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Shades of Citizenship - Race and the Census in Modern Politics (Paperback)
Loot Price: R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
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(11%)
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Shades of Citizenship - Race and the Census in Modern Politics (Paperback)
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List price R614
Loot Price R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
You Save R70 (11%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book explores the politics of race, censuses, and citizenship,
drawing on the complex history of questions about race in the U.S.
and Brazilian censuses. It reconstructs the history of racial
categorization in American and Brazilian censuses from each
country's first census in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
up through the 2000 census. It sharply challenges certain
presumptions that guide scholarly and popular studies, notably that
census bureaus are (or are designed to be) innocent bystanders in
the arena of politics, and that racial data are innocuous
demographic data.
Using previously overlooked historical sources, the book
demonstrates that counting by race has always been a fundamentally
political process, shaping in important ways the experiences and
meanings of citizenship. This counting has also helped to create
and to further ideas about race itself. The author argues that far
from being mere producers of racial statistics, American and
Brazilian censuses have been the ultimate insiders with respect to
racial politics.
For most of their histories, American and Brazilian censuses were
tightly controlled by state officials, social scientists, and
politicians. Over the past thirty years in the United States and
the past twenty years in Brazil, however, certain groups within
civil society have organized and lobbied to alter the methods of
racial categorization. This book analyzes both the attempt of
America's multiracial movement to have a multiracial category added
to the U.S. census and the attempt by Brazil's black movement to
include racial terminology in census forms. Because of these
efforts, census bureau officials in the United States and Brazil
today work within political and institutional constraints unknown
to their predecessors. Categorization has become as much a
"bottom-up" process as a "top-down" one.
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