has been
dominated by a
settler society of
religiously and ethnically diverse
Whites. The heaviest burdens of
racism in the country have historically fallen upon
Native
Americans,
Asian Americans,
African Americans,
Latin Americans,
American Jews,
Irish
Americans and some other
immigrant groups and their
descendants.
Major racially structured institutions include slavery, Indian
reservations, segregation, residential schools (for Native
Americans), internment camps, and affirmative action.
Racial stratification has occurred in
employment, housing, education and government. Formal racial
discrimination was largely banned in the mid-20th century, and it
came to be perceived as socially unacceptable and/or morally
repugnant as well, yet racial politics remain a major
phenomenon.
Racist attitudes, or
prejudice, are still
held by significant portions of the U.S. population. Members of
every American ethnic group have perceived racism in their dealings
with other groups.
Also to note the definition of "White" has changed over time; many
European groups, such as Irish and Italians, were not considered
"White" when they first immigrated to the United States, and were
victims of racial discrimination at that time. White Americans
occasionally do experience racial discrimination; it is
disputed whether this is properly termed
"racism," and, in general, since other groups have less economic
and social power, it is uncommon that such discrimination has the
power to seriously harm Whites.
History by targeted racial group
Racism against Native Americans

Members of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation
in Oklahoma around 1877.
Notice the European and African ancestry members.
The Creek were originally from the Alabama region.
Native
Americans, who had lived on the North America continent for at
least 15,000 years, had an enormously complex impact on American
history and racial relations. During the colonial and independent
periods, a long series of conflicts were waged, with the primary
objective of obtaining resources of Native Americans. Through
wars,
massacres,
forced displacement (such as in the
Trail of Tears), and the imposition
of treaties, land was taken and numerous hardships imposed. In 1540
AD, the first racial strife was with Spaniard
Hernando de Soto's expedition who enslaved
and murdered many
New World communities.
In the early 1700s, the English had enslaved nearly 800
Choctaws.
After the creation of the United States, the idea of
Indian removal gained momentum. However, some
Native Americans choose to remain and avoided removal where they
were subjected to racist institutions in their ancient homeland.
The
Choctaws in Mississippi
described their situation in 1849, "we have had our
habitations torn down and burned, our fences destroyed, cattle
turned into our fields and we ourselves have been scourged,
manacled, fettered and otherwise personally abused, until by such
treatment some of our best men have died." Joseph B. Cobb,
who moved to Mississippi from Georgia, described Choctaws as having
"no nobility or virtue at all, and in some respect he found blacks,
especially native Africans, more interesting and admirable, the red
man's superior in every way. The Choctaw and Chickasaw, the tribes
he knew best, were beneath contempt, that is, even worse than black
slaves."
Ideological expansionist justification (
Manifest Destiny) included stereotyped
perceptions of all Native Americans as "merciless Indian savages"
(as described in the
United States
Declaration of Independence) despite successful American
efforts at civilization as proven with the
Cherokee,
Chickasaw,
Creek, and
Choctaw. The most egregious attempt occurred with
the
California gold rush, the
first two years of which saw the deaths of thousands of Native
Americans.
Under Mexican rule in California
, Indians were subjected to de facto
enslavement under a system of peonage.
While in
1850, California formally entered the Union
as a
free state, with respect
to the issue of slavery, the practice of Indian
indentured servitude was not
outlawed by the California
Legislature until 1863.
Military and civil resistance by Native Americans has been a
constant feature of American history. So too have a variety of
debates around issues of sovereignty, the upholding of treaty
provisions, and the civil rights of Native Americans under U.S.
law.
Discrimination, marginalization
Once their territories were incorporated into the United States,
surviving Native Americans were denied equality before the law and
often treated as wards of the state. Many Native Americans were
relegated to reservations—constituting just 4% of U.S.
territory—and the treaties signed with them violated. Tens of
thousands of American Indians and Alaska Natives were forced to
attend a
residential school
system which sought to reeducate them in white settler American
values, culture and economy, to "kill the Indian, sav[ing] the
man."
Further dispossession continued through concessions for industries
such as oil, mining and timber and through division of land through
legislation such as the Allotment Act. These concessions have
raised problems of consent, exploitation of low royalty rates,
environmental injustice, and gross mismanagement of funds held in
trust, resulting in the loss of $10–40 billion. The
Worldwatch Institute notes that 317
reservations are threatened by environmental hazards, while
Western Shoshone land has been
subjected to more than 1,000 nuclear explosions.
Native American owned slaves
Before removal, some Southern Native American tribes owned African
American slaves. The Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chickasaw were known to
have had slaves. Just as they adopted European American culture
(Christianity, yeoman farming techniques, and educational
institutions), they also adopted slavery. But unlike the United
States before
Emancipation, African
Americans (and European Americans) were allowed to become citizens
of their respective Native American nations; however, it was rare
for African Americans to become citizens of Native American
nations. For example, a small number of "Free People of Color"
lived in many Native American nations as Cherokee, Choctaw, or
Creek citizens.
Assimilation efforts into American society
George Washington and
Henry Knox believed that Native Americans were
equals but that their society was inferior. The government
appointed agents, like
Benjamin
Hawkins, to live among the Indians and to teach them, through
example and instruction, how to live like whites. Washington
formulated a policy to encourage the "civilizing" process.
Washington had a six-point plan for civilization which included,
1. impartial justice toward Native Americans
2. regulated buying of Native American lands
3. promotion of commerce
4. promotion of experiments to civilize or improve Native American
society
5. presidential authority to give presents
6. punishing those who violated Native American rights.
The
Indian Citizenship
Act of 1924 granted U.S. citizenship to all Native Americans.
Prior to the passage of the act, nearly two-thirds of Native
Americans were already U.S. citizens.
The earliest recorded date of Native Americans becoming U.S.
citizens was in 1831 when the Mississippi
Choctaw became citizens after the United States
Legislature ratified the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek. Under
article XIV of that treaty, any Choctaw who elected not to move to
Native American Territory could become an American citizen when he
registered and if he stayed on designated lands for five years
after treaty ratification. Citizenship could also be obtained
by:
1. Treaty Provision (as with the Mississippi
Choctaw)
2. Allotment under the Act of February 8,
1887
3. Issuance of Patent in Fee Simple
4. Adopting Habits of Civilized Life
5. Minor Children
6. Citizenship by Birth
7. Becoming Soldiers and Sailors in the U.S. Armed Forces
8. Marriage
9. Special Act of Congress.
While formal equality has been legally granted,
American Indians,
Alaska Natives,
Native Hawaiians, and
Pacific Islanders remain among the most
economically disadvantaged groups in the country, and according to
National mental health studies, American Indians are the most
affected racial group to suffer from high levels of alcoholism,
depression and suicide.
Racism against African Americans
Slavery and emancipation
In colonial America, before
slavery became completely based
on racial lines, thousands of African slaves served European
colonists, alongside other Europeans serving a term of
indentured servitude. In some cases for
African slaves, a term of service meant freedom and a land grant
afterward, but these were rarely awarded, and few former slaves
became landowners this way.
In a precursor to the American Revolution,
Nathaniel Bacon led a revolt in 1676 against the Governor of
Virginia
and the
system of exploitation he represented: exploitation of poorer
colonists by the increasingly wealthy landowners where poorer
people, regardless of skin color, fought side by side.
However, Bacon died, probably of
dysentery; hundreds of participants in the revolt
were lured to disarm by a promised
amnesty;
and the revolt lost steam.
Slaves were primarily used for
agricultural labor, notably in the production of
cotton and
tobacco.
Black slavery in the Northeast was common until the early 19th
century, when many Northeastern states abolished slavery. Slaves
were used as a labor force in agricultural production, shipyards,
docks, and as domestic servants. In both regions, only the
wealthiest Americans owned slaves. In contrast, poor whites
recognized that slavery devalued their own labor. The social rift
along color lines soon became ingrained in every aspect of colonial
American culture. Approximately one Southern family in four held
slaves prior to war. According to the 1860 U.S. census, there were
about 385,000 slaveowners out of approximately 1.5 million white
families.
Although the Constitution had banned the importation of new African
slaves in 1808, and in 1820 slave trade was equated with piracy,
punishableby death, the practice of chattel slavery still existed
for the next half century. All slaves in only the areas of the
Confederate States of
America that were not under direct control of the United States
government were declared free by the
Emancipation Proclamation, which
was issued on January 1, 1863 by President
Abraham Lincoln. It should be noted that the
Emancipation Proclamation
did not apply to areas loyal to, or controlled by, the Union, thus
the document only freed slaves where the Union still had not
regained the legitimacy to do so. Slavery was not actually
abolished in the United States until the passage of the
13th
Amendment which was declared ratified on December 6,
1865.
About 4 million
black slaves were freed in 1865. Ninety-five percent of
blacks lived in the South, comprising one third of the population
there as opposed to one percent of the population of the North.
Consequently, fears of eventual emancipation were much greater in
the South than in the North. Based on 1860 census figures, 8% of
all
white males aged 13 to 43 died in
the civil war, including 6% in the North and an extraordinary 18%
in the South. Despite this, post-emancipation America was not free
from racism; discriminatory practices continued in the United
States with the existence of
Jim Crow
laws, educational disparities and widespread criminal acts
against people of color.
Nadir of American race relations
The new century saw a hardening of institutionalized racism and
legal discrimination against citizens of African descent in the
United States. Although technically able to vote,
poll taxes, acts of terror (often perpetuated by
groups such as the
Ku Klux Klan,
founded in the
Reconstruction
South), and discriminatory laws such as
grandfather clauses kept black Americans
disenfranchised particularly in the South but also nationwide
following the
Hayes election at
the end of the
Reconstruction era
in 1877. In response to
de jure racism,
protest and lobbyist groups emerged, most notably, the
NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People) in 1909.
This time period is sometimes referred to as the
nadir of American race
relations because racism in the United States was worse during
this time than at any period before or since.
Segregation,
racial discrimination, and expressions
of white supremacy all increased. So did anti-black violence,
including
lynchings and
race riots.
In
addition, racism which had been viewed primarily as a problem in
the Southern states, burst onto the national consciousness
following the Great
Migration, the relocation of millions of African Americans from
their roots in the Southern states to the industrial centers of the
North after World War I, particularly in cities such as Boston
, Chicago
, and
New
York
(Harlem
). In
northern cities, racial tensions exploded, most violently in
Chicago, and
lynchings--mob-directed
hangings, usually racially motivated—increased dramatically in the
1920s.
American Civil Rights movement

Civil Rights marchers at the Lincoln
Memorial
Prominent African American politicians, entertainers and activists
pushed for civil rights throughout the twentieth century, quite
noticeably during the 1930s and 1940s with noted allies including
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who facilitated singer
Marian Anderson's famous 1939
Easter concert when segregated venues would
not accommodate her.
Activists, particularly
A.
Philip Randolph agitated for
civil rights throughout the
Great
Depression and
World War II years,
organizing protest marches and seeking government concessions. The
efforts of civil rights activists began to bear fruit with the
issuance of wartime
Executive Order
8802, signed by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 25, 1941 to prohibit
racial discrimination in the national
defense industry. This was
followed by
Executive Order
9981 by President
Harry S.
Truman in July 1948, which banned racial segregation in the American
armed forces, and the creation of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
in 1957. The 1950s and 1960s saw the peaking of the American
Civil Rights Movement and the
desegregation of schools under the 1954
Supreme Court case
Brown v. Board
and the organizing of widespread protests across the nation under a
younger generation of leaders.Ronald Takaki,
A Different
Mirror: A History of Multicultural America (New York: Little,
Brown & Co., 1993), 400-414.
The pastor and activist
Martin
Luther King, Jr. was the catalyst for many
nonviolent protests in the 1960s which led to
the passage of the
Civil Rights
Act of 1964. This signified a change in the social acceptance
of legislative racism in America and a profound increase in the
number of opportunities available for people of color in the United
States. While substantial gains were made in the succeeding decades
through middle class advancement and public employment, black
poverty and lack of education deepened in the context of
de-industrialization.
Many cite the
2008 United States
presidential election as a step forward in race relations:
White Americans played a role in electing
Barack Obama, the country's first black
president. However, according to exit polls, over sixty percent of
white Americans voted for McCain. Barack Obama receives over thirty
death threats a day, higher than Bush or Clinton, which has led
some to question tolerance in white America.
Discrimination and racism against Asian-Americans

A Sinophobic cartoon called "Yellow
terror" appearing in the United States in 1899
In the
Pacific States, racism was
primarily directed against the resident Asian immigrants. Several
immigration laws discriminated against the Asians, and at different
points the ethnic Chinese or other groups were banned from entering
the United States. Nonwhites were prohibited from testifying
against whites, a prohibition extended to the Chinese by
People v. Hall.
The Chinese were often subject to harder labor on the
First Transcontinental
Railroad and often performed the more dangerous tasks such as
using dynamite to make pathways through the mountains. The
San Francisco Vigilance
Movement, although ostensibly a response to crime and
corruption, also systematically victimized Irish immigrants, and
later this was transformed into mob violence against Chinese
immigrants. Legal discrimination of Asian minorities was furthered
with the passages of the
Chinese Exclusion Act of
1882, which banned the entrance of virtually all ethnic Chinese
immigrants into the United States until 1943.
During World War II, the United States created
internment camps for Japanese
American citizens in fear that they would be used as spies for
the Japanese. The executive order hasn't affected any Japanese
populations in the Eastern US and the large Japanese population in
Hawaii.
Discrimination against Latin Americans
Americans of Latin American ancestry (often categorized as
"
Hispanic") come from a wide variety of
racial and ethnic backgrounds.Latinos are not all distinguishable
as a racial minority.
The
Zoot Suit Riots were vivid
incidents of racial violence against Latinos (e.g.
Mexican-Americans) in Los Angeles
in 1943. Naval servicemen stationed in a
Latino neighborhood conflicted with youth in the dense
neighborhood. Frequent confrontations between small groups and
individuals had intensified into several days of non-stop rioting.
Large mobs of servicemen would enter civilian quarters looking to
attack Mexican American youths, some of whom were wearing
zoot suits, a distinctive exaggerated fashion
popular among that group. The disturbances continued unchecked, and
even assisted, by the local police for several days before based
commanders declared downtown Los Angeles and Mexican American
neighborhoods off-limits to servicemen.
West Coast racism
The Pacific and
Western states
were often portrayed to those on the
East Coast as more liberal
in terms of race relations in the 1960s and 1970s, but California
legally allowed racial segregation of public facilities until the
1950s and other forms of racism were felt there as well.
A variety of laws were enacted to prevent African American
migration to the
Pacific
Northwest.
While slavery was criminalized in the
Oregon
Territory
in 1844, a
so-called "lash law" subjected blacks found guilty of violating the
law to whippings—no less than 20 and no more than 39 strokes of the
lash—every six months "until he or she shall quit the
territory." An exclusion law, barring African Americans from
entering the territory was passed in 1847, repealed in 1854, and
added to the new Oregon state constitution in 1857. While African
Americans have been present at some level since 1805, the
demographic reverberations of these laws remain today.
Hate crimes
Most
hate crimes in the United States
target victims on the basis of race or ethnicity (for Federal
purposes, crimes targeting Hispanics based on that identity are
considered based on ethnicity). Leading forms of bias cited in the
FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, based on law
enforcement agency filings are: anti-black, anti-Jewish,
anti-white, anti-homosexual, and anti-Hispanic bias in that order
in both 2004 and 2005. There are more hate crimes against whites
than against Hispanics, Asians, American-Indians and multiple-race
groups - a statistically expected trend given that there far more
whites than other ethnic groups put together. By contrast, the
National Criminal Victimization Survey, finds that per capita rates
of hate crime victimization varied little by race or ethnicity, and
the differences are not statistically significant.
The
New Century Foundation, a
white nationalist organization
founded by
Jared Taylor, argues that
blacks are more likely than whites to commit hate crimes, and that
FBI figures inflate the number of hate crimes committed by whites
by counting Hispanics as "white". Other analysts are sharply
critical of the NCF's findings, referring to the criminological
mainstream view that "Racial and ethnic data must be treated with
caution. ... Existing research on crime has generally shown that
racial or ethnic identity is not predictive of criminal behavior
with data which has been controlled for social and economic
factors." NCF's methodology and statistics are further sharply
criticized as flawed and deceptive by anti-racist activists Tim
Wise and the Southern Poverty Law Center.
The first post-Jim Crow era hate crime to make sensational media
attention was the beating death of
Vincent
Chin, an Asian American of Chinese descent in 1982. He was
attacked by a mob of white assailants who were recently laid off
from a Detroit area auto factory job and blamed the Japanese for
their individual unemployment. Chin was not of Japanese descent but
the assailants testified at the criminal court case that he "looked
like a Jap", an ethnic slur used to describe Japanese and other
Asians, and that they were angry enough to beat him to death. They
served no jail time and were acquitted of all charges.
Antisemitism
Antisemitism has also played a role in
America.
During the late 1800s and early 1900s,
hundreds of thousands of Ashkenazi
Jews were escaping the pogroms of Russia
and Eastern Europe. They boarded boats
from ports on the Baltic Sea and in Northern Germany
, and largely arrived at Ellis Island
, New
York
.Ronald Takaki, A Different Mirror: A History of
Multicultural America (New York: Little, Brown & Co.,
1993), 277-283.
It is thought by
Leo Rosten, in his book,
'
The Joys of Yiddish', that as
soon as they left the boat, they were subject to racism from the
port immigration authorities. The derogatory term '
kike' was adopted when referring to Jews (because they
often could not write so they may have signed their immigration
papers with circles - or kikel in
Yiddish).
From the 1910s, the Southern Jewish communities were attacked by
the
Ku Klux Klan, who objected to
Jewish immigration, and often used 'The Jewish Banker' in their
propaganda.
In 1915, Texas
-born,
New
York
Jew Leo
Frank was lynched by the newly re-formed Klan, after being
convicted of rape and sentenced to death (his punishment was
commuted to life imprisonment).
The events in
Nazi Germany also
attracted attention from America. Jewish lobbying for intervention
in Europe drew opposition from the
isolationists, amongst whom was Father
Charles Coughlin, a well known
radio priest, who was known to be critical of Jews, believing that
they were leading America into the war. He preached in weekly,
overtly
anti-Semitic sermons and, from
1936, began publication of a newspaper, Social Justice, in which he
printed anti-Semitic accusations such as
The Protocols of the Elders
of Zion.
A number of Jewish organizations, Christian organizations, Muslim
organizations, and academics consider the
Nation of Islam to be
anti-Semitic. Specifically, they claim that
the Nation of Islam has engaged in revisionist and antisemitic
interpretations of the Holocaust and exaggerates the role of Jews
in the African slave trade. The Jewish
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) alleges
that NOI Health Minister, Abdul Alim Muhammad, has accused Jewish
doctors of injecting blacks with the
AIDS
virus, an allegation that Dr. Abdul Alim Muhammad has denied.
Anti-White racism
In the
United
States
, there have been crimes committed against White Americans on the basis of their
ethnicity. One series of unprovoked crimes that specifically
targeted
White Americans is the
Zebra murders that occurred in San
Francisco between 1973 and 1974. The Zebra murders were carried out
by a group known as Death Angels (a radical splinter group of the
Nation of Islam) that intended to
kill whites to spread terror and earn favor and status within their
sect. The final death count varies depending on which killings are
included, but it is believed to account for more than 71 murders in
addition to numerous rapes and attempted murders.
Another series of crimes that specifically targeted whites is the
2002
Beltway sniper attacks
which planned to kill six whites a day for 30 days, and resulted in
10 deaths and 3 critical injuries. One of the snipers
Lee Boyd Malvo testified that
John Allen Muhammad was driven by hatred
of America because of its "slavery, hypocrisy and foreign policy"
and his belief that "the white man is the devil."
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, national anti-white
hate groups that are currently active include
Nation of Islam and
New Black Panther Party.
According
to FBI
statistics
from 1995-2002, Whites are the second most targeted group for
racially motivated hate crime in New York City.
Affirmative action is sometimes
called "reverse racism" by its
opponents;
some sociologists argue that the term
"racism" can only be applied to structured systems of racial
supremacy, and that opponents would more correctly call affirmative
action "reverse
discrimination."
Racism against Middle Easterners and Muslims
Racism against
Arab Americans may
rise concomittantly with tensions between the American government
and the Arab world. Following the
September 11, 2001 attacks in the
United States, discrimination and racialized violence has markedly
increased against Arab Americans and many other religious and
cultural groups.
Iraqis in particular were demonized which led to hatred towards
Arabs and Iranians living in the United States and elsewhere in the
western world. There have been attacks
against Arabs not only on the basis of their religion (
Islam), but also on the basis of their ethnicity;
numerous Christian Arabs have been attacked based on their
appearances. In addition, non-Arabs who are mistaken for Arabs
because of perceived "similarities in appearance" have been
collateral victims of anti-Arabism.
Iranian people (who constitute a
different ethnicity than Arabs), as well as
South Asians of different ethnic/religious
backgrounds (Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs) have been stereotyped as
"Arabs". The case of
Balbir Singh
Sodhi, a Sikh who was murdered at a Phoenix gas station by a
white supremacist for "looking
like an Arab terrorist" (because of the turban that is a
requirement of
Sikhism), as well as that of
Hindus being attacked for "being Muslims" have achieved prominence
and criticism following the September 11 attacks.
Racism against Iranians
The
November 1979 Iranian hostage
crisis of the U.S. embassy in Tehran
precipitated
a wave of anti-Iranian sentiment in the United States, directed
both against the new Islamic
regime and Iranian nationals and immigrants. Even though
such sentiments gradually declined after the release of the
hostages at the start of 1981, they sometimes flare up. In
response, some Iranian immigrants to the U.S. have distanced
themselves from their nationality and instead identify primarily on
the basis of their ethnic or religious affiliations.
Ann Coulter called Iranians "ragheads."
Brent Scowcroft called the Iranian
people "rug merchants."
Since the 1980s and especially since the 1990s Hollywood's
depiction of Iranians has gradually shown signs of vilifying
Iranians. Hollywood network productions such as
24 ,
John Doe,
On Wings of Eagles (1986),
Escape From
Iran: The Canadian Caper (1981), and
JAG almost regularly host Persian speaking villains
in their storylines. On May 9, 1997,
CBS aired
an episode of
JAG in which several
Hamas terrorists take a Washington hospital under
siege. According to the film, they spoke in fluent "Persian", not
"Arabic".
Some of Hollywood's "stereotypical" and anti-Iranian movies
include:
The
Peacemaker (in which a character, apparently without any
context, says "fuck Iran"),
The
Hitman (in which several mobs join together to demolish an
Iranian mob operating in Canada),
MadHouse (partially centering upon
a wealthy Iranian who is in the process of divorcing his American
wife. In one scene, the wife, speaking to her Iranian husband
utters "you goddamn towel heads, sand rats"),
The Naked
Gun,
Under Siege,
The Delta Force,
Into the Night,
Down and Out in
Beverly Hills,
Threads,
The Final Options,
and
Silver Bears.
Racism as a factor in U.S. foreign policy
The earliest decades of expansionist
United States foreign policy
making was often accompanied by racialist ideological
justifications. While pursuing a series of expansionist wars (see
"Racism against Native Americans" above), American leaders embraced
and ideology of
white racial
supremacy.
George Washington
predicted at the end of the
U.S. Revolutionary War, “The gradual
extension of our settlements will as certainly cause the savage, as
the wolf, to retire; both being beasts of prey, tho' they differ in
shape."
The successful slave revolution in Haiti
alarmed the
United States leadership, and the country refused diplomatic
recognition for decades. The United States conquest of Florida
and the Seminole Wars
were fought in part to confront the danger of
"mingled hordes of lawless Indians and negroes," in the words of
President John Quincy Adams.
Early 20th-century President
Theodore
Roosevelt declared, "The most ultimately righteous of all wars
is a war with savages" and openly spoke of cementing the rule of
"dominant world races." In line with the concepts of the "
Manifest Destiny" of white Anglo-Americans
to conquer lands inhabited by "inferior" races of Native Americans
and Mexicans, and the "White Man's Burden" of Europeans' obligation
to introduce civilization to the "primitive" people of Africa, Asia
and the Pacific, American foreign policy in the early 20th century
had racial overtones of a "superior" race destined to rule the
world.
Critics such as
Gore Vidal and
Noam Chomsky have suggested that racism has
played a significant role in U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East
and its treatment of the Arabs. Various critics have suggested that
racism along with strategic and financial interests motivated the
Bush Administration to
attack Iraq even though the
Baathist regime of
Saddam Hussein did not possess
weapons of mass destruction nor had any ties to
Al Qaida. On the other hand, some scholars believe
that the United States has softened racial restrictions based on
foreign policy concerns. For example, Congress eliminated racial
bars on Asian immigration during
World War
II and the
Vietnam War to recognize
American allies. When the
Supreme
Court decided
Brown
v. Board of
Education, the government argued that the Supreme Court should
rule against racial segregation to counter Communist propaganda and
improve America's image overseas.
Conflicts between racial and ethnic minorities
Argument against minority-minority racism
Minority racism is sometimes considered controversial because of
theories of
power in society. Some
theories of racism insist that racism can only exist in the context
of social power to impose it upon others.
African and Mexican American gang violence
There has
been ongoing violence between African
American and Mexican American
gangs, particularly in Los Angeles
, California
. There have been reports of racially
motivated attacks against African Americans who have moved into
neighborhoods occupied mostly by Mexican Americans, and vice versa.
According to gang experts and law enforcement agents, a
longstanding race war between the
Mexican
Mafia and the Black Guerilla family, a rival
African American prison gang, has generated such intense racial
hatred among Mexican Mafia leaders, or shot callers, that they have
issued a "green light" on all blacks.
This amounts to a
standing authorization for Latino gang members to prove their
mettle by terrorizing or even murdering any blacks sighted in a
neighborhood claimed by a gang loyal to the Mexican Mafia.[155911] There have been several significant
riots in California
prisons where Mexican American inmates and African
Americans have targeted each other particularly, based on racial
reasons.
Hispanics and Whites
Recently there has also been an increase in racial violence between
whites and Hispanic
immigrants.
New Immigrant Africans and African Americans
The rapid growth in
African immigrants has came
into conflict with American blacks.
Strife, conflict and reconcilation
The U.S. has long had experienced conflict and reconciliation
between ethnic minority groups.
Historians point out after a period of conflict, ethnic and racial
groups can band together in solidarity. For example, the
competiting
Irish-American and
Italian-American groups once held
aminousity against each other in the early 20th century, would
later merge and also with
Polish-Americans,
German-Americans and
French-Canadians in the U.S. because of the
commonality as "ethnics" and
Roman
Catholics in a primarily Protestant Anglo America by the 1940s
and '50s. The modern American consciousness on race will consider
descendants of European ethnic groups assimilated to become part of
the larger "
White American"
group.
In the
1960s & '70s, African-American and Puerto Rican political
activism banded together to battle the common problems of racial
discrimination, poverty and underpresentation in many urban areas
across the US like in New York City
. Also to note there was substantial
intermarriage between the newly-arrived
Indian American, later came the
Filipino and Hispanic communities in California
under similar working conditions and shared cultural values in the
1920s (see
Punjabi Mexican
American).
The current-day social melange of "minorities" and "people of
color" echoes the previous experience of European ethnic groups'
sense of "otherness" about 2 or 3 generations ago.
Stereotypes and prejudice
Stereotypical images in the entertainment media
Popular culture (songs, theater) for European-American audiences in
the nineteenth century created and perpetuated negative stereotypes
of African-Americans. One key symbol of racism against African
Americans was the use of
blackface.
Directly related to this was the institution of
minstrelsy. Other stereotypes of African
Americans included the fat, dark-skinned "
mammy" and the irrational, hypersexual male
"buck".
Other stereotypes include the portrayal of
East Asians as very small people with huge front
teeth and the portrayal of
Native Americans as
dangerous savages.
Contemporary images and protests
Increasing numbers of African-American activists have asserted that
rap music videos utilize African-American
performers commonly enacting
trope of scantily clothed women and men
as thugs or pimps. Church organized groups have protested outside
the residence of Phillipe Dauman (Upper East Side (New York, NY))
(president and chief executive officer of
Viacom) and the residence of Debra L. Lee (Northwest
Washington DC) (chairman and chief executive of
Black Entertainment
Television, a unit of Viacom). Rev. Donald Coates, leader of a
protest organization formed around the issue of the videos, "Enough
is Enough!" said, “In the wake of the
Imus
affair, I began to think that the African-American community must
be consistent in its outrage.” The Clifton, Maryland ministered has
also said, “Why are these corporations making these images
normative and mainstream?” ... “I can talk about this in the church
until I am blue in the face, but we need to take it outside.” The
NAACP and the National Congress of Black Women
also have called for the reform of images on videos and on
television.
Julian Bond said that in a
segregated society, people get their impressions of other groups
from what they see in videos and what they hear in music.
In a similar vein, activists protested against the BET show,
Hot Ghetto Mess, which satirizes the culture of
working-class African-Americans. The protests resulted
in the change of the television show name to
We Got to Do Better.
Congressional hearing
In September, 2007 Rep.
Bobby Rush
(D-Illinois) initiated a Congressional hearing on African-American
images in the media, “From Imus to Industry: The Business of
Stereotypes and Degrading Images.”
Segregation and integration
History
The
Jim Crow Laws were state and local
laws enacted in the Southern
and border states of the
United
States
and enforced between 1876 and 1965. They
mandated "
separate but equal"
status for black Americans. In reality, this led to treatment and
accommodations that were almost always inferior to those provided
to
white Americans. The most
important laws required that public schools, public places and
public transportation, like trains and buses, have separate
facilities for whites and blacks.
(These Jim Crow Laws were separate from
the 1800-66 Black Codes,
which had restricted the civil rights
and civil liberties of African Americans.) State-sponsored school
segregation was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme
Court of the United States
in 1954 in Brown v.
Board of
Education. Generally, the remaining Jim Crow laws were
overruled by the
Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and the
Voting Rights
Act; none were in effect at the end of the 1960s.
Segregation continued even after the demise of the Jim Crow laws.
Data on house prices and attitudes toward integration from suggest
that in the mid-twentieth century, segregation was a product of
collective actions taken by whites to exclude blacks from their
neighborhoods. Segregation also took the form of
redlining, the practice of denying or increasing
the cost of services, such as
banking,
insurance, access to jobs, access to
health care, or even
supermarkets to
residents in certain, often racially determined, areas.
Although
in the United
States
informal discrimination and segregation have always
existed, the practice called "redlining" began with the National Housing Act of 1934,
which established the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA). The practice was fought first
through passage of the
Fair
Housing Act of 1968 (which prevents redlining when the criteria
for redlining are based on race, religion, gender, familial status,
disability, or ethnic origin), and later through the
Community Reinvestment Act of
1977, which requires banks to apply the same lending criteria in
all communities.
Comeback Cities: A Blueprint for Urban Neighborhood
Revival By Paul S. Grogan, Tony Proscio. ISBN 0813339529.
Published 2002. Page 114.
The goal was not to relax lending restrictions but
rather to get banks to apply the same criteria in the inner-city as
in the suburbs.
Although redlining is illegal some argue that it continues to exist
in other forms.
Contemporary issues
Black-White segregation is declining fairly consistently for most
metropolitan areas and cities. Despite these pervasive patterns,
many changes for individual areas are small. Thirty years after the
civil rights era, the United States remains a residentially
segregated society in which Blacks and Whites inhabit different
neighborhoods of vastly different quality.
Some researchers suggest that racial segregation may lead to
disparities in health and mortality. Thomas LaVeist (1989; 1993)
tested the hypothesis that
segregation would
aid in explaining race differences in infant mortality rates across
cities. Analyzing 176 large and midsized cities, LaVeist found
support for the hypothesis. Since LaVeist's studies, segregation
has received increased attention as a determinant of race
disparities in mortality. Studies have shown that mortality rates
for male and female African Americans are lower in areas with lower
levels of residential segregation. Mortality for male and female
Whites was not associated in either direction with residential
segregation.
Researchers Sharon A. Jackson, Roger T. Anderson, Norman J. Johnson
and Paul D. Sorlie found that, after adjustment for family income,
mortality risk increased with
increasing minority residential segregation among Blacks aged 25 to
44 years and non-Blacks aged 45 to 64 years. In most
age/race/gender groups, the highest and lowest mortality risks
occurred in the highest and lowest categories of residential
segregation, respectively. These results suggest that minority
residential segregation may influence mortality risk and underscore
the traditional emphasis on the social underpinnings of disease and
death. Rates of heart disease among African Americans are
associated with the segregation patterns in the neighborhoods where
they live (Fang
et al. 1998). Stephanie A. Bond Huie
writes that neighborhoods affect health and mortality outcomes
primarily in an indirect fashion through environmental factors such
as smoking, diet, exercise, stress, and access to health insurance
and medical providers. Moreover, segregation strongly influences
premature mortality in the US.
Laws regarding race
Court cases regarding race
Institutional racism
Institutional racism is the
theory that aspects of the structure, pervasive attitudes, and
established institutions of society disadvantage some racial
groups, although not by an overtly discriminatory mechanism. There
are several factors that play into institutional racism, including
but not limited to: accumulated wealth/benefits from racial groups
that have benefited from past discrimination, educational and
occupational disadvantages faced by non-native English speakers in
the United States, ingrained stereotypical images that still remain
in the society (e.g. black men are likely to be criminals).
Immigration
Access to United States
citizenship was
restricted by race, beginning with the
Naturalization Act of 1790 which
refused naturalization to "non-whites."
Many in the modern
United States forget the institutionalized prejudice against white
followers of Roman Catholicism who
immigrated from countries such as Ireland
, Germany
, Italy
and France
.
Other efforts include the 1882
Chinese Exclusion Act and the 1924
National Origins Act. The
Immigration Act of 1924 was aimed at further restricting the
Southern and
Eastern Europeans who had begun to enter the
country in large numbers beginning in the 1890s. While officially
prohibited, U.S. officials continue to differentially apply laws on
illegal immigration depending on national origin (essentially
declining to enforce immigration laws against citizens of rich
countries who overstay their visas) and personal economy
(differentially awarding visas to foreign nationals based on bank
accounts, properties and so on).
Wealth creation
Massive racial differentials in account of wealth remain in the
United States: between whites and African Americans, the gap is a
factor of ten. An analyst of the phenomenon, Thomas Shapiro,
professor of law and social policy at Brandeis University argues,
“The wealth gap is not just a story of merit and achievement, it’s
also a story of the historical legacy of race in the United
States.” Differentials applied to the
Social Security Act (which
excluded agricultural workers, a sector that then included most
black workers), rewards to military officers, and the educational
benefits offered returning soldiers after
World War II. Pre-existing disparities in
wealth are exacerbated by tax policies that reward investment over
waged income, subsidize mortgages, and subsidize private sector
developers.
Impact on health
In the US racial differences in health and quality of life often
persist even at equivalent socioeconomics levels. Individual and
institutional discrimination, along with the stigma of inferiority,
can adversely affect health. Residence in poor neighborhoods,
racial bias in medical care, the stress of experiences of
discrimination and the acceptance of the societal stigma of
inferiority can have deleterious consequences for health. Using
The Schedule of Racist
Events (SRE), an 18-item self-report inventory that assesses
the frequency of racist discrimination. Hope Landrine and Elizabeth
A. Klonoff found that racist discrimination is rampant in the lives
of African Americans and is strongly related to psychiatric
symptoms. A study on racist events in the lives of African American
women found that lifetime experiences of racism were positively
related to lifetime history of both physical disease and frequency
of recent common colds. These relationships were largely
unaccounted for by other variables. Demographic variables such as
income and education were not related to experiences of racism. The
results suggest that racism can be detrimental to African
American's well being. The physiological stress caused by racism
has been documented in studies by
Claude
Steele, Joshua Aronson, and Steven Spencer on what they term
"
stereotype threat." Kennedy et
al. found that both measures of collective disrespect were strongly
correlated with black mortality (r = 0.53 to 0.56), as well as with
white mortality (r = 0.48 to 0.54). These data suggest that racism,
measured as an ecologic characteristic, is associated with higher
mortality in both blacks and whites.
Health care inequality
They are major racial differences in access to
health care and in the quality of health care
provided. A study published in the American Journal of Public
Health estimated that: "over 886,000 deaths could have been
prevented from 1991 to 2000 if African Americans had received the
same care as whites." The key differences they cited were lack of
insurance, inadequate
insurance,
poor service, and reluctance to seek care. A history of
government-sponsored experimentation, such as the notorious
Tuskegee Syphilis Study has
left of legacy of African American distrust of the medical
system.
Inequalities in health care may also reflect a
systemic bias in the way medical procedures
and treatments are prescribed for different ethnic groups. Raj
Bhopal writes that the history of
racism in science and medicine shows that
people and institutions behave according to the ethos of their
times and warns of dangers to avoid in the future. Nancy Krieger
contended that much modern research supported the assumptions
needed to justify racism. Racism she writes underlies unexplained
inequities in health care, including treatment for heart disease,
renal failure, bladder cancer, and pneumonia. Raj Bhopal writes
that these inequalities have been documented in numerous studies.
The consistent and repeated findings that black Americans receive
less health care than white Americans—particularly where this
involves expensive new technology.
Affirmative action
Affirmative action is a policy or
program intended to promote access to education or employment for
minority groups and women. Motivation for affirmative action
policies is to redress the effects of past discrimination and to
encourage public institutions such as universities, hospitals, and
police forces to be more representative of the population.
Affirmative action programs may include targeted recruitment
efforts, preferential treatment given to applicants from
historically disadvantaged groups, and in some cases the use of
quotas. Most American universities and some employers practice
affirmative action.
Some opponents of affirmative action view the greater access by
women and minority groups to be at the expense of groups considered
dominant (typically white men). In their view, these policies
demonstrate an overt preference for applicants from particular
backgrounds over better-qualified (or equally-qualified) candidates
from other backgrounds. Some opponents of affirmative action
believe the only consideration in choosing between applicants
should be merit. Some also criticize affirmative action because
they believe it perpetuates racial division instead of minimizing
the importance of race in American society.
Supporters of affirmative action believe that the perceived
injustice to the dominant group is not supported by facts. They
point to statistics that suggest that affirmative action has not
resulted in fewer opportunities for white people. For example,
white enrollment in universities has increased along with minority
enrollment. In 1973, 30% of white high school graduates attended
universities; in 1993, after widespread implementation of
affirmative action policies, that number had risen to 42%. Some
supporters of affirmative action point out that, even in the
absence of affirmative action, college admissions rarely are purely
merit-based: athletes, musicians, and
legacy students (children of
alumni) have always been given preferential
treatment.
For example, Harvard University
admits 35-40% of legacy applicants, and a rejected
white applicant is more likely to have been displaced by a legacy
student than by one who benefited from affirmative
action.
Anti-Civil Rights leaders
The following list are of US personages well known for their
opposition to either equal and or Civil Rights for minorities:
- Benjamin Harrison, President
who did not veto the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act
- Woodrow Wilson, President who
reintroduced segregation into the Federal Government
- Henry Cabot Lodge, Senator who
was proponent of Anglo-Saxon racial superiority and of the Immigration Restriction
League
- Jesse Helms, Senator
- Ben Tillman, Governor and
Senator
- Roger B. Taney, Chief Justice who wrote the Dred Scott decision.
- Pierce Butler, Supreme Court
Justice
- James Clark McReynolds,
Supreme Court Justice
- George Sutherland, Supreme
Court Justice
- Strom Thurmond, Senator who
conducted the longest filibuster (24 hours and 18 minutes) in
opposition to the Civil Rights Act of 1957.
- John Calhoun, antebellum South Carolinan senator, known for his
vociferous agitation for "states
rights", and a virulent defender of slavery.
- Andrew Jackson, President who
signed and supported the Indian
Removal Act. The law removed nearly all Native Americans from
the eastern United States and the tribes migrated into lands west
of the Mississippi river.
Current hate groups
Supremacist, separatist, racist, and
hate groups still operate in the United States. The
Ku Klux Klan, the
National Alliance,
National
Socialist Movement ,
Aryan
Nations,
Westboro Baptist
Church,
Nation of Islam,
League of the South,
New Black Panther Party,
Nation of Aztlán,
Nation of Yahweh,
Jewish Task Force, the
Jewish Defense League, and the
White Order of Thule are among
the institutions most commonly identified in this way.
Anti-racism
Counter-racist organizations
Further reading
- Cedric Robinson: Forgeries
of Memory and Meaning: Blacks and the Regimes of Race in American
Theater and Film Before World War II, University of North
Carolina Press, 2007, ISBN 0807858412
See also
External links
References
- AFP: US minorities don't trust each other
- Deep Divisions, Shared Destiny - A Poll of Black,
Hispanic, and Asian Americans on Race Relations
- Castillo, Edward D. (1998). Short Overview of California Indian History",
California Native American Heritage Commission.
- Ward Churchill, Kill the Indian, Save the Man,
2006.
- United States Senate, Oversight Hearing on Trust Fund Litigation, Cobell
v. Kempthorne. See also, Cobell v. Norton.
- Winona
LaDuke, All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and
Life, 1999, p. 2-3.
- The curse of Cromwell
- Alonzo L. Hamby, George Clack, and Mildred Sola Neely. Outline of US History. A publication of the US
Department of State.
- The legal and diplomatic background to the seizure of
foreign vessels
- Emancipation Proclamation (1863)
- XIII - Slavery Abolished The Avalon
Project
- James McPherson, Drawn with the Sword, page 15
- The Deadliest War
- " February 26, 1939 Eleanor Roosevelt Resigns from
the Daughters of the American Revolution," Franklin D.
Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum.
- Ronald Takaki, A Different Mirror: A History of
Multicultural America (New York: Little, Brown & Co.,
1993), 397.
- Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward, Poor People’s
Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail (New York: Vintage
Books, 1979 [1977]), ch. 4.
- JBHE Statistical Shocker of the Year
- White Americans play major role in electing the
first black president, Los Angeles Times
- Immigration...Chinese:Exclusion
- Text of People v. Hall decision
- Ronald Takaki, A Different Mirror: A History of
Multicultural America (New York: Little, Brown & Co.,
1993), 196-98.
- Internment
of German Americans in the United States during World War
II
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Riots" Revisited: Mexican and Latin American Perspectives,"
Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, Vol. 16, No. 2.
(Summer, 2000), pp. 367-391.
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Angeles," The Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 63, No. 3, Fortress
California at War: San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, and San
Diego, 1941-1945. (Aug., 1994), pp. 306-7.
- Timeline of Black History in the Pacific
Northwest
- Hate Crime Statistics, 2004. Hate
Crime Statistics, 2005.
- [www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/hcrvp.pdf Hate Crime Reported by
Victims and Police], Bureau of Justice Statistics Special Report,
November 2005, NCJ 209911.
- The Color of Crime, 1999.
- Preface to Minnesota's official crime data reports, quoted in
Southern Poverty Law Center, Coloring Crime.
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Science," 2004.
- Southern Poverty Law Center, Coloring Crime.
- Rosten, Leo (1968) "The Joys of Yiddish"
- Phagan, 1987, p. 27, states that "everyone knew the identity of
the lynchers" (putting the words in her father's mouth). Oney,
2003, p. 526, quotes Carl Abernathy as saying, "They'd go to a
man's office and talk to him or ... see a man on the job and talk
to him," and an unidentified lyncher as saying "The organization of
the body was more open than mysterious."
- Father Charles Edward Coughlin (1891-1971) By Richard
Sanders, Editor, Press for Conversion!
- Mary Christine Athans, "A New Perspective on Father Charles E.
Coughlin," Church History, Vol. 56, No. 2. (Jun., 1987),
pp. 224-235.
- H-ANTISEMITISM OCCASIONAL PAPERS, NO. 1M
- Nation of Islam
- The sniper's plan: kill six whites a day for 30
days
- What factors lead to cross-sectional variation in
anti-White hate crime on the community district level?,
American Society of Criminology (ASC)
- Leonard, Karen. University of California, Irvine. Western
Knight Center. "American Muslims: South Asian Contributions to the
Mix." 2005. July 28, 2007. [1]
- United States
- The Free Press - Independent News Media - War in
Iraq
- Demonization of Muslims Caused the Iraq Abuse
- Attacks on Arab Americans (PBS)
- Hindu Beaten Because He's Muslim, Mistaken
Anti-Islam Thugs Pummel, Hogtie And Stab Deliveryman - CBS
News
- Ann Coulter 'Raghead' Comments Spark Blogger
Blacklash - 02/13/2006
- "Charlie Rose interviews Zbigniew Brzezinski, Henry
Kissinger and Brent Scowcroft", International Herald
Tribune
- See detailed analysis in: The U.S. Media and the Middle
East: Image and Perception. Praeger, 1997; Greenwood,
1995.
- Media Matters - Conservatives continue to use Fox's 24 to
support hawkish policies
- Tv View; 'On Wings Of Eagles' Plods To Superficial
Heights - New York Times
- Escape from Iran: The Canadian Caper (1981) (TV)
- Iranian.com | Archive Pages
- Quoted in Noam Chomsky, Year 501: The Conquest
Continues, (Boston: South End Press, 1993), 22.
- Quoted in Noam Chomsky, Year 501: The Conquest
Continues, (Boston: South End Press, 1993), 24.
- MERIP Interventions: Behind the Battles Over US
Middle East Studies, by Zachary Lockman
- Racism in Reporting, Jingoism as Foreign Policy (by
Kristen Schurr) - Media Monitors Network
- [2]
- Gabriel J. Chin, The Civil Rights Revolution Comes
to Immigration Law: A New Look at the Immigration and Nationality
Act of 1965, 75 North Carolina Law Review 273 (1996)
- Mary L. Dudziak, "Desegregation as a Cold War Imperative," 41
Stanford Law Review 61 (1988)
- For example, Catherine A. Hansman, Leon Spencer, Dale Grant,
Mary Jackson, "Beyond Diversity: Dismantling Barriers in
Education," Journal of Instructional Psychology, March
1999
- Andrew Blankstein And Joel Rubin. L.A.’s top cops at odds: William Bratton, Lee Baca
disagree on role of race in gang violence.
Los_Angeles_Times (ctrl-click)">Los Angeles
Times, June 13, 2008.
- Race relations | Where black and brown collide |
Economist.com
- Riot Breaks Out At Calif. High School, Melee
Involving 500 People Erupts At Southern California School
- California Prisons on Alert After Weekend Violence:
NPR
- A bloody conflict between Hispanic and black gangs
is spreading across Los Angeles
- The Hutchinson Report: Thanks to Latino Gangs,
There’s a Zone in L.A. Where Blacks Risk Death if They
Enter
- JURIST - Paper Chase: Race riot put down at
California state prison
- Racial segregation continues in California
prisons
- Late-night snack soured by racially motivated
violence
- African immigrants face bias from blacks
- Racism not always black and white
- Felicia R. Lee, "Protesting Demeaning Images in Media" "New
York Times" November 5, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/05/arts/05enou.html
- Marissa Newhall, " Channeling Their Discontent, 500 Gather at
Executive's D.C. Home to Protest Stereotypes,"
Washington Post, September 16,
2007
- Enough is Enough! website:
http://www.enoughisenoughcampaign.com/
- What About Our Daughters?
- The Rise and Decline of the American Ghetto David M.
Cutler, Edward L. Glaeser, Jacob L. Vigdor The Journal of
Political Economy, Vol. 107, No. 3 (Jun., 1999), pp.
455-506
- Racial Discrimination and Redlining in
Cities
- See: Race and health
- In poor health: Supermarket redlining and urban
nutrition, Elizabeth Eisenhauer, GeoJournal Volume 53, Number 2 / February,
2001
- How East New York Became a Ghetto by Walter Thabit.
ISBN 0814782671. Page 42.
- Inequality and Segregation R Sethi, R Somanathan -
Journal of Political Economy, 2004
- SEGREGATION AND STRATIFICATION: A Biosocial
Perspective Douglas S. Massey Du Bois Review: Social Science
Research on Race (2004), 1: 7-25 Cambridge University Press
- Inequality and Segregation Rajiv Sethi and Rohini
Somanathan Journal of Political Economy, volume 112
(2004), pages 1296–1321
- ..
- THE CONCEPT OF NEIGHBORHOOD IN HEALTH AND MORTALITY
RESEARCH
- What is Institutional and Structural Racism?
ERASE RACISM
- Bullock III, C. S. & Rodgers Jr., H. R. (1976)
"Institutional Racism: Prerequisites, Freezing, and Mapping".
Phylon 37 (3), 212-223.
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Nineteenth-Century America by Julie Byrne, Dept. of Religion,
Duke University, National Humanities Center
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- Immigration Act of 1924
HistoricalDocuments.com
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American: How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality, 2004.
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persist," November 14, 2006.
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Social Democracy and the "White" Problem in American Studies,"
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369-387.
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Discrimination and a Study of Its Negative Physical and Mental
Health Consequences Journal of Black Psychology, Vol. 22, No.
2, 144-168 (1996)
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and Jeffrey St. Clair, Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs, and the
Press, London: Verso, 1998.
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crusade against racial discrimmination / Patrick Garry (2006)
ISBN 1581825692
- Myths and Fact about Affirmative Action