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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Comet, Susan Rich Ms
Comet, Susan Rich Ms
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
Comet was born from the author's Fulbright year living and walking in South Africa in the first year of President Nelson Mandela's term in office. The poem takes on race from the uncomfortable perspective of a Jewish, working class, white woman.
Disrupting White Fragility And Colorblind Racism: Using Games To Measure How Race And Ethnicity Courses Change Students’ Racial Ideologies, Alicia L. Brunson, Christopher Benedict Cartright
Disrupting White Fragility And Colorblind Racism: Using Games To Measure How Race And Ethnicity Courses Change Students’ Racial Ideologies, Alicia L. Brunson, Christopher Benedict Cartright
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
This research provides instructors teaching race and ethnicity a tool to assess the racial ideologies of their students in the form of “race talk.” In particular, Bonilla-Silva’s (2010) concepts denoting colorblindness and DiAngelo’s (2018) concept of white fragility were measured before and after completing one race and ethnicity course by having students play a live version of the game “Guess Who” (Hasbro Co.). At the end of the course, student responses during the game, and their subsequent reflections, revealed a significant decrease in white fragility. Using this game, instructors can assess students’ racial ideologies and whether or not they have …
Diversity And Its Discontents: Deepening The Discourse, Ragnhild Utheim
Diversity And Its Discontents: Deepening The Discourse, Ragnhild Utheim
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
This article explores the shifting meanings of diversity discourse from the classical demarcations associated with demographic groups to the individualized applicability the concept has assumed in recent years. The trend toward attenuated understandings of diversity comes at the risk of slighting historic hardship that groups of people have long endured. The analysis weaves student testimonies and teaching experience from the classroom together with existing research and critical theory on diversity. In emphasizing the need to honor legacies of oppression among particular groups, while animating the possibilities that shared experiences across expansive human variation provide, the author includes feedback from classes …
It’S Not Just About Civility: How Procedural Fairness And Social Capital Can Cure Congressional Gridlock, Jolie Libert
It’S Not Just About Civility: How Procedural Fairness And Social Capital Can Cure Congressional Gridlock, Jolie Libert
The Commons: Puget Sound Journal of Politics
Undeniably, our country has reached a moment of heightened partisan competition. Political polarization, negative partisanship, the disappearance of institutionalism, and the tribal nature of our two-party system all point to the dysfunction that Congress currently experiences. Some have called for a restoration of civility in both political rhetoric and actions, yet civility might just be the ultimate lost cause in Washington. Congressional gridlock cannot be cured with civility as niceness. Looking at how Jim Wright (D) and Newt Gingrich (R) conducted their political business, each while Speaker of the House, serve as case studies that provide an understanding of how …
Civil-Military Relations In Russia, Jeremy Lennon
Civil-Military Relations In Russia, Jeremy Lennon
The Commons: Puget Sound Journal of Politics
This policy-oriented work evaluates Russian civil-military relations with a focus on their development under Vladimir Putin. This essay examines how key events and actors have shaped civil-military relations in the context of overarching structural limitations on reform related to economic performance, institutionalized knowledge and geopolitical competition. The disparity between the military’s preferred anti-Western security policy, Russia’s economic state, and the goals of civil politicians led to the dereliction of the Russian military throughout the 1990s and early-2000s. Only with Vladimir Putin’s consolidation of political power, were these three factors slowly brought into greater alignment, thus allowing for meaningful reform of …
Tattoos In East Asia: Conforming To Individualism, Morgan Macfarlane
Tattoos In East Asia: Conforming To Individualism, Morgan Macfarlane
The Commons: Puget Sound Journal of Politics
Although Japan, South Korea, and China share a similar history of tattoo criminality spanning thousands of years, in modern times they all hold different legal policies concerning the practice of tattooing. South Korea has the strictest laws, requiring a medical doctorate to legally tattoo, while Japan has only recently reaffirmed the legality of the practice outside of health professionals. China, on the other hand, has few restrictions on body art. This paper explores this interesting difference via observational fieldwork in the major cities of Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai and Beijing as well as interviews with local people within and outside the …
Modern Military Weaponry And (Un)Sustainable Treatment Of The Environment, Melanie Siacotos
Modern Military Weaponry And (Un)Sustainable Treatment Of The Environment, Melanie Siacotos
The Commons: Puget Sound Journal of Politics
An often ignored aspect of environmental degradation in the modern age is military pollution. How has the military impacted environmental health over time, from ancient Rome to the Marshall Islands? This paper compares and contrasts types of environmental degradation, like chemical warfare and deforestation, and attempts to lay out the steep increase in their negative impact following industrialization in the west entering into the 20th century. The paper concludes that a different understanding of human relationship with the earth is necessary to combat environmental degradation going forward.
Analyzing Threat: Organized Extremist Groups Vs. Lone Wolf Terrorists In The Context Of Islamist Extremism, Adeline W. Toevs
Analyzing Threat: Organized Extremist Groups Vs. Lone Wolf Terrorists In The Context Of Islamist Extremism, Adeline W. Toevs
The Commons: Puget Sound Journal of Politics
Lone wolf terrorism lends itself to the execution of large numbers of people and the spread of extremist ideology, but they pose less of a threat to Western nations than organized extremist groups. Lone attacks require less strategy and funding, fewer resources, are more difficult to target with state counterterrorism campaigns, and can penetrate ‘high security’ states more effectively than groups, so the attacks are more likely to succeed. Additionally, lone actors are highly susceptible to propaganda and messaging from extremist groups, and they are often radicalized online, making them difficult to track. Conversely, when organized extremist groups do manage …
Where In The World Is The Black Educator? Teacher Shortage As Manufactured Crisis, Matthew D. Davis
Where In The World Is The Black Educator? Teacher Shortage As Manufactured Crisis, Matthew D. Davis
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
This exploration of “teacher shortage as manufactured crisis” uses five narratives from the archives that have arisen from one Midwestern (but still, decidedly, Border South) urban center: the St. Louis, Missouri, region. These narratives are an attempt to tap into Sankofa while looking toward a more just and equitable future
Building Racial Coalitions: Limitations And New Directions To Teaching “White Privilege”, Eric César Morales
Building Racial Coalitions: Limitations And New Directions To Teaching “White Privilege”, Eric César Morales
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
In this article, I pull from critical race theory, psychology, and philosophy to deconstruct the underlying psychological components that lead to “white fragility,” and I explore the limitations in current pedagogical approaches to teaching privilege. I argue that we adopt a more nuanced and context based understanding of “white privilege,” one that breaks down the concept into its two constituent parts: the “privilege/adversity paradigm” and “colonizer alignment privilege.” In the former, basic human physical or cultural traits are presented to students as capable of being beneficial or detrimental depending on context. In the latter, the ways in which people create …
Naming Resistance And Religion In The Teaching Of Race And White Supremacy: A Pedagogy Of Counter-Signification For Black Lives Matter, Martin Nguyen
Naming Resistance And Religion In The Teaching Of Race And White Supremacy: A Pedagogy Of Counter-Signification For Black Lives Matter, Martin Nguyen
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
The need to bring religion into our teaching of race and white supremacy is critically important, but by simply naming it, we take the first step in inviting our students to understand the how’s and why’s of it. The pedagogy of naming described herein, which is inspired by the #BlackLivesMatter movement, is theoretically grounded in the theory of signification and counter-signification developed by scholars of religion, Charles H. Long and Richard Brent Turner. I explore how the act of naming, as a form of signification, can be employed to heuristically structure intersectional considerations of religion in the teaching of a …
Handle With Care: Anti-Racist Teaching In A White School, Robbie Wood
Handle With Care: Anti-Racist Teaching In A White School, Robbie Wood
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
A Series Of Decisions And Actions, Dylan Richmond
A Series Of Decisions And Actions, Dylan Richmond
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
Coming To Consciousness: Reworking Racial Tensions In Student Teaching, Hayley Rathburn
Coming To Consciousness: Reworking Racial Tensions In Student Teaching, Hayley Rathburn
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
The History And Future Of Music Education: Appropriation Vs. Appreciation, Sheri-Ann Nishiyama
The History And Future Of Music Education: Appropriation Vs. Appreciation, Sheri-Ann Nishiyama
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
Up Against A Wall: Combating Fatigue And Oppression In Antiracist Education, Erika Horwege
Up Against A Wall: Combating Fatigue And Oppression In Antiracist Education, Erika Horwege
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
Windows & Mirrors: A Collection Of Upper Elementary Chapter Books With Protagonist, Erica Gott
Windows & Mirrors: A Collection Of Upper Elementary Chapter Books With Protagonist, Erica Gott
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
Facilitating Conflict Repair Between Students, Julianne Bonnell
Facilitating Conflict Repair Between Students, Julianne Bonnell
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
No abstract provided.
Engaging Teaching Dilemmas To Foster Culturally Responsive And Antiracist Teaching Practice, Mary Boer, Latoya Brackett, Fred L. Hamel, Molly Pugh, Amy E. Ryken
Engaging Teaching Dilemmas To Foster Culturally Responsive And Antiracist Teaching Practice, Mary Boer, Latoya Brackett, Fred L. Hamel, Molly Pugh, Amy E. Ryken
Race and Pedagogy Journal: Teaching and Learning for Justice
This special Issue of the Race and Pedagogy Journal features artist statements and images of projects created by Master of Arts in Teaching candidates in their master’s coursework focused on developing anti-racist and culturally responsive teaching practices.