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Experiences of United Methodist ministers serving in cross-cultural-cross-racial appointmentsKeaton, Jessie C. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (D.Min.)--Asbury Theological Seminary, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 170-174).
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"What, Lord, would you have us to do?" an analysis and critique of the decision of Galilee Baptist Church, Denver, Colorado to move from E. 32nd Avenue and Adams Street /Brown, David, January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary, 1982. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 88-91).
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Making race : the role of free blacks in the development of New Orleans' three-caste society, 1791-1812 / Role of free blacks in the development of New Orleans' three-caste society, 1791-1812Aslakson, Kenneth Randolph, 1963- 13 June 2012 (has links)
"Making Race: The Role of Free Blacks in the Development of New Orleans' Three-Caste Society, 1791-1812" excavates the ways that free people of African descent in New Orleans built an autonomous identity as a third "race" in what would become a unique racial caste system in the United States. I argue that in the time period I study, which encompasses not only the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, but also the rise of plantation slavery and the arrival of over twelve thousand refugees from the revolution-torn French West Indies, New Orleans's free blacks took advantage of political, cultural and legal uncertainty to protect and gain privileges denied to free blacks elsewhere in the South. The dissertation is organized around three sites in which free blacks forged and articulated a distinct collective identity: the courtroom, the ballroom, and the militia. This focus on specific spaces of racial contestation allows me to trace the multivalent development of racial identity. "Making Race" brings together the special dynamism of the Atlantic world in the Age of Revolution with the ability of individuals to act within structures of power to shape their surroundings. I show that changing political regimes (in the time period I study New Orleans was ruled by the Spanish, the French and the Americans) together with the socio-economic, ideological and demographic impact of the Haitian Revolution created opportunities for new social and legal understandings of race in the Crescent City. More importantly, however, I show how members of New Orleans's free black community, strengthened numerically and heavily influenced by thousands of gens de couleur refugees of the Haitian Revolution, shaped the racialization process by asserting a collective identity as a distinct middle caste, contributing to the creation of a tri-racial system. / text
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Zero-tolerance discipline: the effect of teacher discretionary removal on urban minority studentsClark, Florence Linelle 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Imagining India(ns): cultural performances and diaspora politics in JamaicaShankar, Guha 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Against the law: violence, crime, state repression, and black resistance in Jim Crow MississippiBerrey, Stephen Andrew 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Reace across the Atlantic : mapping racialization in Africa and the African diasporaPierre, Jemima 23 May 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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The anti-Chinese campaigns in Sonora, Mexico, 1900-1931Jacques, Leo Michael Dambourges January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IN CALIFORNIA, 1856-1868Stanley, Gerald, 1941- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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Investigating Hate Crimes in Farmington, New MexicoBennett, Cheryl Louise January 2013 (has links)
The racial violence between Navajos and whites in Farmington, New Mexico is historical. One of the first documented acts of racial violence was in 1875, when white settlers would take gunshots at Navajos for entertainment. This violent atmosphere continued throughout the years, and most notoriously in 1974 with the murders of three Navajo men by three white teenagers. This violence was part of an ongoing cycle of racism and hostility between Navajos and whites. The murders ignited local and national media frenzy, and Farmington was dubbed the "Selma, Alabama of the Southwest." Navajo citizens responded to the murders with activism and demonstrations in the streets of Farmington, and demanded justice and change. Throughout subsequent years, racism and racial violence continues and Navajos are still the targets of hate crimes. The purpose of this study is to examine and investigate the hate crimes that have been committed against Navajo people in Farmington and its neighboring towns. This study, in particular, analyzes the impacts that hate crime has on Navajo citizens. Interviews with Navajo victims of hate crime expand on the findings of a pilot interview. The research in this dissertation shows that the affects of hate crime are long lasting and impact not only the victims but also the entire Navajo Nation. As a result of the unrelenting hate crimes in Farmington, the Navajo Nation has created a human rights commission to investigate race relations in Navajo Nation border towns. This study addresses what steps the Navajo Nation and Navajo citizens have taken to combat and recover from racism and racial violence. Finally, this study proposes interventions to improve race relations.
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