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Collected in this volume are the best articles and symposia from
Poverty & Race, the bimonthly newsletter journal of The Poverty
& Race Research Action Council (PRRAC), a Washington, DC-based
national public interest organization founded in 1990. Poverty
& Race in America includes over six-dozen works originally
published between mid-2001 and 2005, many of which have been
updated and revised. The contributors represent the best of
progressive thought and activism on America's two most salient, and
seemingly intractable, domestic problems-race and poverty. Divided
into topical sections, this volume considers the issues of race,
poverty, housing, education, health, and democracy. Poverty &
Race in America is especially concerned with the links between and
among these areas, both for purposes of analysis and policy
prescriptions. Featuring a foreword by Congressman Jesse L.
Jackson, Jr., this edited collection will be of great interest to
policy makers and human rights activists and hopefully stimulate
creative thought and action to bring an end to racism and poverty.
Collected in this volume are the best articles and symposia from
Poverty & Race, the bimonthly newsletter journal of The Poverty
& Race Research Action Council (PRRAC), a Washington, DC-based
national public interest organization founded in 1990. Poverty
& Race in America includes over six-dozen works originally
published between mid-2001 and 2005, many of which have been
updated and revised. The contributors represent the best of
progressive thought and activism on America's two most salient, and
seemingly intractable, domestic problems-race and poverty. Divided
into topical sections, this volume considers the issues of race,
poverty, housing, education, health, and democracy. Poverty &
Race in America is especially concerned with the links between and
among these areas, both for purposes of analysis and policy
prescriptions. Featuring a foreword by Congressman Jesse L.
Jackson, Jr., this edited collection will be of great interest to
policy makers and human rights activists and hopefully stimulate
creative thought and action to bring an end to racism and poverty.
This book explains why America can realize the civil rights dream
in the 21st centuryâif U.S. citizens take actions as individuals
as well as work together for equality. It has been more than 53
years since Martin Luther King Jr. made his "I Have a Dream"
speech. Why has the United States still not been able to make
King's dream a reality after a half a century of effort and
progress? Is there still hope of full participation for all in
America? In Realizing the Civil Rights Dream: Diagnosing and
Treating American Racism, author Kenneth B. Bedell proposes a civil
rights dream that grows out of American history and speaks to the
21st-century reality. He makes the case that by adopting a larger
perspective of the role of racism in preserving U.S. social,
cultural, economic, and political institutions and practices,
Americans can understand why it has been so difficult to fulfill
the promises of the 1960s civil rights dream. Bedell describes and
applies sociological theories that serve to explain why racism is
still prevalent in the United States and identifies the steps that
are necessary to overcome racism. The book concludes with proposals
for ways to apply social science to realize the civil rights dream
and examples of how individuals can take action to make a
difference.
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