
At The Same Time That The Civil Rights Movement Brought Increasing Opportunities For Blacks, The United States Liberalized Its Immigration Policy. While The Broadening Of The United States's Borders To Non-european Immigrants Fits With A Black Political Agenda Of Social Justice, Recent Waves Of Immigration Have Presented A Dilemma For Blacks, Prompting Ambivalent Or Even Negative Attitudes Toward Migrants. What Has An Expanded Immigration Regime Meant For How Blacks Express National Attachment? In This Book, Niambi Michele Carter Argues That Immigration, Both Historically And In The Contemporary Moment, Has Served As A Reminder Of The Limited Inclusion Of African Americans In The Body Politic. As Carter Contends, Blacks Use The Issue Of Immigration As A Way To Understand The Nature And Meaning Of Their American Citizenship-specifically The Way That White Supremacy Structures And Constrains Not Just Their Place In The American Political Landscape, But Their Political Opinions As Well. White Supremacy Gaslights Black People, And Others, Into Critiquing Themselves And Each Other Instead Of White Supremacy Itself. But What May Appear To Be A Conflict Between Blacks And Other Minorities Is About Self-preservation. Carter Draws On Original Interview Material And Empirical Data On African American Political Opinion To Offer The First Theory Of Black Public Opinion Toward Immigration.
How does the expansion of United States immigration policy influence the way African Americans perceive their own national attachment and citizenship? Niambi Michele Carter, an associate professor of political science, utilizes a combination of original interview material and empirical data to analyze the intersection of Black political identity and immigration. She argues that immigration serves as a lens through which African Americans navigate the constraints of white supremacy and define their precarious position within the American body politic.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and political analysts recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the nuances of Black political thought in the context of shifting demographics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigor with which the author applies political theory to contemporary social issues.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190053569
ISBN-13:
9780190053567
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