Description
Over the last century, the United States and much of the world broadly has seen massive social change with respect to attitudes and beliefs about anti-Black racism. But change alone does not ensure a decline in racism. In Anti-Black Racism in America, renowned race relations scholar Thomas F. Pettigrew undertakes a comprehensive assessment of the key trends in racism against Black Americans, drawing on a wide range of scholarship and his own decades of experience in the field. The book describes the advances made in recent years that promise a decline in anti-Black racism--especially in politics and education, but it also highlights where American racism remains firmly entrenched--in economics, housing, and the justice system. Employing significant insights from social psychology, such as understanding implicit prejudice and the importance of intergroup contact, Pettigrew lays out a theory of racism centering the importance of segregation in housing for its perpetuation, and makes the case for reparations funded by billionaires.
Table of Contents
AcknowledgementsIntroductionChapter 1: Prejudice: Implicit and Explicit Racial MindsetsChapter 2: Racial DiscriminationChapter 3: The Power of Racial NormsChapter 4: Race and EconomicsChapter 5: Race and EducationChapter 6: Race, Crime, and JusticeChapter 7: Race and HealthChapter 8: Race and PoliticsChapter 9: Interracial ContactChapter 10: Race and HousingChapter 11: So, Has American Racism Declined?Chapter 12: The Need for ReparationsReferencesIndex



