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The unexpected shift from the election of Barack Obama and the
post-racial hope to the racial confrontations in the Trump era begs
the question: Why did such a big volatile swing happen in such a
short period of time? Uncertainty reigns in volatile political
times. This book aims to provide a systemic model for understanding
how political volatility throughout the U.S. history has had its
root in two competing racial and religious groupings. Moreover, the
groupings grounded in white supremacy and egalitarianism have
collided, contested, and facilitated the configuration and
reconfiguration of the atomic political structure. As demonstrated
in this book, the antagonism between the two competing identity
groupings led to a history of political volatility in the United
States. Contrary to the endless "political deadlocks" suggested by
the scholars of American political development, this book explains
how and why the two orders persist, reach peaks of volatility, and
why one temporarily achieves prominence over the other. Going
beyond the simplistic view of racial and religious hierarchy, this
book provides an account rooted in structural tensions, strategic
imperatives, opportunities, and threats on collective actions.
The unexpected shift from the election of Barack Obama and the
post-racial hope to the racial confrontations in the Trump era begs
the question: Why did such a big volatile swing happen in such a
short period of time? Uncertainty reigns in volatile political
times. This book aims to provide a systemic model for understanding
how political volatility throughout the U.S. history has had its
root in two competing racial and religious groupings. Moreover, the
groupings grounded in white supremacy and egalitarianism have
collided, contested, and facilitated the configuration and
reconfiguration of the atomic political structure. As demonstrated
in this book, the antagonism between the two competing identity
groupings led to a history of political volatility in the United
States. Contrary to the endless "political deadlocks" suggested by
the scholars of American political development, this book explains
how and why the two orders persist, reach peaks of volatility, and
why one temporarily achieves prominence over the other. Going
beyond the simplistic view of racial and religious hierarchy, this
book provides an account rooted in structural tensions, strategic
imperatives, opportunities, and threats on collective actions.
Race Rules: Electoral Politics in New Orleans, 1965-2006 examines
one of the innumerable ramifications of Hurricane Katrina: a
reversal in the decades-long process of racial transition, from
white dominant to black dominant. The electoral consequences of
such a racial change - in a city where race has historically played
a pronounced social, economic, and political role - are potentially
dramatic. In light of the 2006 New Orleans mayoral election, the
following emerges as a significant question: Does a change in the
population's racial composition mean a reversal in the political
status of African Americans in New Orleans? To address this
question, Liu and Vanderleeuw investigate racial voting patterns in
New Orleans' municipal elections over a forty year span from 1965
to 2006.Race Rules argues that as an enduring influence in urban
politics race manifests as either electoral conflict or electoral
accommodation, but not as acceptance of the political empowerment
of 'other race' members.
Solving the Mystery of the Model Minority: The Journey of Asian
Americans in America introduces students to current debates
surrounding the concept of model minority and its relation to the
greater Asian American experience. The book defines the term model
minority, examines who is against it, who is for it, and why they
feel the way they do, all of which brings to light profound
disagreements regarding Asian American identity, as well as the
meaning and fate of American democracy. The text uses two
comparative perspectives to examine Asian American experiences and,
in doing so, explores not only the similarities and differences
between Asian Americans and other racial groups, but also the
similarities and differences within Asian American ethnic groups.
The second edition not only updates the introductory chapters, but
also features six new chapters on the topics of Asian American
women leaders and barriers to entry in leadership; the new journey
of Asian Americans in sports; transnational adoption of Asians;
Asian Americans and anti-affirmative action attitudes; anti-Asian
American hate crimes; and Asian American political participation in
the 21st century. Timely and interdisciplinary in subject matter,
Solving the Mystery of the Model Minority is well suited for ethnic
studies, political science, sociology, cultural studies, and Asian
studies courses.
Like quantitative analysis itself, the text Social Research begins
with a question. Why do social scientists use numbers to talk about
everything from the stock market to human emotions? Social Research
provides an answer with its common sense approach to the
quantitative scientific method. The book balances imagination and
reason with theoretical and mathematical information processing to
help students understand the important link between social research
and foundational math skills. Initially, readers are asked to
consider the type of tasks to which such analysis might be applied.
They learn about conceptualization, units of analysis, and the
quantitative mind. These can then be applied as students explore
specific tools, including measurement, variables, hypothesis and
experiment, and controlled comparison. It shows detailed examples
of how to use both SPSS and R software programs for basic
statistical operations and programming needs. The book also
discusses random sampling, the central limit theorem, Type I and
Type II errors and bivariate and multiple regression. Social
Research is about why science works, and while it includes
mathematics, it does so in an accessible way. The book is suitable
for undergraduate methods courses that meet the requirement for
quantitative sciences, and it can also be a supplemental text to
first graduate-level quantitative method classes that require
mathematical training.
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