It's Still Slavery by Another Name
As the long history, right to the present day, of police and vigilante violence against black people has shown with great clarity, the racial chasm between black and white people in the United States lives on. A few black men and women have climbed into the 1 percent, and a sizable African-American...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Monthly review (New York. 1949) 2020-05, Vol.72 (1), p.40-50 |
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description | As the long history, right to the present day, of police and vigilante violence against black people has shown with great clarity, the racial chasm between black and white people in the United States lives on. A few black men and women have climbed into the 1 percent, and a sizable African-American middle class now exists. But by every measure of social well-being, black Americans fare much worse than their white counterparts. Just as for the economic, political, and social distance between capitalists and workers, so too is there a differential between black and white people, for these same interconnected components of daily life continue because of the way our system is structured. |
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source | Sociological Abstracts; EZB Electronic Journals Library |
subjects | African Americans Black people Civil rights movements Everyday life Exploitation Inequality Racism Slavery Social distance Well being White people |
title | It's Still Slavery by Another Name |
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