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The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000
Educating for a New Economy: The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000 by William D. Goldsmith Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy MacLean, Supervisor ___________________________ Edward J. Balleisen ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith ___________________________ Gary Gereffi ___________________________ Helen Ladd Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in The Graduate School of Duke University 2018 ABSTRACT Educating for a New Economy: The Struggle to Redevelop a Jim Crow State, 1960–2000 by William D. Goldsmith Department of History Duke University Date:_______________________ Approved: ___________________________ Nancy MacLean, Supervisor ___________________________ Edward J. Balleisen ___________________________ Adriane Lentz-Smith ___________________________ Gary Gereffi ___________________________ Helen Ladd An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History in the Graduate School of Duke University 2018 Copyright by William D. Goldsmith 2018 Abstract This dissertation shows how an array of policymakers, invested in uprooting an unequal political economy descended from the plantation system and Jim Crow, gravitated to education as a centerpiece of development strategy, and why so many are still disappointed in its outcomes. By looking at state-wide policymaking in North Carolina and policy effects in the state’s black belt counties, this study shows why the civil rights movement was vital for shifting state policy in former Jim Crow states towards greater investment in human resources. By breaking down employment barriers to African Americans and opening up the South to new people and ideas, the civil rights movement fostered a new climate for economic policymaking, and a new ecosystem of organizations flourished to promote equitable growth. -
BULLETIN /NEWS Société Canadienne D’Études De La Renaissance Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies
SCÉR CSRS BULLETIN /NEWS Société canadienne d’études de la Renaissance Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies Vol. 35 N˚1 April / Avril 2016 SOMMAIRE DE CE NUMÉRO/ SUMMARY OF THIS ISSUE Le Mot de la Présidente/ A Word from the President p. 2 Congress Banquet / Banquet du Congrès 2016 p. 4 Des nouvelles de nos membres / News from our members p. 5 Annonces/ Announcements p. 5 CSRS/SCÉR Membership Renewals for 2016/ Abonnements pour 2016 p. 6 Appels à communications / Calls for papers p. 7 Appel à notes / Call for contributions p.21 Minutes from the CSRS Annual General Meeting (2015) / p. 22 Procès-verbal de l’assemblée genérale annuelle de la SCÉR (2015) Programme du Congrès de la SCÉR 2016 – CSRS 2016 Congress Program p. 29 The Executive / L’Exécutif 2014-2016 p. 37 The News is published three times a year, in September, in December, and in April. It is e-mailed to all members of the Society in good standing. We encourage you to send announcements, queries and news of your activities to the editorial team via [email protected]. Items for inclusion in the next issue of the News must be received by August 15, 2016. Le Bulletin est publié trois fois par année, en septembre, en décembre et en avril. Il est expédié électroniquement à tous les membres en règle de la Société. Nous vous encourageons à soumettre annonces, questions, nouvelles de vos activités à l’équipe de rédaction via [email protected]. Les textes pour publication dans le prochain numéro du Bulletin doivent être reçus avant le 15 août 2016. -
Introduction and Literature Review
Abstract SHERWOOD, JESSICA HOLDEN. Talk About Country Clubs: Ideology and the Reproduction of Privilege. (Under the direction of Barbara J. Risman.) This dissertation reports on interviews with members of five exclusive country clubs in the Northeastern United States. At these clubs, membership is extended only by selective invitation after a subjective screening process. The clubs have long histories of racial-ethnic homogeneity, but they now display some demographic diversity while preserving the economic and cultural homogeneity with which members are comfortable, and which they consider an important appeal of the private club. I focus on club members’ explanations around three topics: their clubs’ exclusivity, their racial-ethnic composition, and the status of women members. Subjects minimize the significance of the exclusion they perform by rhetorically pointing to forces beyond their control, and by promoting the American Dream of colorblind, meritocratic equal opportunity. While they use the dominant racial ideology of colorblindness, subjects also show a departure from colorblindness in their active development of and rhetorical emphasis on racial-ethnic diversity in their ranks. Concerning women’s status, club members mostly accept the subordination of women in clubs. To justify it, they rhetorically rely on both the dominant gender ideology and the inequalities in men’s and women’s wealth and domestic responsibilities which originate elsewhere. Club members are called to account for their exclusivity by the American value of egalitarian equal access. But at the same time, other cultural values provide them with the tools needed to successfully explain themselves, even as their talk and actions contribute to the reproduction of class, race, and gender inequalities. -
G a Z E T T E
g a z e t t e THE CHRONICLE OF CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY Winter 2003 Vol. 13, No. 2 CEU Continues to Strengthen European Ties CEU initiates the Consortium for the Advancement of Graduate Education in Europe and attends the European University Association Conference CEU recently took part in two events involving its rela- University Representatives: tionship with other graduate schools at the European level. At CEU's initiative, rectors and other high-level Mark Vuijlsteke, Director of Development, and Robert representatives of 16 universities gathered in Budapest Picht, Professor, College of Europe, Brugge, Belgium; on November 1, to discuss ways to Reynold Bloom, President, Am e r i c a n strengthen graduate education in University, Bulgaria; Jaak Aaviksoo, Europe as a means to achieve the Re c t o r , University of Tartu, Estonia; objectives of the Bologna Process. Jurgen Dieringer, Professor, An d r á s s y The participants were "natural" U n i v e r s i t y, Budapest, Hungary; partners of CEU from Central and László Komlósi, Vice-Rector, Uni- Eastern European, as well as West- versity of Pécs, Hungary; A t t i l a ern European graduate schools. Chikán, Rector, Budapest Univer- After a full day of intensive discus- sity of Economic Sciences and sions, consensus was reached that Public Administration, Hungary; the European Higher Education Ferenc Hudecz, Pro-Rector, Eötvös Area, which is planned to come Loránd University, Budapest, Hun- into being by 2010, cannot be complete and competitive gary; Andreas Frijdal, Head of Academic Service, Euro- without high-level graduate education. -
Narratives of Interiority: Black Lives in the U.S. Capital, 1919 - 1942
City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 5-2015 Narratives of Interiority: Black Lives in the U.S. Capital, 1919 - 1942 Paula C. Austin Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/843 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] NARRATIVES OF INTERIORITY: BLACK LIVES IN THE U.S. CAPITAL, 1919 – 1942 by PAULA C. AUSTIN A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York 2015 ©2015 Paula C. Austin All Rights Reserved ii This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in History in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ________________ ____________________________ Date Herman L. Bennett, Chair of Examining Committee ________________ _____________________________ Date Helena Rosenblatt, Executive Office Gunja SenGupta Clarence Taylor Robert Reid Pharr Michele Mitchell Supervisory Committee THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract NARRATIVES OF INTERIORITY: BLACK LIVES IN THE U.S. CAPITAL, 1919 – 1942 by PAULA C. AUSTIN Advisor: Professor Herman L. Bennett This dissertation constructs a social and intellectual history of poor and working class African Americans in the interwar period in Washington, D.C. Although the advent of social history shifted scholarly emphasis onto the “ninety-nine percent,” many scholars have framed black history as the story of either the educated, uplifted and accomplished elite, or of a culturally depressed monolithic urban mass in need of the alleviation of structural obstacles to advancement. -
Fall 2007 Volume Xxiiii No
FALL 2007 VOLUME XXIIII NO. 3 NNeettwwoorrkknewsnews The Newsletter of Sociologists for Women in Society SSWWSS MMeeeettiinnggss iinn NNYYCC AAuugguusstt 1111--1133 22000077 FFrroomm tthhee BBiigg UUnneeaassyy ttoo tthhee BBiigg AAppppllee By: Manisha Desai The meeting in New York was organized to continue the SWS President focus of the winter meetings on Solidarities Across Borders. I was really pleased with the attendance at our sessions. rom New Orleans to New York was both a dramatic There was standing room only at Doing Gender: 20 Years shift and yet a continuation of the story of the Later which honored Candace West and Don Zimmerman's contemporaryFF crisis of the US state, in particular the increas- classic article in Gender and Society. Similarly the panel, ing privatization and corruption of the state’s security and Straight Up No Chaser: Challenges Women of Color Face in reconstruction roles. While the attack in New York, six the Academy, and Evelyn Nakano Glenn's SWS Feminist years ago, marked the beginning of this crisis, New Orleans Lecture, Yearning for Whiteness: The New Global represented the depth of this crisis. The SWS meeting in Marketing of Skin Whitening Products, were well attended New Orleans showcased how every day men and women in and led to animated discussions. I also took advantage of our New Orleans were building solidarities across borders to location in New York City and organized jointly, with ASA rebuild even as the state had abdicated its responsibilities. and Women Make Movies, a day-long women's film The US model of privatization of state roles was also evident festival. -
Introduction to the Special Issue on Shmuel Noah Eisenstadt
City Research Online City, University of London Institutional Repository Citation: Susen, S. and Turner, B. S. (2011). Introduction to the Special Issue on Shmuel Noah Eisenstadt. Journal of Classical Sociology, 11(3), pp. 229-239. doi: 10.1177/1468795X11408657 This is the published version of the paper. This version of the publication may differ from the final published version. Permanent repository link: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/18821/ Link to published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468795X11408657 Copyright: City Research Online aims to make research outputs of City, University of London available to a wider audience. Copyright and Moral Rights remain with the author(s) and/or copyright holders. URLs from City Research Online may be freely distributed and linked to. Reuse: Copies of full items can be used for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge. Provided that the authors, title and full bibliographic details are credited, a hyperlink and/or URL is given for the original metadata page and the content is not changed in any way. City Research Online: http://openaccess.city.ac.uk/ [email protected] 408657JCS11310.1177/1468795X11408657Susen and TurnerJournal of Classical Sociology Editorial Journal of Classical Sociology 11(3) 229 –239 Introduction to the Special © The Author(s) 2011 Reprints and permission: Issue on Shmuel Noah sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1468795X11408657 Eisenstadt jcs.sagepub.com Simon Susen Birkbeck College, University of London, UK Bryan S. Turner City University of New York, USA University of Western Sydney, Australia It is with a strange mixture of sadness and pride that we are editing this Special Issue on the work of the late Shmuel Noah Eisenstadt. -
CURRICULUM VITAE April 18, 2010
CURRICULUM VITAE April 18, 2010 DR. PEPPER SCHWARTZ, PhD Department of Sociology University of Washington Seattle, Washington 98195 (206) 543-4036 – Office (206) 543-5882 – Sociology Dept. http://faculty.washington.edu/couples/ EDUCATION 1 B.A. Washington University, 1967, Sociology M.A. Washington University, 1968, Sociology M.Phil. Yale University, 1970, Sociology Ph.D. Yale University, 1974, Sociology POSITIONS HELD 1969–70 Teaching Assistant, Yale University 1972–79 Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Washington 1979–present Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Washington 1979–present Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science 1979–present Adjunct Professor of Women's Studies 1990–92 Special Assistant to the Provost, University of Washington 1993 Associate Chair, Sociology, University of Washington 1988–present Professor of Sociology, University of Washington 2005 Distinguished Visiting Professorship, University of Denver, Spring quarter 2007–2010 Schrag Fellow, Professor of Sociology, University of Washington FIELDS OF PROFESSIONAL INTEREST Intimate Relationships Marriage and the Family Human Sexuality Gender Qualitative Methodologies 2 NATIONAL PROFESSIONAL SERVICE National Consultant, Centers For Disease Control, Sexual Health Consultation, “Promoting Public Health Approach to Sexual Health in the United States,” Atlanta, GA, April 28-29, 2010. Board Member, Contemporary Council on the Family, 2008-2010. Chairperson, National Sexuality Resource Center, National Sexuality Centers, San Francisco State University, 2007-2010. Board Member, 2010-2012. Member, American Sociological Association (ASA), Committee on Excellence in Reporting of Social Issues Award Selection, 2006–2008. Member, Advisory Council of the National Sexuality Research Center (NSRC), 2004– 2006. Chairperson, Campaign for Sexual Literacy, 2007-present. Member, American Sociological Association (ASA), Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology, 2005–2008. -
Les Représentations Médiatiques De La Vieillesse Dans La Société Française Contemporaine
Les repr´esentations m´ediatiquesde la vieillesse dans la soci´et´efran¸caisecontemporaine : ambigu¨ıt´esdes discours et r´ealit´essociales Yannick Sauveur To cite this version: Yannick Sauveur. Les repr´esentations m´ediatiques de la vieillesse dans la soci´et´efran¸caise contemporaine : ambigu¨ıt´esdes discours et r´ealit´essociales. Sciences de l'information et de la communication. Universit´ede Bourgogne, 2011. Fran¸cais. <NNT : 2011DIJOL015>. <tel- 00665923> HAL Id: tel-00665923 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00665923 Submitted on 3 Feb 2012 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L'archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destin´eeau d´ep^otet `ala diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publi´esou non, lished or not. The documents may come from ´emanant des ´etablissements d'enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche fran¸caisou ´etrangers,des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou priv´es. UNIVERSITE DE BOURGOGNE THÈSE Pour obtenir le grade de Docteur de l‟Université de Bourgogne Discipline : Sciences de l‟Information et de la Communication par Yannick Sauveur Les représentations médiatiques de la vieillesse dans la société française contemporaine Ambiguïtés des discours et réalités sociales Thèse dirigée par Pascal Lardellier Soutenue le mercredi 22 juin 2011 Jury M. Jean-Jacques BOUTAUD, Professeur, Université de Bourgogne, Mme Michèle DION, Professeur, Université de Bourgogne, M. Claude JAVEAU, Professeur émérite, Université Libre de Bruxelles, M. Pascal LARDELLIER, Professeur, Université de Bourgogne, Directeur de la thèse, M. -
Haverford College Catalog 2003-2004
HAVERFORD COLLEGE CATALOG 2003-2004 1 HAVERFORD COLLEGE ACADEMIC CALENDAR 2003-2004 SEMESTER I August 27 First-year and transfer students arrive August 30-31 Returning students arrive August 31 Non-academic registration September 1 Labor Day; Classes begin at Haverford, Bryn Mawr, and Swarthmore September 5 Last day to uncover NNG-CR/NO CR from previous semester September 8-9 Final academic verification at Haverford and Bryn Mawr September 9 Last day to register - Class of 2007 September 19 Last day to request NNG-CR/NO CR at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Last day to drop a credit at Haverford and Bryn Mawr October 10 Fall break begins at 4:00 p.m. October 20 Classes resume at 8:30 a.m. October 20-24 Faculty reports of concern to CSSP due October 24 Academic flexibility proposals due End of 1/2 semester courses October 24-26 Family Weekend/Homecoming November 13-14 Registration for spring semester November 26 Thanksgiving break begins at 4:00 p.m. December 1 Classes resume at 8:30 a.m. December 12 Classes end at Haverford and Bryn Mawr All papers (except those in lieu of exams) and lab note- books due December 13-14 Reading period December 15-20 Final examinations for all students through Saturday at 12:00 noon December 20 Semester I ends at 12:00 noon January 5 Final grades due in registrar's office by 12:00 noon 2 SEMESTER II January 19 Classes begin at Haverford, Bryn Mawr, and Swarthmore January 23 Last day to uncover NNG-CR/NO CR from previous semester January 26-27 Final academic verification at Haverford and Bryn Mawr February 6 Last day to request NNG-CR/NO CR at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Last day to drop a credit at Haverford and Bryn Mawr March 5 End of i/2 semester courses Spring break begins at 4:00 p.m. -
Western Europe
Western Europe Great Britain* JLHE PERIOD under review (July 1, 1962, to December 31, 1963) was an eventful one in British political and economic life. Economic recession and an exceptionally severe winter raised the number of unemployed in Jan- uary 1963 to over 800,000, the highest figure since 1939. In the same month negotiations for British entry into the European Common Market broke down, principally because of the hostile attitude of President Charles de Gaulle of France. Official opinion had stressed the economic advantages of union, but enthusiasm for the idea had never been widespread, and there was little disappointment. In fact, industrial activity rallied sharply as the year progressed. In March 1963 Britain agreed to the dissolution of the Federation of Rho- desia and Nyasaland, which had become inevitable as a result of the transfer of power in Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia to predominantly African governments and the victory of white supremacists in the elections in South- ern Rhodesia, where the European minority still retained power. Local elections in May showed a big swing to Labor, as did a series of par- liamentary by-elections. A political scandal broke out in June, when Secretary for War John Pro- fumo resigned after confessing that he had lied to the House of Commons concerning his relations with a prostitute, Christine Keeler. A mass of infor- mation soon emerged about the London demimonde, centering on Stephen Ward, an osteopath, society portrait painter, and procurer. His sensational trial and suicide in August 1963 were reported in detail in the British press. A report issued in September by Lord Denning (one of the Law Lords) on the security aspects of the scandal disposed of some of the wilder rumors of immorality in high places but showed clearly the failure of the government to deal with the problem of a concurrent liaison between the war minister's mistress and a Soviet naval attache. -
Conversation Avec Julien Freund
Conversation avec Julien Freund par Pierre Bérard http://asymetria-anticariat.blogspot.com Julien Freund est mort en septembre 1993. De la fin des ann ées 70 jusqu©à son décès, je l©ai rencontré à maintes reprises tant à Strasbourg que chez lui à Villé et dans ces villes d©Europe où nous réunissaient colloques et conférences. Des heures durant j©ai frotté à sa patience et à sa perspicacité les grands thèmes de la Nouvelle Droite. Il les accueillait souvent avec une complicit é rieuse, parfois avec scepticisme, toujours avec la franche ind épendance d©esprit qui a marqué toute son existence. Les lignes qui suivent mettent en sc ène des conversations tenues à la fin des années quatre-vingt. Des notes prises alors sur le vif et des souvenirs demeurés fort intenses m©ont permis de reconstituer par bribe certains de ces moments. Bien entendu, il ne s©agit pas d©utiliser ici le biais de la fiction posthume pour prêter à Julien Freund des propos que les calomniateurs dont on connaît l©acharnement pourraient instrumenter contre la mémoire d©un grand maître. C©est pourquoi j©entends assumer l©entière responsabilité de ce dialogue. Lors de ces entrevues, on le devine, l©ami absent mais souvent évoqué était Alain de Benoist. Ce texte lui est dédié. J.F. - Vous êtes à l'heure, c'est bien ! Visage plein, barré d'un large sourire, Julien Freund se tient sur le pas de sa porte. - J'ai réservé à l'endroit habituel, poursuit-il. Il enfile un anorak, ajuste un béret sur une brosse impeccable et se saisit de sa canne.