Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 304
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7425-6076-5 • Paperback • May 2008 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-6536-6 • eBook • May 2008 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Earl Smith is a professor of sociology and distinguished professor of ethnic studies at Wake Forest University. Angela J. Hattery is an associate professor of sociology at Wake Forest. David G. Embrick is an assistant professor at Loyola of Chicago.
Chapter 1 Chapter One: The New Global World: America's World and the World's America
Part 2 Part I: Race/Racism in the United States
Chapter 3 Chapter Two: "Look, a Negro": Reflections on the Human Rights Approach to Racial Inequality
Chapter 4 Chapter Three: The Diversity Ideology: Keeping Major Transnational Corporations White and Male in an era of Globalization
Part 5 Part II: Introduction to Reparations Chapters
Chapter 6 Chapter Four: Jim Crow and the Case for Reparations: Lessons from the African Diaspora
Chapter 7 Chapter Five: Bringing Down the House: Reparations, Universal Morality, Human Rights and Social Justice
Chapter 8 Chapter Six: Paying for the Past: Prospects and Obstacles Facing Reparations Politics in the U.S. and South Africa
Part 9 Part III: Introduction to Immigration Issues
Chapter 10 Chapter Seven: Immigrant Rights as Human Rights
Chapter 11 Chapter Eight: "Aliens", "Illegals" and Other Types of "Mexicanness": Examination of Racial Profiling in Border Policing
Chapter 12 Chapter Nine: El Sueño Americano? Barriers to Homeownership for Mexican-Origin Populations
Chapter 13 Chapter Ten: No Phone, No Vehicle, No English, and No Citizenship: The Vulnerability of Latino Immigrants in the United States
Chapter 14 Chapter Eleven: Border Sexual Conquest: A Framework for Gendered and Racial Sexual Violence
Chapter 15 Chapter Twelve: Israeli Fashion and Palestinian Labor during the Intifada
Part 16 Part IV: Introduction to The Intersection Between Global and Local Human Rights
Chapter 17 Chapter Thirteen: Constitutions and Human Rights
Chapter 18 Chapter Fourteen: Twenty-First Century Globalization and the Social Forum Process: Building Today's Global Justice and Equality Movement
Chapter 19 Chapter Fifteen: The Globalization of the U. S. Prison Industrial Complex
Chapter 20 Chapter Sixteen: America's World and the World's America: Conclusions and recommendations for addressing inequalities and human rights violations
Hattery, Embrick, and Smith have assembled an exceptional group of articles delving into the timely issues of race, racism, and immigration. With attention to continuing concerns over human rights and reparations,Globalization and America addresses inequality and human rights violations in and outside of the United States. Concluding the volume with a section of "talking points," this collection is certain to spark discussion both in and out of the classroom.
— Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University
Race, Human Rights and Inequality embodies a comprehensive examination of contemporary issues in social inequality. This valuable text incorporates a broad historical survey of social inequality, offering an innovative treatment of the evolving dimensions of global inequality.
— Timothy McGettigan, Colorado State University at Pueblo, and author of Utopia on Wheels: Blundering Down the Road to Reality