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For all of us, it means being willing to treat identity as loose fitting some of the time. That means focusing a little less on building and fortifying enclaves and more on forging alliances.
Woke became a common term during the Black Lives Matter movement, a push to draw attention to the disproportionate killings of Black people at the hands of police and the ways in which racism can ...
Police chiefs have insisted that a new plan to tackle racism among officers is not about political correctness or being “woke”. The National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) launched a Police Race ...
[28] Sociologist Marcyliena Morgan contrasts woke with cool in the context of maintaining dignity in the face of social injustice: "While coolness is empty of meaning and interpretation and displays no particular consciousness, woke is explicit and direct regarding injustice, racism, sexism, etc." [1] The term woke became increasingly common on ...
The legal scholar Tanya Katerí Hernández has written that anti-Black racism has a lengthy and often violent history within the Hispanic/Latino community. [3] According to Hernández, anti-Black racism is not an individual problem but rather a "systemic problem within Latinidad" and that myths exist within the community that "mestizaje" exempts Hispanics/Latinos from racism.
All else being equal, we suggest that the answer may be yes. An example from the developing world includes Brazil which, due to a long-term demographic decline of white Brazilians , has been designated as a majority-minority country in relation to the South American nation's racial classification of whiteness.
Donald Trump's election has given Americans permission to stop fearing what the say, and his return to the White House may put a dent in the woke culture.
Color-blind racism refers to "contemporary racial inequality as the outcome of nonracial dynamics." [6] The types of practices that take place under color blind racism are "subtle, institutional, and apparently nonracial." [6] Those practices are not racially overt in nature such as racism under slavery, segregation, and Jim Crow laws. Instead ...