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Title Afro-descendants, identity, and the struggle for development in the Americas / edited by Bernd Reiter and Kimberly Eison Simmons
Published East Lansing : Michigan State University Press, ©2012

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Description 1 online resource (xxx, 314 pages)
Series Ruth Simms Hamilton African diaspora series
Ruth Simms Hamilton African diaspora series.
Contents Building black diaspora networks and meshworks for knowledge, justice, peace, and human rights / Faye V. Harrison -- Pan-Afro-Latin African Americanism revisited : legacies and lessons for transnational alliances in the new millennium / Darién J. Davis, Tianna S. Paschel, and Judith A. Morrison -- Haitians in the Dominican Republic : race, politics, and neoliberalism / Lauren Derby -- Navigating the racial terrain : blackness and mixedness in the United States and the Dominican Republic / Kimberly Eison Simmons -- Negotiating blackness within the multicultural state in Latin America : creole politics and identity in Nicaragua / Juliet Hooker -- Ethnic identity and political mobilization : the Afro-Colombian case / Leonardo Reales -- The grammar of color identity in Brazil / Seth Racusen -- Afro-Colombian welfare : an application of Amartya Sen's capability approach using multiple indicators multiple causes modeling (MIMIC) / Paula A. Lezama -- Racism in a racialized democracy and support for affirmative action policy in Salvador and São Paulo, Brazil / Gladys Mitchell-Walthour -- Afro-descendant peoples and public policies : the network of Afro-Latin American and Afro-Caribbean women / Altagracia Balcácer Molina and Dorotea Wilson -- Decolonizing the imaging of African-derived religions / Amanda D. Concha-Holmes -- Neoliberal dilemmas : diaspora, displacement, and development in Buenos Aires / Judith M. Anderson -- Pluralizing race / Mamyrah A. Dougé-Prosper
Summary Indigenous people and African descendants in Latin America and the Caribbean have long been affected by a social hierarchy established by elites, through which some groups were racialized and others were normalized. Far from being "racial paradises" populated by an amalgamated "cosmic race" of mulattos and mestizos, Latin America and the Caribbean have long been sites of shifting exploitative strategies and ideologies, ranging from scientific racism and eugenics to the more sophisticated official denial of racism and ethnic difference. This book, among the first to focus on African descendants in the region, brings together diverse reflections from scholars, activists, and funding agency representatives working to end racism and promote human rights in the Americas. By focusing on the ways racism inhibits agency among African descendants and the ways African-descendant groups position themselves in order to overcome obstacles, this interdisciplinary book provides a multi-faceted analysis of one of the gravest contemporary problems in the Americas
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Print version record
Subject Black people -- Race identity -- Latin America
Racially mixed people -- Race identity -- Latin America
African Americans -- Race identity.
Racially mixed people -- Race identity -- United States
Social integration -- Latin America
Social integration -- United States
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General.
African Americans -- Race identity
Black people -- Race identity
Race relations
Racially mixed people -- Race identity
Social integration
SUBJECT Latin America -- Race relations
United States -- Race relations. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140494
Subject Latin America
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Reiter, Bernd, 1968- editor.
Simmons, Kimberly Eison, editor
ISBN 9781609173241
1609173244
9781628961638
1628961635