Showing posts with label Corporation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corporation. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Waste of a White Skin: The Carnegie Corporation and the Racial Logic of White Vulnerability




Waste of a White Skin: The Carnegie Corporation and the Racial Logic of White Vulnerability (George Gund Foundation Imprint in African American Studies) by Tiffany Willoughby-Herard


2015 | ISBN: 0520280865, 0520280873 | English | 328 pages | PDF + EPUB | 2 MB + 4 MB




A pathbreaking history of the development of scientific racism, white nationalism, and segregationist philanthropy in the U.S. and South Africa in the early twentieth century, Waste of a White Skin focuses on the American Carnegie Corporation’s study of race in South Africa, the Poor White Study, and its influence on the creation of apartheid.




This book demonstrates the ways in which U.S. elites supported apartheid and Afrikaner Nationalism in the critical period prior to 1948 through philanthropic interventions and shaping scholarly knowledge production. Rather than comparing racial democracies and their engagement with scientific racism, Willoughby-Herard outlines the ways in which a racial regime of global whiteness constitutes domestic racial policies and in part animates black consciousness in seemingly disparate and discontinuous racial democracies. This book uses key paradigms in black political thought—black feminism, black internationalism, and the black radical tradition—to provide a rich account of poverty and work. Much of the scholarship on whiteness in South Africa overlooks the complex politics of white poverty and what they mean for the making of black political action and black people’s presence in the economic system.




Ideal for students, scholars, and interested readers in areas related to U.S. History, African History, World History, Diaspora Studies, Race and Ethnicity, Sociology, Anthropology, and Political Science.








Wednesday, September 9, 2015

More Freedom, Less Terror?: Liberalization and Political Violence in the Arab World (Rand Corporation Monograph) [Repost]




More Freedom, Less Terror?: Liberalization and Political Violence in the Arab World (Rand Corporation Monograph) by Dalia Dassa Kaye


English | Sep. 24, 2008 | ISBN: 0833045083 | 226 Pages | PDF | 1.15 MB




A key tenet of U.S. foreign policy has been that promoting democracy reduces terrorism; however, scant empirical evidence links democracy to terrorism, positively or negatively. This study explores the relationship between the two by examining the effects of liberalization processes on political violence in six Arab cases.