Unit 1: Contemporary Experiences: Persons and Places,
Identities, and Communities
S.C. Rampage Spurs Grief, Concern for Church Safety, Scott
Dance and Michael A. Memoli, Baltimore Sun, 2015
Dance and Memoli recount the murder of the nine persons in a church
in Charleston, South Carolina, the arrest of the killer, an
admittedly racially motivated younger person and first public
responses to this evil action.
Half a Century after Rioting Ravaged Cambridge, Town Seeks to
Embrace History—So as to Transcend It, Jonathan M. Pitts,
Baltimore Sun, 2017
This account of Mayor Victoria Jackson-Stanley’s recollection of
her family’s participation in the civil rights struggle in a small
town in rural Maryland and her own participation in the life of
that fragmented community provides an example of how the
journalistic fashioning of a historical case study of race
relations creates local knowledge that is usable and useful for
process of healing required to understand and to overcome the pain
of social and political violence.
Life, Death, and Demolition, Steve Hendrix, Washington Post,
2017
Steve Hendrix’s account of the decline, decay and death of a
neighborhood in Baltimore brilliantly weaves race, and class and
location into a narrative of urban policy failure and the imaging
of race and ethnic relations that shaped decades of our domestic
self-understanding and the challenges and contradictions exposed by
our denial problems and refusal to see the complexities of
pluralism and urbanization.
Victoria Mosque Fire Ruled Arson, Jon Wilcox, The Victoria
Texas Advocate, 2017
This news update and press release from the Victoria Islamic Center
enables the outsider to violence and conflict to enter the world of
those that experience fear and invites us to agonize over the
aftermath of shattered ethno-religious relations.
At Latin Grammys, Suave Ballads, Raucous Emoting and a Rare
Political Turn, Jon Parelas, New York Times, 2015
Jon Parelas’s account of the Latin Grammys is a unique example of
“writing the meaning of a culture” as his text transports the
reader into ethnic music and clarifies the meaning and uses of
music as a transition belt of the binding capacity of ethnic music
to shape a shared consciousness and the evocative substance of
musicality in communities.
Rancor and Reconciliation, Brendan O’Shaughnessy, Notre Dame
Magazine, 2016
Brendan O’Shaughnessy account of the dialogue and response of a
university community and culture to undocumented students and
bigotry and the attendant endorsement of principles and norms such
as the dignity and worth of every human person, regardless of
ethnicity, race, gender, class, sexual orientation, immigration
status, the commitment to the common good, and to solidarity with
the most vulnerable and marginalized.
‘Sanctuary Cities’ Just the Start of Mayors’ Opposition to
Trump, Alan Greenblatt, Governing, 2017
This report on the relationship between mayors and the Trump
administration’s Executive Order concerning federal funds to cities
that adopted approaches to law enforcement called “Sanctuary
Cities” reveals the current borders of social and legal
contentions, the intersection of immigrants, with local
governments, the role of federal government in such issues that
spilled-over from the world of words found in electoral campaign
rhetoric into the world of governance and public policy
implementation.
An Immigrant Church, Then and Now, Denise Fedorow, Today's
Catholic News, 2017
This account of ethnic and neighborhood succession from a Polish
American into a Hispanic American is not uncommon in the older
industrial cities of the Midwest and East, but its particular
relevance is that it illustrates the centrality of the
community-residential church and school to urban life and
privileges the specific location of groups and the dynamic of
cooperation required and the unique place specific character of
ethnicity as a local identity.
Unit 2: The Immigrant Origins of Diversity, the Political
Constructions of Disparities, and the Development of Pluralism in
the United States of America
Racial Restrictions in the Law of Citizenship, Ian F. Haney
López, White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race, 1996
This article traces the legal history of naturalization in the
development of the definitions and legal norms that affected
American citizenship.
Dred Scott v. Sandford, Chief Justice Taney, United States
Supreme Court, 1856
This case is concerned with the claim by Dred Scott, a slave, who
was taken by his master to live in a free state, and then claimed
to have lost his status as a slave. The Court ruled that the U.S.
Constitution did not protect him, nor other African Americans,
whether they were considered free or held as slaves.
Why Korematsu Is Not a Precedent, Noah Feldman, The New York
Times, 2016
The fact that in Korematsu v United States (1944) the Supreme Court
upheld the wartime conviction of a Japanese American has been cited
in campaign rhetoric as legal support of racial ethnic religious
discrimination, but Noah Feldman addresses this contention with a
much wider set of factual, moral, and legal arguments and evidence
against the establishment of a national registry of Muslims
immigrants.
Brown et al. v. Board of Education of Topeka et al., Chief
Justice Warren, United States Supreme Court, 1954
In this case the Court overturned Plessy v. Ferguson and ended
dejure segregation of public schools. The Court ruled that
“separate but equal has no place in public education for separate
education facilities are inherently unequal.”
Historical Discrimination in the Immigration Laws, from The
Tarnished Golden Door, United States Commission on Civil
Rights, 1980
This article summarizes the history of immigration laws and their
effects on immigrant groups: the Nativist movement of the 1830s,
The Chinese Exclusion Acts of the 1880s, the quota system of the
1920s, and the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952.
Extreme Measures, Robert Schmuhl, Notre Dame Magazine,
2016
Robert Schumuhl’s short peak into the persuasion and decisions of
President Lyndon Johnson that produced the Civil Rights Act of 1964
takes us beyond the major scholarly accounts of this landmark
legislation by reporting the first-hand experiences and
recollections of Father Ted Hesburgh, then member of the U. S.
Civil Rights Commission, and echoing the ever contemporary
challenges of the American ideal this moment represents and
signifies for current challenges to liberty and justice for
all,
Unit 3: American Demography: If You’re Not Counted, You Don’t
Count: The U.S. Census, the Politics of Pluralism, and the Science
of Social Indicators
The American Community Survey: The New Dimensions of Race and
Ethnicity in America, John David Kromkowski, Building Blocks,
Occasional Papers, The National Council of Urban Education
Associations, 2010
This article provides a synopsis of data race and ethnic data
collection and facsimiles of Census question asked race or color
from 1790-2010. Populations totals for 105 specific ethnic groups
and unclassified and other not dis-aggregated groups for 2010 and a
cross-tab array of social indicators and profiles for American
ethnic groups with over 1,000,000,000 persons.
Educational Attainment in the United States: 2015, Camille
L. Ryan and Kurt Bauman, Current Population Reports, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration,
U.S. Census Bureau, 2016
This compilation of information from the U.S. Census and the
American Communities Survey provides arrays of aggregated and
disaggregated educational indicators of ethnic and racial
populations and trend line from which demographic portraits emerge
and variations of education attainment and forecasts of economic
mobility can be derived.
Congress and Ancestry: A Broader View of Diversity and How to
Start Systematically Looking at It, John David Kromkowski,
Occasional Papers NCUEA, 2017
This article systematically measures American ethnic diversity,
quantifies and compares levels of ethnic variety at the state
level, and presents graphic evidence of profound ethnic
clustering.
The Size, Place of Birth, and Geographic Distribution of the
Foreign-born Population in the United States: 1960 to 2010,
Elizabeth M. Grieco, et al., U.S. Census Bureau, 2012
This compilation of information from the U.S. Census and the
American Communities Survey provides arrays of aggregated and
disaggregated social and economic indicators and the historical
baselines of ethnic demographics including size, distribution, and
place of birth of the communities that constitute foreign-born
ethnic groups and the stunning increase and variety of the American
population.
Income and Poverty in the United States: 2015, Bernadette D.
Proctor, Jessica L. Semega, and Melissa A. Kollar, U.S. Census
Bureau Current Population Reports, 2016
This compilation of information from the U.S. Census and the
American Communities Survey provides arrays of aggregated and
disaggregated income indicators of ethnic and racial populations
and historical trend line which illustrate the linkages of race and
income and the dominance of poverty as a demographic feature of
race and ethnic differences and the attendant combination of
economic class and social historical as factors in American life
and group relations.
Arab Households in the U nited States: 2006-2010, Maryam Asi
and Daniel Beaulieu, American Community Survey, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Economics and Statistics Administration, U.S. Census
Bureau, 2013
This compilation of information from the U.S. Census and the
American Communities Survey provides arrays of indicators including
homeownership, income, immigrant origins to create a profile of
Arab households as well as a view which disaggregates various Arabs
into the ancestry and ethnic, national origins.
Irish-American Heritage Month (March) and St. Patrick's Day
(March 17): 2017, U.S. Department of Commerce, Economics and
Statistics Administration, U.S. Census Bureau, 2017
This composite of informational social demographic indicators
provides a summary profile that includes valued cross-tabs on Irish
Americans and web-sites which provide the capacity to drill down
into data sources for additional research and insight.
Unit 4: Indigenous Ethnic Groups: The Native Americans
American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month: November
2016, U.S. Department of Commerce, Economics, and Statistics
Administration, U.S. Census Bureau, 2017
This Census report provides a summary profile of the contemporary
descendants of indigenous populations and references to American
Factfinder websites from which the researcher can drill down into
more detailed data about specific regions and populations.
Ending Violence So Children Can Thrive, Byron L. Dorgan, et
al., United States Department of Justice, 2014
This compendium of findings provides a window into and overall
situations of Native Americans and particularly children as it
makes specific recommendations for legislative and executive action
and remedies for these unconscionably cruel facts of misery and
neglect.
Does the Fate of the Navajo Nation Depend on Its Language?
Elaine Teng, The New Republic, 2014
Elaine Teng’s interview of Dr.Evangeline Parsons-Yazzie about the
dispute occasioned by the law challenge to the legitimacy of Chris
Deschene to be a candidate for the tribal presidency reveals the
intersection of ethnicity, language and law as well as the complex
of governance posed by traditional social orders.
Unit 5: African Americans
National African-American History Month: February 2017, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Economics, and Statistics Administration,
U.S. Census Bureau, 2017
This Census report provides a summary of social indicators of Black
(African American) Americans and includes references to other U.S.
Census databases and the American Factfinder websites from which
the researcher can drill down into more detailed information.
Chicago Soul, Lonnae O’Neal Parker, The Washington Post,
2014
Lonnae O’Neal Parker returned to her South Side Chicago home, and
now, a visiting journalist delves into the realities of her
childhood neighborhood and the impact of decades of failed urban
policy, technological and economic changes and social
disintegration to produce a personal and neighborhood level
historical and contemporary tapestry of the African American
situation.
Unit 6: Hispanic/Latino Americans
Hispanic Heritage Month 2016, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Economics, and Statistics Administration, U.S. Census Bureau,
2016
This composite of informational social demographic indicators
provides a summary profile that includes valued cross-tabs on
Hispanic/Latino Americans and web-sites which provide the capacity
to drill down into data sources for additional research and
insight.
The Foreign Born from Latin America and the Caribbean: 2010,
U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S.
Census Bureau, 2011
This compilation of information provides arrays of aggregated and
disaggregated indicators including size, distribution, place of
birth, citizenship for persons born in Latin America and the
Caribbean, the locus of stunning emigration; From less than a
million in 1960 to 21.2 million in 2010.
Xenophobia, the Other Face of Racism, Alexander Dawoody,
Public Administration Times, 2016
Alexander Dawoody’s op-ed provides popular social psychology lesson
in a journal read by public employees and academic public
administrationist and human resources practitioners. He provides a
rapid summary and extension of the generalist’s critic of racism as
based in fear of others and prejudice which he then binds onto the
general problem of misperceptions of immigrants. The claim that
knowing the bound of racism to xenophobia-the fear of others, will
cure this social malady an approach to group relations worthy of
deeper analysis, if not critique.
Cuban-Americans: Politics, Culture, and Shifting
Demographics, Kristiana Mastropasqua, Journalist's Resource,
2014
The politics and culture of Cuban Americans began a new epoch when
the Obama administration began the process to resume relations with
Cuba, this moment is also a reminder that the Hispanics/Latinos are
really more than a few ethnicities, have varied traditions and
historical relations to immigration and the government of the
United States.
Unit 7: Asian Americans
Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month: May 2016, U.S.
Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, 2016
This report on ethnic groups that constitute the Asian populations
and the various web-based data resources of the U.S. Census and
American Communities Survey, provides a profile of social
indicators as well as Congressional Resolutions and Commemorations
of Asian participation in the peopling of America.
Poverty Rates for Selected Detailed Race and Hispanic Groups by
State and Place: 2007-2011, Suzanne Macartney, Alemayehu
Bishaw, and Kayla Fontenot, U.S. Department of Commerce, Economics,
and Statistics Administration, U.S. Census Bureau, 2013
This compilation and array of indicators derived from the American
Community Survey Briefs, enables us to measure variations in
location, ethnicity, and extent of poverty and the attendant
marginalized condition and lack of participation in the workforce
related to both short term and persistent poverty that afflicts
persons and places.
Finally a Movie That Captures What It's Like to Be Asian
American, Elaine Teng, The New Republic, 2014
Elaine Teng review and Commentary on “Fresh Off the Boat” engages
the problematic arena of art, reality, representation, and
stereotyping as well as the relationship of ethnic literature and
drama to mainstream culture and pluralism.
Unit 8: Euro/Mediterranean Ethnic Americans
White House Wants to Add New Racial Category for Middle Eastern
People, Gregory Korte, USA Today, 2016
Gregory Korte’s account of proposed changes in the way the U.S.
Census collects racial and ethnic data reveals the process of
creating categories that define populations and the
institutionalizing bonds of demographics and governance that an
immigrant-receiving country must address to assure representation
and information that is needed to measure the distribution of
benefits and burdens in a pluralistic society.
American Attitudes toward the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict,
Arab American Institute, 2016
These data document American public opinion on the most important
issues and aspects of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict and the
values and preferences Americans have regarding the Israelis and
Palestinians, but the study also reveals the challenge facing
popular participation in international relations, that is, many
respondents are not familiar enough with topics to offer
opinions.
Myths and Facts about Refugees Resettlement, HIAS, 2017
This document prepared by HIAS addresses some common misperceptions
and questions that swirl in public opinion as the world experiences
the displacement of millions of persons from their homes and the
tradition of welcoming refugees that are fleeing persecution and
violence and the need for humanitarian aid grows.
Made In Hollywood: Italian Stereotypes in the Movies,
Rosanne De Luca Braun, The Order Sons of Italy in America
Rosanne De Luca Braun's short account of Italian-Americans in the
film industry reveals aspects of ethnic group history and mass
media, the imaginative and creative development of ethnic group
stereotypes, and their impact on personal and group identities
framed by negative images and narratives and finally the demand to
restore balance and accuracy by defamed and aggrieved ethnics.
Polonia: Today's Profile Tomorrow's Promise, Dominik Stecula
and Thaddeus C. Radzilowski, Piast Institute, Dekaban Lecture,
2013
This report provides a fledgling attempt to systematically identify
the attitudes, dispositions, common purposes and preferences on
issues that could become the articulation of definitive domestic
and international agenda of Polish Americans.
Unit 9: Contemporary Dilemmas and Contentions: The Search for
Convergent Issues and Common Values
How to Protect Diversity during Trump’s Presidency, Richard
D. Kahlenberg, The New Republic, 2017
Richard D. Kahlenberg’s description of the threats to diversity
posed by a white nationalist agenda and his prescription for an
expanded concept of liberalism and wider progressive agenda that
would include the extension of economic benefits is a timely and
provocative framing of fresh discussion of race and ethnic
relations which could foster hopes not fears in
America.
Myths Debunked: Why Did White Evangelical Christians Vote for
Trump? Myriam Renaud, Sightings: Religion in Public Life. The
Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School,
2017
Myriam Renaud’s findings about on surveys of white evangelical
Christians provide information that is not only indicative of their
motivation for supporting the election of President Trump, but even
more importantly for revealing the awesome gap between the claims
and issues preferences of the leadership of evangelicals and the
attitudes and motivations of this populations as a whole captured
in public samplings of opinion.
The Ugly Truth about Hate Crimes—in 5 Charts and Maps, Christopher
Ingraham, The Washington Post, 2015
Christopher Ingraham’s report on the murder of nine persons in the
AME Church in Charleston places this hate crime into the historical
and geographical patterns of violence perpetrated by killers driven
and possessed by bigotry and violence promoting ideologies.
All Hollowed Out, Victor Tan Chen, The Atlantic, 2016
Victor Tan Chen report on the ignored and neglected aspects of
poverty in the white working class revisits the discussion that
began in the de-industrialization of the late 1960s and its
reemergence in the political rhetoric of populism on the right and
left in the campaign of 2016.
More than a House: Home and Hospitality in Camden, Pilar Hogan
Closkey, Building Community in a Mobile/Global Age, 2013
Pilar Hogan Closkey’s case review of Camden, NJ, reveals the
reality of the racial and economic isolation of persons in one of
the most devastated situations of urban America and the pathway of
citizens using Catholic social teaching a guide to community
building and recovering/creating cooperative approaches and new
grounded in the virtue of hospitality as a counter-force to hatred,
conflict, neglect, and ignorance.
Hold Up, ‘Hon’: Baltimore’s Black Vernacular, Youthful, Dynamic if
Less Recognized than ‘Bawlmerese’, Brittany Britto, The Baltimore
Sun, 2017
Brittany Britto’s journalistic venture into linguistics illustrates
the importance of localism and language as features of ethnicity
and its essential reality within lived communities and through
communication and the lyrics of human voices capture by attentive
observers of social interaction.
Hard Truths: Law Enforcement and Race, James B. Comey, Federal
Bureau of Investigation, 2015
James B. Comey, Director of the FBI, speech marks a significant
point in the history of law enforcement, the conversation about
race and policing, and emergence of a new narrative that personal,
professional, and public.
Investigation of the Ferguson Police Department, United States
Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, United States
Department of Justice, 2015
This official enquiry into the practices, behaviors and record of
the criminal justice systempolicing, courts, motivations as well
as recommendations for ways of mending the bonds of trust may
become a landmark document that guides the administration of
justice in America.
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