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  • 11:06, 7 May 2024Darden Grzymala Busse 2006 (hist | edit) ‎[3,271 bytes]Abrilcelestino (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Introduction _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Darden Grzymala Busse states that half of the countries that belonged to the Soviet Union got rid of their communist ideals while the rest actually reinstated these ideals after the elections. His study aims to discover why some country’s citizens retained those positive views on the matter while the others grew negative sentiments to the concept. This...")
  • 04:40, 6 May 2024Fabe 2014 (hist | edit) ‎[8,516 bytes]Abrilcelestino (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Reading: Marilyn Fabe (2014), An Introduction to the Art of Narrative Film Technique, Glossary. The Shot: building blocks that compose a film Editing: Continuity editing is the glue around the building blocks that allows for a smooth and supported structure that allows the story to flow _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ In narrative films, shots are the building blocks. Continuity editing is...")
  • 02:49, 6 May 2024Cornell 2000 (hist | edit) ‎[7,752 bytes]Abrilcelestino (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Reading: Stephen Cornell (2000), “We are a people: Narrative and multiplicity in constructing ethnic identity”, pp. 41-53. Main Argument: Historical and cultural context in conversations revolving around communities is important as shown in the first interaction with the tribal leader of the Native American reservation they were visiting. History is what creates these ethnic identities and therefore it remains the core of them. This history becomes a narrative, esp...")
  • 08:03, 24 April 2024Kim 1999 (hist | edit) ‎[3,473 bytes]Tamaras (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Main argument: Asian Americans have a unique position within the racial hierarchy of the United States, where they are benefiting from and being victimized by the racial triangulation between Whites and African Americans History: - Asian Americans have been subjected to racial triangulation from the middle of the 19th century, and in the years following 1965 - Racial triangulation was openly culturally-racial before the civil rights era while in the post-civil rights e...")
  • 01:16, 19 April 2024Stoddard 1997 (hist | edit) ‎[3,147 bytes]Wz25 (talk | contribs) (Created page with ""Bleeding Heart: Reflections On Using the Law to Make Social Change"")
  • 05:07, 17 April 2024Brubaker 2002 (hist | edit) ‎[3,707 bytes]Feliciaquan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Brubaker 2002 == '''Main Argument:''' Ethnicity should not be seen in terms of groups; rather, we must re-examine our concept of ethnicity. Instead of thinking of ethnicity, race, and nation as tangible, we should instead think of them as relational and dynamic, with real consequences independent of their actual existence. Furthermore, we must think of groupness as an event, and distinguish between groups and categories–this distinction allows us to see group-making...")
  • 17:24, 2 April 2024Yashar 1998 (hist | edit) ‎[10,473 bytes]Emmaleawood (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Incentives to Organize: State Reforms, National Access, and Local Autonomy''' *State reforms in prior regimes created allegiance among rural communities that hoped to gain access to land and the state and encouraged indigenous peoples to define themselves as peasants to gain access to state resources *State reforms unintentionally created greater local political and economic autonomy - greater state penetration into rural areas meant more protection from local landlor...")
  • 05:30, 2 April 2024Grinde 2004 (hist | edit) ‎[5,206 bytes]Zbiabani (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''bold'''Summary *The education system was put in place to help the Native Americans get rid of their ways of life, customs, traditions and beliefs; it was used as a “mechanism to destroy traditional Native American ways.” There was never an option of adding the white man's customs to native tradition, rather the schools were used as a tool of completely wiping out the indigeneity of the indigenous peoples of North America. They went as far as institutionalizing the...")
  • 22:35, 18 March 2024Chapter 7 (hist | edit) ‎[2,913 bytes]Cabrera (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==Chapter 7: "Race War and White Women"== '''Main Argument:''' Women were central to the white power movement. White women played a crucial symbolic and practical role in the white power movement of the 1980s. This was exemplified during the 1988 Fort Smith sedition trial of movement leaders. '''Background''' *In the 1980s, the white power movement emphasized the symbolic importance of white women's reproduction and the creation of a white homeland in the Pacifi...")
  • 22:29, 18 March 2024Chapter 2 (hist | edit) ‎[5,306 bytes]Cabrera (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Main Argument:''' '''Intro:''' '''Chapter 2: Building the Underground''' *Louis Beam in 1977 purchased 50 acres of swampland using the Texas Veterans Land Board Grant *He created a training facility which transformed Klansmen into Soldiers **Curating a paramilitary that was unified by a white power movement, would implement various methods to target undocumented immigrants such as a Klan border watch *Southern Poverty Law Center banned paramilitary training, furthe...")
  • 17:15, 17 March 2024Belew 2018 (hist | edit) ‎[20,338 bytes]Dunyiamoh (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Main Argument:")
  • 23:10, 11 March 2024Roth 2016 (hist | edit) ‎[10,784 bytes]136.152.209.180 (talk) (Race has become a complex and conflicting thing for many people. The many aspects of race make it difficult for someone to just identify with one. Things like self-identification and identification from other people (who pick up on racial aspects) make it just one race. Race is socially constructed, the structure of race is maintained by micro-interactions that maintain a cognitive structure in race (1311).)
  • 00:59, 8 March 2024Adida Robinson 2023 (hist | edit) ‎[4,080 bytes]Oliviamramos (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Main Idea: The journal documents studies of Black immigrants selectively claiming the identity of US-born African Americans to protect against the racial discrimination of groups who have assimilated into American culture and the history of racism. This article follows the posed differences between black immigrants and US-born African Americans inferencing that there are incentives for one to separate oneself for economic reasons. This study follows the assimilation of...")
  • 06:08, 5 March 2024Duane 2019 (hist | edit) ‎[6,314 bytes]Jordanrm (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Main Idea''' Daniel Duane reflects on his personal experiences with Nazism and racism in the surfing community, discussing instances of antisemitic attacks and Nazi symbolism in California. He also highlights the history of swastikas in surf culture and ultimately acknowledges his own ignorance and privilege and the need to confront and dismantle systemic racism in the surfing community and subsequently society overall. '''History of Nazism in Surf Culture''' *The...")
  • 23:25, 4 March 2024Harff Gurr 1988 (hist | edit) ‎[9,552 bytes]Lineamarie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Harff & Gurr. 1988. Research Note: Toward Empirical Theory of Genocides and Politicides: Identification and Measurement of Cases since 1945 == '''Main argument:''' Comparative research on geno- and politicides is needed despite critics who see comparative research on genocides as a universalization of the Holocaust. A distinction between genocides and politicides is beneficial. '''Genocides and politicides:''' * A puzzle in the literature on genocides and politicide...")
  • 20:37, 4 March 2024Bass 2006 (hist | edit) ‎[3,131 bytes]EliasZadi (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Main Argument")
  • 06:51, 27 February 2024Blattman Lessing Tobon Duncan 2022 (hist | edit) ‎[7,864 bytes]Rasheeda Young (talk | contribs) (Created page with "=== Title === ==== (small heading) ==== * Google Doc")
  • 03:43, 23 February 2024Tilly 1985 (hist | edit) ‎[8,178 bytes]Allendmata (talk | contribs) (Title pages)
  • 19:38, 20 February 2024Mares Young 2016 (hist | edit) ‎[13,701 bytes]135.180.162.118 (talk) (Created page with "Introduction "Buying, Expropriating, and Stealing Votes" by Isabela Mares and Lauren Young illuminates the complex dynamics of electoral influence across the globe, where voters are often swayed by a mix of threats and promises contingent on their voting behavior. The text emphasizes the evolution of clientelism, detailing the diversity of actors who serve as brokers in the electoral process and the varied forms of clientelism, categorized by positive and negative induc...")
  • 06:18, 20 February 2024Benn Miguel Posner 2010 (hist | edit) ‎[8,873 bytes]Sara A. (talk | contribs) (Created page with "=="Political Competition and Ethnic Identification in Africa" by Benn Eifert, Edward Miguel, and Daniel N. Posner== ==='''The Political Sources of Ethnic Identification'''=== Competitiveness of a presidential election is a possible explanation for variations in the tendency of survey respondents to identify in ethnic terms. The authors provide the possible hypothesis that "''the strength of ethnic identity is dependent on the competitiveness of elections''" and have pr...")
  • 00:45, 18 February 2024Whitman 2017 (hist | edit) ‎[4,605 bytes]Oliviamramos (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Introduction:")
  • 00:07, 11 February 2024Beltrán 2010 (hist | edit) ‎[23,530 bytes]Yasminerizk22 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Level 2 == Creating Beltran")