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Comparative Racial Politics in Latin America contributes to, and builds on the study of Black politics in Latin America.
List of contents
Introduction: Comparative Racial Politics in Latin America - Black Politics Matter [Kwame Dixon and Ollie A. Johnson III] Part 1: History 1. Beyond Representation: Rethinking Rights, Alliances and Migrations: Three Historical Themes in Afro-Latin American Political Engagement [Darién J. Davis] 2. Recognition, Reparations, and Political Autonomy of Black and Native Communities in the Americas [Bernd Reiter] 3. Pan-Africanism and Latin America [Elisa Larkin Nascimento] Part 2: The Caribbean 4. Black Activism and the State in Cuba [Danielle Pilar Clealand] 5. Correcting Intellectual Malpractice: Haiti and Latin America [Jean-Germain Gros] 6. Black Feminist Formations in the Dominican Republic since La Sentencia [April J. Mayes] Part 3: South America 7. Afro-Ecuadorian Politics [Carlos de la Torre and Jhon Antón Sánchez] 8. In The Branch of Paradise: Geographies of Privilege and Black Social Suffering in Cali, Colombia [Jaime Amparo Alves and Aurora Vergara-Figueroa]9. The Impossible Black Argentine Political Subject [Judith M. Anderson] 10. Current Representations of "Black" Citizens: Contentious Visibility within the Multicultural Nation [Laura de la Rosa Solano] Part 4: Comparative Perspectives 11. The Contours and Contexts of Afro-Latin American Women’s Activism [Kia Lilly Caldwell] 12. Race and the Law in Latin America [Tanya Katerí Hernández] 13. The Labyrinth of Ethnic-Racial Inequality: a Picture of Latin America according to the recent Census Rounds [Marcelo Paixão and Irene Rossetto] 14. The Millennium/Sustainable Development Goals and Afro-descendants in the Americas: An (Un)intended Trap [Paula Lezama] Conclusion [Kwame Dixon and Ollie A. Johnson III]
About the author
Kwame Dixon is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Howard University, who did his undergraduate work at the University of South Florida and received his Ph.D. from Clark-Atlanta University. He was awarded two Fulbright grants and has done extensive field research and lived in several Latin American countries, including Ecuador, Colombia and Brazil. He is the author of Afro-Politics and Civil Society in Salvador da Bahia (University Press of Florida, 2016) and coeditor of Comparative Perspectives on Afro Latin America (University Press of Florida, 2012). He teaches courses on International Human Rights, Latin American Politics and Comparative Racial Politics.
Ollie A. Johnson III is Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of African American Studies at Wayne State University. He is the coeditor of Race, Politics, and Education in Brazil: Affirmative Action in Higher Education (2015). He also authored Brazilian Party Politics and the Coup of 1964 and coedited Black Political Organizations in the Post-Civil Rights Era. Professor Johnson received his Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California at Berkeley. His current research focuses on African American, Afro-Brazilian and Afro-Latin American Politics.
Summary
Comparative Racial Politics in Latin America contributes to, and builds on the study of Black politics in Latin America.