This document discusses concepts of identity, including how identities are based on traits that socially identify individuals as members of groups. It notes that identities reduce individuality and are determined externally. The document also discusses identity politics and debates around multiculturalism. It notes the difficulties with identity politics, like erasing internal differences. For race, it discusses how the concept is questionable but still impacts experiences and societal organization. Racism works ideologically through stereotypes. Ethnicity is connected to both race and culture.
Cultural studies is a field of theoretically, politically, and empirically engaged cultural analysis that concentrates upon the political dynamics of contemporary culture, its historical foundations, defining traits, conflicts, and contingencies.
Cultural studies views cultures not as fixed, bounded, stable, and discrete entities, but rather as constantly interacting and changing sets of practices and processes.
The field of cultural studies encompasses a range of theoretical and methodological perspectives and practices. Although distinct from the discipline of cultural anthropology and the interdisciplinary field of ethnic studies, cultural studies draws upon and has contributed to each of these fields
U.S. Enforcement Efforts Likely to Curtail Business Travel Rather than Online...Gaming Research Partners
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Joseph M. Kelly, Alex A. Igelman, and Keith Furlong dive into the complex issue of Internet offshore gambling and how the US Department of Justice will affect that business.
Cultural studies is a field of theoretically, politically, and empirically engaged cultural analysis that concentrates upon the political dynamics of contemporary culture, its historical foundations, defining traits, conflicts, and contingencies.
Cultural studies views cultures not as fixed, bounded, stable, and discrete entities, but rather as constantly interacting and changing sets of practices and processes.
The field of cultural studies encompasses a range of theoretical and methodological perspectives and practices. Although distinct from the discipline of cultural anthropology and the interdisciplinary field of ethnic studies, cultural studies draws upon and has contributed to each of these fields
U.S. Enforcement Efforts Likely to Curtail Business Travel Rather than Online...Gaming Research Partners
JOSEPH M. KELLY, ALEX A. IGELMAN, and KEITH FURLONG
Joseph M. Kelly, Alex A. Igelman, and Keith Furlong dive into the complex issue of Internet offshore gambling and how the US Department of Justice will affect that business.
What is the legal status of fantasy sports? Joseph M. Kelly and Alex Igelman go into the details regarding the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) passed in late 2006.
In this document, we discuss the cryptographic and security requirements of a government-run Internet gaming system (called a "casino."). Internet casinos and gambling have become big business in the last couple of years. By setting up casinos on the Internet, casino operators get very low operating costs, and get to set up their casinos in a lax regulatory environment. Many customers connect to these casinos from places where gambling is illegal, or where casinos are set up only by a small number of favored operators.
The authors will attempt to give an overview of the litigation by compulsive gamblers against Canadian gaming entities, and especially the litigation concerning class action suits.
Steve Goldbeck, Chief Deputy Director, San Francisco Bay Conservation & Development Commission, at the National Institute for Coastal & Harbor Infrastructure, John F. Kennedy Center, Boston, Nov. 12, 2013: "The Triple Threat of Rising Sea Levels, Extreme Storms and Aging Infrastructure: Coastal Community Responses and The Federal Role" See http://www.nichiusa.org or http://www.nichi.us
Dr. Jennifer L. Jurado, Southeast Florida Climate Change Compact, Broward County Staff Steering Committee Member, Broward County Director Natural Resources Planning and Management Division; National Institute for Coastal & Harbor Infrastructure, John F. Kennedy Center, Boston, Nov. 12, 2013: "The Triple Threat of Rising Sea Levels, Extreme Storms and Aging Infrastructure: Coastal Community Responses and The Federal Role" See http://www.nichiusa.org or http://www.nichi.us
New Orleans , Garret Graves, Chairman, Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority; National Institute for Coastal & Harbor Infrastructure, John F. Kennedy Center, Boston, Nov. 12, 2013: "The Triple Threat of Rising Sea Levels, Extreme Storms and Aging Infrastructure: Coastal Community Responses and The Federal Role" See http://www.nichiusa.org or http://www.nichi.us
Dale Morris, Senior Economist, Royal Dutch Embassy, The Dutch National Plan: The Delta Commission; National Institute for Coastal & Harbor Infrastructure, John F. Kennedy Center, Boston, Nov. 12, 2013: "The Triple Threat of Rising Sea Levels, Extreme Storms and Aging Infrastructure: Coastal Community Responses and The Federal Role." See http://www.nichiusa.org or http://www.nichi.us
Race and Ethnicity – Part II SOCY 3720-E01 Global Perspect.docxaudeleypearl
Race and Ethnicity – Part II
SOCY 3720-E01 Global Perspectives on Social Issues
Summer 2019
Part II:
• For the second part of our lecture we will be discussing these main academic notions:
Patterns of Majority – Minority Interaction
• Genocide
• Segregation
De Jure Segregation
De Facto Segregation
• Assimilation
• Pluralism
• Prejudice and Bigotry Approaches
• Prejudice and Bigotry in Social Structures.
• Prejudice and Bigotry and their Cultural Factors:
Social Norms
Stereotyping
• Prejudice and Bigotry in the Individual:
Frustration – Aggression
Projection
Patterns of Majority - Minority Interaction
• There are many different ways that majority and minority populations interact. These interactions can
also range from positive to negative and from peaceful to deadly.
• When studying these patterns, sociologists use four models:
Genocide
Segregation
Assimilation
Pluralism
• Genocide: today this term is used to describe “the deliberate, systematic killing of an entire people or
nation.” (Schaefer, 2002).
• Genocide is murder and it has occurred again and again in human history. It has been tolerated and
sometimes even encouraged by governments and their people.
• There have been many instances of genocide throughout the ages and some of the most infamous
examples are:
• Beginning in 1500, the Spanish, Portuguese, English, French, and Dutch forcefully colonized North and
South America, resulting in the deaths of thousands of native people. (Although most native people fell
victim to diseases brought by Europeans to which they had no natural defenses, many were also killed.)
• Turkish authorities killing about one million Armenians in 1915.
• We often hear this term when discussing the Holocaust as Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany exterminated
about 6 million European Jews along with Homosexual individuals and Romani people.
• We have our own history of genocide in the United States in relation to American Indians.
• Jozef Stalin is believed to have killed approximately 7 million people.
• The more recent genocides in Rwanda and in Darfur.
• Segregation: it refers to “the physical separation of two groups in residence, workplace, and social
functions. Generally, the dominant group imposes segregation on a subordinate group.” (Schaefer,
2002).
• We have seen examples of segregation right here in the United States not only though the institution of
slavery, but legal segregation as well.
• We have also seen the government-imposed racial segregation in South Africa during apartheid.
• There are two specific types of segregation:
• De Jure segregation: derives from the Latin “by law,” this type of segregation is required by law.
• De Facto segregation: derives from the Latin “in fact,” this type of segregation results from “housing
patterns, economic inequalities, gerrymandered school districts, and the departure of midd ...
Hey friends,
This is from the chapter "Democracy and diversity". This chapter is from the civics text book of CBSE. This is From the 10th standard syllabus.
2. Debating Identity 5.1
•
Identities: “They define who somebody is in terms of a trait, such as a physical
feature of the body, a belief, a genealogy or a cultural preference.”
•
“They identify by placing individuals into groups who share that trait.”
•
“This has a consequence: it means that identity is won at the price of reducing
individuality.”
•
“Identities are not given in terms of what individuals are as a whole, but in terms of
more or less arbitrarily selected features that they possess.”
•
“Individuals have little power to choose what features will be used to identify themthese are determined socially, from the outside.”
•
“They anchor who you are to only part of yourself.”
•
“Individuals exist socially in and through their identities. Societies, identities and
individuals do not exist independently of one another.”
3. •
“Individuals don’t have a single identity, they have identities, and they do so just
because identities are based on partial traits (skin color, socio-economic status,
gender, nationality, region, profession, generation and so on).”
•
“Not all identities carry equal weight in particular circumstances or have the same
social consequences. Gender, race or ethnicity, and class are the identities, most
of all, by which we are placed socially.”
•
“Quite often, words used by others to define a group insultingly or prejudicially are
appropriated by the group themselves and turned into a term marking self-identity,
usually after passing through a brief phase where they are used ironically: hippie,
punk, nigger.”
•
“Significant numbers of people struggle to ‘dis-identify’ from-detach themselves
from-given identities (we can have an identity based on dis-identification).”
•
“It is important to distinguish between given or inherited identities (a woman) and
chosen identities, many of which are based on cultural, material or ideological
choices or preferences (a waiter, an opera fan).”
4. • Identity politics: “A politics engaged on behalf of those with
particular identities (usually historically disempowered ones)
rather than a political one, organized on the basis of
particular social policies or philosophies.”
• The origins of identity politics: “They begin with the civil rights
movement in the USA during the early sixties, after which
groups with specific cultural and social identities increasingly
made political claims on the basis of those identities-in
particular, African Americans on behalf of their racially
defined community and feminists on behalf of women.”
• “Identity politics are fuelled by the desire for ‘recognition’ (the
street word for which is ‘respect’), but in most cases they
have also been motivated by more than that- by the desire for
access, liberty and fair, unprejudiced treatment.”
5. •
“The women’s movement was enabled by a series of economic and
technological developments: relative affluence, new devices for washing,
cleaning, cooking and so on, all of which gradually shifted the balance of
power between genders in everyday life.”
•
“And as we have seen, the culture and media industries themselves
accelerate segmentation and identity formation by quickly targeting
particular identities as specific, de-limited consumer markets.”
• Difficulties with Identity politics:
1- “Tends to erase internal differences.” ex. Feminism has an effect on
women of different classes and ethnicities.
2- “Tends to work by the principle of exclusion. Identities tend to be
structured by reducing or demonizing others (the concept of the White
was largely based on vilifying groups with other skin colors).”
3- “Tends to overlook identities around which lives are actually lived. One of
the more important identities that individuals have is determined by the
paid work they do.”
4- “Tends to invest legitimating histories or traditions which can be politically
(then commercially) exploited. National identities are the most obvious
instance of this. Ex. The Scottish ‘tartan’ and ‘kilt’ as an important
signifier of national identity.”
6. •
“The meaning and force of all identities are in constant mutation. Identities are not
just given or chosen, they have to be enacted, but this means that they have to
enter into negotiations with the situation in which they are performed or otherwise
acted upon.”
•
Subaltern: “Refers to those social groups with the least power of all, especially
colonized peoples. Under colonialism, the identity of subaltern groups is
articulated in signifying practices that imitate and displace concepts that have
been articulated by the colonizer.”
•
“Groups and individuals do not have a single identity but several.”
•
“It is impossible to exist in society without a proper name, without being located
within the set of identity-granting institutions into which one is born: family or kingroup, nation, ethnic community, gender.”
•
“There is no getting away from identities-even being a cultural studies student or
teacher forms one.”
7. Multiculturalism 5.2
•
Multiculturalism: The idea “that several different cultures (rather than one
national culture) can coexist peacefully and equitably in a single country.”
•
“ Multiculturalism in the US tends to mean something rather different than it does
in Europe or Australia: it is somewhat less connected to issues of immigration and
more focused on accepting blacks and Hispanics.”
•
Multiculturalism prevents threatens:
1- “A return to cultural barbarism through a lowering of standards or a debasement of
values”
2- Small-minded forces. “under particular policies designed to enable the survival of
minority cultures, limits to individual freedom may be imposed.” ex. “The law in
Quebec, Canada, requiring all firms of over fifty employees to conduct business in
French.”
3- National unity. “Multiculturalism will lead to a (division) of languages, religions and
cultures within the nation. (This unravels) the binding threads required for national
unity.”
•
“The idea that multiculturalism equals barbarism is odd. Multiculturalist policies are
features precisely of the most developed states.”
8. • “Multiculturalism is much weaker in the peripheries
of the developed world.” Ex. an advanced industrial
state such as Japan barely accommodates it,
retaining an official monotheism which downgrades
the lives of migrants.”
• “Almost all nations are, and always have been,
multicultural in the sense that they contain a
multitude of cultures and usually of languages and
dialects.”
• “All modern societies do not just tolerate, but are
built around, meanings and values that are not
shared by all members.”
9. •
“The primary point of multiculturalism is to grant full citizenship to those of
different cultures.”
•
“And culture becomes important in this context because citizenship is not just
a matter of holding a passport. It also consists of the capacity to contribute
one’s heritage, looks and beliefs to the national identity.”
•
-
Official multiculturalism emerged out of:
“Difficulties faced by European politicians when they divided central Europe
into new states after WW1.”
“Many nations-from Germany to the USA- denaturalized ethnic groups or
migrants, often condemning them to statelessness.” This caused violence.
“After WW2, policies of denaturalization were eliminated.”
“Official multiculturalism was spurred on by large-scale immigration in and
after the fifties when improved and cheaper global communications allowed
migrant communities to stay in touch with their home states and maintain their
old cultural interests and dispositions.” “So to some degree multiculturalism is
a consequence of globalization.”
-
•
“On one level multiculturalism is a governmental tool for managing
difference.”
10. •
“ It can be a means of managing not just mono-culturalism but also
racism:”
-
“Multiculturalism closes down on differences within particular cultural
groups. That is, it does not provide sufficient room for identity-indifference.”
-
“Multiculturalism tends to propose cultural solutions for political problems,
by emphasizing recognition and freedom of expression rather than power
and economic equality.” “States promote multiculturalism to exhibit their
tolerance rather than to promote differences.” Ex. Ethnic restaurants and
festivals.
-
“In aiming to market to different communities, corporations will
incorporate personal values connected to those communities. Urban
governments have promoted cultural diversity in order to make their cities
attractive to globally mobile companies and highly skilled labor.”
•
“Each multiculture contains a variety of perspectives and values, some in
conflict with others, and some (are transferable) onto other multicultures.”
Ex. A conservative Muslim father and a conservative Christian father who
share the same concerns for their daughters.
“Individuals can belong simultaneously to different multicultures and
engage in activities which are not covered by any ‘culture’ at all.”
•
11. • Cultural Diversity: is a more appropriate term than multiculturalism
and can mean the same thing. “ Multiculturalism implies a bounded
border within which different cultures co-exist.”
• “Multiculturalism may require different groups of citizens to be treated
differently.” Ex. Muslim women be allowed to wear the Hijab in
schools. “These issues become more difficult when customs come
into question.”
• “When cultural traditions don’t respect human rights as these have
come to be understood in the West and by the major international
organizations, should universal rights override cultural rights?”
- Nations do not require common cultures and common religions
anymore.
- They do not require common laws. In some countries the laws of the
native peoples are applied and are upheld for different circumstances.
- Nations do not require a common language. “Very few states have
ever been monolingual, and bilingualism or multilingualism” go
together.
12. Race 5.3
•
“Race differs from concepts such as gender, class and even ethnicity in that there
is a question as to whether it is real at all.”
•
“Race, it seems, is nothing but a dangerous product of prejudice or, at least, of
false thinking.”
•
“Racism is, at its heart, the belief that the human species is constituted by a
number of separate and distinct biological discrete sub-species: i.e. races.” It is
“difficult to decide how many races actually existed.
•
“yet race as a category refuses to disappear. There are several main reasons for
this:”
1- “It can return to its pre-scientific roots.”
“Races consist less of people joined by deep-seated biological traits than by the sharing of
particular kinds of personalities, values and dispositions, bound to particular body types,
often marked by skin color. That kind of racism can create hierarchies and build
apparatuses of oppression and discrimination.”
2- “It is often difficult to disjoin culturalism (that idea that different peoples have
different inherited cultures) from a racist node, since different cultures so often
implies different kind of people with different kind of bodies.”
13. 3- “Racism is difficult to uproot since it is based on look-the visual differences
between different groups of people.”
4- “Race is experienced as such by many on a daily basis, although not by the samerace majorities in most communities.”
“For example, travelling to china can be such a powerful experience for Europeans:
there they can understand what it is like to be a member of a group with a different
body type.”
•
“At one level the only way to avoid racism is simply to stop using racist concepts.
This would require removing the markers of race, and in particular that of skin
color, from discourses about social groups and individuals so that these markers
become as meaningless a criterion for distinguishing between people as, say,
shoe size.”
•
This is highly unlikely though. “Just because culture and society are still too
organized around them; experience too is filtered through them.”
•
•
The history of Western racism:
The concept of the volk community: a theory by J. G. Herder during the late 18th
century. “A community distinguished by its authenticity and bound together by a
cultural tradition-by values, myths, languages and a spectrum of character types
and capabilities unique to it.”
14. •
Theory of Evolution or Darwinism: A theory by Charles Darwin published in 1859.
“Darwinism allowed society and politics to be understood not as the outcome of
human choices (under the sway of particular interests) but as subject to invariable,
determining biological laws, and, in particular, the laws that ordered the
transmission of inherited traits across populations.”
•
“This was the basis of what has come to be known as ‘scientific racism’.”
•
Scientific racism “became such a powerful idea because it fulfilled particular
ideological needs in the age of imperialism, and most all because it helped
legitimate the domination of the globe by white.”
•
“It is as if once all human beings were deemed equal, systemic inequality could
only be maintained by declaring some kind of people less than fully human-and
racism could do that.”
•
“Today, as we know, racism works purely ideologically. Inside a shared culture, in
most cases it works by distinguishing other people by virtue of their race.”
•
“Racism organizes certain stereotypes: races are regarded as groups of similar
individuals who possess a narrow set of traits, usually, but not necessarily,
negative traits. Notions such as ‘Asians are brainy’ or ‘Indians are lazy’.”
15. •
“Racist imagery of this kind regards individuals not so much as individuals as such
or even as belonging to other collectivities (to localities or classes say) but
primarily as members and representatives of a race imagined as a bundle of
stereotypes and dispositions.”
•
“The primary difficulty with the concept of race today is that it is so tightly
connected to that of ethnicity.”
•
Ethnicity: “Relating to large groups of people classed according to common racial,
national, tribal, religious, linguistic, or cultural origin or background Ethnicity is
what ties you to your race or culture. It is your background and has a strong
influence on the things you do.”
•
“Race is a biological notion while ethnicity is a cultural one. Yet ethnicity is very
connected to filiation and blood: people of the same ethnicity share not just
cultures but a network of family relations, roots, and a connection to a particular
home territory.”
•
“If race mediates between society and nature, ethnicity mediates between race
and culture.”
•
“Globalised societies and cultures are finding more and more ways to use race: as
a niche for marketing; as a source of commodifiable, imaginary representations
which can energize popular cultures; and as a source of identity pride especially
for the marginalized and unprivileged.”