Civil Rights - American history
What are the politics of respectability?
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2963600
ARTICLE
CLASS CONTRADICTIONS IN THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT:
THE POLITICS OF RESPECTABILITY, DISRESPECT, AND SELF-
RESPECT
Harold A. McDougall*
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................45
I. THE ROLE OF NARRATIVE IN HUMAN HISTORY .............................46
II. RACISM IN THE UNITED STATES: NARRATIVE AND COUNTER-
NARRATIVE ...................................................................................49
III. THE POLITICS OF RESPECTABILITY ................................................50
IV. THE POLITICS OF DISRESPECT .......................................................56
V. THE POLITICS OF SELF-RESPECT ...................................................60
A. The Black Nationalist Project ...........................................61
B. Stories of Self-Respect ........................................................64
VI. FACING THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN NARRATIVE DILEMMA:
CONVERSATIONS WITH HOWARD LAW STUDENTS ........................67
A. Black Lives Matter ............................................................69
B. The National Association of the Southern Poor ................75
CONCLUSION .........................................................................................80
INTRODUCTION
In 2014, nationwide protests over police harassment and
brutality towards African-Americans surprised many, not only with
their passion and broad base, but also by their general disconnection
from the civil rights establishment. Similar to the student sit-ins of the
1960s, bright and passionate young people surged forward without the
sanction—or even the knowledge—of established leaders. Much as
their predecessors fifty years before,1 the establishment in 2014 sought
*
Professor of Law, Howard University. BA magna cum laude, Harvard, 1967; J.D. Yale, 1971. I presented
an outline of this paper at the Duke Law School conference on the Present and Future of Civil Rights
Movements in November 2015, and received welcome research supported from my Dean, Danielle Holley-
Walker. Special thanks to Profs. Anthony Alfieri, John Brittain, Kevin Johnson, Gerald Lopez, and Shauna
Marshall for helpful comments, and to my research assistants Monique Peterkin, Tabias Wilson, Ebony
Johnson, and Brooke Oki, who did most of the heavy lifting.
1 See Harold McDougall, I Have A Dream: Bring Back SNCC, HUFFINGTON POST (Aug. 28, 2013, 2:12
PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harold-a-mcdougall/sncc-civil-rights-movement_b_3828787.html.
45
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2963600
HOWARD HUMAN & CIVIL RIGHTS LAW REVIEW
to get out in front of these young protesters, channel them into approved
and controlled activities, minimize any damage to the establishment
donor/patronage base, and exploit their energy to advance the
establishment agenda.2
However, there has been pushback. These young people see
their constituency as the poor and working class of the African-
American community, the ghetto dwellers who occupy ground zero in
conflicts with police, rather than the more affluent classes from which
so many of them come.3 Moreover, a significantly larger number of
today’s protesters and protest organizers are from the affected
communities themselves.4 These latter participants are often suspicious
of established civil rights leadership as well.5
This paper will explore class tensions that have bedeviled the
civil rights movement since its very beginning, yielding conflicting
narratives and patterns of activity, and ultimately resulting in the
disorder we see today. This paper will also address how we might
identify the best these narratives and patterns of activity have to offer,
marshalling, and synthesizing them into a more productive approach.
I believe the key is to develop “civic infrastructure” in the
African-American community, so the raw energy of today’s protests
does not ebb and disappear, leaving behind no fundamental
improvement. The National Association of the Southern Poor (NASP),
discussed in the final section of the paper, provides an example of the
kind of civic infrastructure I have in mind.
I. THE ROLE OF NARRATIVE IN HUMAN HISTORY
Human beings of various species have been on the planet for
approximately 2.5 million years. Our own species, Homo sapiens, has
been here for only 200,000 years. All previous species, and our own
until just 12,000 years ago, lived as hunter-gatherers. Our biological
2 See Harold McDougall, ‘American Spring’? HUFFINGTON POST (Dec. 10, 2014, 9:57 PM),
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harold-a-mcdougall/american-spring_b_6292942.html.
3 My research assistant Tabias Wilson provides an example. Tabias was one of the founders of Occupy
Boston, and went on to help start various antiracist offshoots, such as Occupy the Hood. See Stacey Patton,
Black Youth Respond to the Occupy Movement, BLACK YOUTH PROJECT, (Nov. 25, 2011),
http://research.blackyouthproject.com/byp-presents/black-youth-respond-to-occupy-movement/.
4 See, e.g., Kellan Howell, Baltimore Riots Sparked not by Race but by Class Tensions Between Police,
Poor, WASH. TIMES (Apr. 29, 2015), http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/apr/29/baltimore-riots-
sparked-not-by-race-but-by-class-t/?page=all.
5 Describing his work in Boston, Tabias Wilson experienced the “establishment, full-integrationist” civil
rights leaders as overly concerned that the youth not “squander the moment” by their lack of “respect” and
“respectability” vis-à-vis the white majority establishment.
46
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2963600
CLASS CONTRADICTIONS
makeup, our DNA, evolved in congruence with this lifestyle6—few
possessions, high levels of mobility, a spare diet, and living in small
bands of about two dozen, bound together by empathic connection.7
This means our DNA programs us to trust people whom we
know personally.8 The emergence of fictive language, of “narrative,”
about 70,000 years ago (the “Cognitive Revolution”) made it possible
for us to work together on slightly less intimate terms, knitted together
by gossip into bands of about 150 people.9 This diminished our
empathic connections somewhat,10 but our small-group DNA remained
relatively undisturbed.
Twelve thousand years ago, an even more radical change
occurred in human society, the “Agricultural Revolution.”11 Humans
domesticated animals and plants12 and narratives emerged rationalizing
human dominance over nature.13 Interestingly, these narratives also
rationalized the dominance of some human beings over others,
dwindling empathic connection even more.14
These new narratives enabled us to work together in groups of
thousands, and eventually millions. They also assigned specific roles to
their adherents, dividing them by gender and work function. Typically,
these assigned roles formed a hierarchy, pyramidal in character, with a
large number of people at the bottom doing the “grunt” work and the
small elite at the top doing the planning, thinking, and relaxing.15 First
6 PAUL SHEPARD, COMING HOME TO THE PLEISTOCENE (2004), http://www.amazon.com/Coming-Home-
Pleistocene-Paul-Shepard/dp/1559635908 (“[O]ur essential human nature is a product of our genetic
heritage, formed through thousands of years of evolution during the Pleistocene epoch, and . . . the current
subversion of that Pleistocene heritage lies at the heart of today’s ecological and social ills . . . .”).
7 Jeremy Rifkin, The Empathic Civilization: Rethinking Human Nature in the Biosphere Era, HUFFINGTON
POST (Mar. 18, 2010), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeremy-rifkin/the-empathic-
civilization_b_416589.html.
8 Id.
9 YUVAL NOAH HARARI, SAPIENS: A BRIEF HISTORY OF HUMANKIND 133 (2015) (Sapiens are distinguished
by our ability to believe in fictions. The cognitive revolutions starts with the first set of hypothetical stories
we allow ourselves to believe in whether they are true or not . . . Our fictions allow us to cooperate. They
give us the imaginary order that is necessary for societies to act together. Amazon Customer Reviews: By
Gary on Feb. 25, 2015).
10 HARARI, supra note 9, at 105 (“All these cooperation networks . . . were ‘imagined orders.’ The social
norms that sustained them were neither based in ingrained instincts nor on personal acquaintances, but rather
on belief in shared myths.”).
11 HARARI, supra note 9, at 48.
12 See JARED DIAMOND, GUNS, GERMS AND STEEL (1997),
http://www.jareddiamond.org/Jared_Diamond/Guns,_Germs,_and_Steel.html.
13 HARARI, supra note 9, at 92-93 (describing means of subordinating and controlling animals, eerily
reminiscent of later techniques for controlling slaves: “In order to turn bulls, horses, donkeys and camels
into obedient draught animals, their natural instincts and social ties had to be broken, their aggression and
sexuality contained, and their freedom of movement curtailed.”).
14 HARARI, supra note 9, at 102.
15 See HARARI, supra note 9, at 81 (asserting that sedentary living begets cruelty and empathy issues).
47
HOWARD HUMAN & CIVIL RIGHTS LAW REVIEW
came the theocracies,16 monarchies and patriarchy of early agricultural
society.17 As time went on, feudalism, capitalism,18 nationalism,
slavery, colonialism, racism,19 imperialism, and many others emerged.
Whatever the prevailing narrative, our physiologically based
empathic impulses20 must be suppressed by education, training or a
force to support it.21 We are not allowed to feel empathy for those lower
on the ladder in our own social narrative, or for adherents to a social
narrative that rivals our own. This compromises our ability to find our
way through personal association, or even gossip, so more and more, we
take the word of our leaders in the social narrative—priests, kings, and
eventually politicians—instead of relying on empathic connection. This
makes us even easier to manipulate, as suppressed empathy creates
social and human space for violence and mistrust.22
These narratives objectify us—by race, gender, class, sexual
orientation, national origin, religion, and so forth.23 This objectification
prompts us to ask our fellow human beings what they are rather than
who they are, marking the objectification of us all.
There is more. Not only must we ask “what meta-narrative
describes you,” but also “where do you fit in the hierarchy it
establishes?” Are you manly enough, womanly enough, black enough,
white enough, rich enough, devout enough to stand at the top of the
heap? If not, what lesser position do you occupy?24 What is your role in
driving the social, political, and economic machinery—beliefs, customs
and practices, institutions, organizations, laws—the narrative coheres?25
16 Id. at 218-19.
17 Id. at 172.
18 Id. at 352-53.
19
Id. at 134.
20 See, e.g., Harold McDougall, Empathy Depletion: An Environmental Hazard, HUFFINGTON POST (June
17, 2014, 2:53 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harold-a-mcdougall/empathy-depletion-an-
envi_2_b_5436807.html. (citing JEREMY RIFKIN, THE EMPATHIC CIVILIZATION: THE RACE TO GLOBAL
CONSCIOUSNESS IN A WORLD IN CRISIS (2009)).
21 HARARI, supra note 9, at 111 (violence needed to maintain the existing order).
22 Indeed, our biologically based empathic impulses can atrophy without real ties to others; their suppression
by “imagined” narratives that privilege elites can lead to violence. See, e.g., Empathy Depletion, supra note
20.
23 Note the grounding of narrative classification in the first written languages, developed to count and
classify in sedentary agricultural societies, about 12,000 years ago.
24 With real human connection, at the genetically appropriate scale—a dozen or two—we can still ask
questions, but they are relevant to real life. What are your likes and dislikes, strengths and weaknesses?
How can your particular talents be of help to me and to the ones I love? Can I trust you? (Note that 80% of
human communication is still nonverbal, seriously handicapping us in age of increasing electronic
communication. See Sherry Turkle, Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age, THE
DIANE REHM SHOW (Oct. 19, 2015, 11:00 AM), http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2015-10-19/sherry-
turkle-reclaiming-conversation-the-power-of-talk-in-a-digital-age).
25 See Harold McDougall, For Critical Race Practitioners: Race, Racism and American Law (4th ed.) by
Derrick A. Bell, Jr., 46 HOW. L.J. 1 (2002) (citing Paul Costello, Racism and Black Oppression in the United
States: A Beginning Analysis, 24 THEORETICAL REV. 11 (1981)).
48
CLASS CONTRADICTIONS
Such is the nature of the narrative about race, particularly in the
United States, with its foundations in the slave south.26 Despite the
narrative’s southern origins, the institution of slavery and the narrative
that rationalized it was so central to the political economy and social life
of all Thirteen Colonies27 that they broke away from England rather than
risk the abolitionism that was on the rise in the mother country.28
II. RACISM IN THE UNITED STATES: NARRATIVE AND COUNTER-
NARRATIVE
Race, class and gender narratives emerging in the ante-bellum
slave south operated not only to support the institution of slavery itself,
but also to rationalize the race, class, and gender hierarchies incidental
to it.29 Characters in these narratives included the white southern
gentleman and the white southern belle, the subservient and
emasculated “Uncle Tom,” the “black mammy,” the “bad Negro,” the
“black Jezebel,”30 and “white trash.”31
These characters and narratives assumed an importance beyond
the Southern region. The South contributed a gendered and classed
ideology of whiteness to the nation after slavery ended,32 becoming
“ideologically dominant in shaping the narrative of national selfhood,”33
providing a Rosetta Stone for American racism nationwide. The Great
Migration spurred the nationalization of the black characters and the
narratives they occupy, bringing large numbers of blacks to Northern,
Midwestern, and eventually Far Western cities as well.34 The
26 Cf. HARARI, supra note 9, at 140-43 (race divisions in the Americas).
27 Email from Professor Gerald Horne, John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History, Univ. of Houston,
Texas to Professor Harold (Sept. 15, 2015) (on file with author). (“The US was a step forward from the
religious axis of society that had bedeviled Europe but this was replaced with a different axis, ‘white’ vs.
‘non-white’—but more than this, perpetual punishment of the descendants of mainland enslaved
Africans.”).
28 See Interview with Gerald Horne, “Counter-Revolution of 1776”: Was U.S. Independence War a
Conservative Revolt in Favor of Slavery? Democracy Now, June 17, 2014,
http://www.democracynow.org/2014/6/27/counter_revolution_of_1776_was_us (discussing Gerald Horne,
The Counter-Revolution of 1776: Slave Resistance and the Origins of the United States of America, (2014);
see also Somerset v. Stewart, 98 ER 499 (1772)).
29 See generally RICHÉ RICHARDSON, BLACK MASCULINITY AND THE U.S. SOUTH: FROM UNCLE TOM TO
GANGSTA 232 (2007) (Kindle version).
30 See RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 59-60, 71; see also Taylor Gordon, Black Women in the Media:
Mammy, Jezebel, or Angry, ATLANTA BLACK STAR (Mar. 4, 2013),
http://atlantablackstar.com/2013/03/04/black-women-in-the-media-mammy-jezebel-or-angry/.
31 No matter how low on the social scale they might be, they were still superior to every black person in the
Southern narrative, now nationalized to the entire U.S. See RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 125.
32 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 10, 67, 75.
33 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 56; see also id. at 232-33.
34 See generally Isabel Wilkerson, THE WARMTH OF OTHER SUNS: THE EPIC STORY OF AMERICA’S GREAT
MIGRATION (2010); cf. RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 220.
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HOWARD HUMAN & CIVIL RIGHTS LAW REVIEW
nationalization of the white characters and their supporting narratives is
more complex; in this paper, we will touch on that phenomenon only
lightly.35 In short, Whiteness became a prized club to which only people
of European descent could belong (if they played by the rules).36
III. THE POLITICS OF RESPECTABILITY
Some years after emancipation, middle-class black males began
striving to create a “gentleman” persona,37 a counter-narrative to the
prevailing slave stereotypes. Black women could not be “belles,” but
they tried to be “ladies.” Elite black men and women thus sought to
adhere to the rules of the “whiteness” club38 as closely as possible (or
rather, as closely as they were permitted). Herein, the politics of
respectability was born.39
Prof. Frederick C. Harris, Director of the Center on African-
American Politics and Society at Columbia University, describes the
politics of respectability as a philosophy first promulgated by “black
elites to ‘uplift the race’ by correcting the ‘bad’ traits of the black
poor.”40 Indeed, as early as the beginnings of the Great Migration,
middle-class black organizations, such as the National Urban League,
distributed pamphlets to poor and new arrivals instructing them on
“respectable” behavior. They were not to use profanity or talk loudly in
public, for example.41 “Respectability” role-players invented a model
black citizen/class, but they required no concessions from the white
ruling class. Indeed, they often played their roles in the shadow of white
intemperance and violence.42
For black males, attempting to conform to the white narrative,
despite this imbalance, meant “manliness” often had to take a back seat,
35 See. e.g., RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 9-10 (Birth of a Nation); see also id. at 74-75 (Southern “manly”
military tradition incorporated into US Army).
36 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 69. Cf. Karen Grigsby Bates, The Whiteness Project: Facing Race In A
Changing America, NAT’L PUB. RADIO (Dec. 21, 2014), http://www.npr.org/2014/12/21/371679777/the-
whiteness-project-facing-race-in-a-changing-america.
37 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 75 (“[t]he class and cultural ambitions of some elite black men” were
shaped by the ideology of white maleness, “even if it was premised on their very exclusion.”).
38 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 69.
39 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 28.
40 Frederick C. Harris, Rise of Respectability Politics, DISSENT, (Winter 2014), at 2,
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/article/the-rise-of-respectability-politics.
41 See RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 77; see also id. at 144 (citing Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man to similar
affect.). Such approaches continued at least until the 1960s. See John McWhorter, It’s About Time Obama
Stuck up for His ‘Respectability Politics’, WASH. POST (May 14, 2015),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2015/05/14/its-about-time-obama-stuck-up-for-his-
respectability-politics/.
42 Leland Ware and Theodore Davis, Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Time: The Black Middle Class
in the Age of Obama, 55 HOW. L.J. 533, 535 (2012).
50
CLASS CONTRADICTIONS
suggesting a certain level of weakness.43 The politics of respectability
thus brought male practitioners dangerously close to the “Uncle Tom”
stereotype,44 a stereotype many black men take pains to avoid.45 Black
militants of the 1960s often perceived middle-class, “respectable” male
civil rights leaders as “Uncle Toms” for precisely this reason.46
Today, practitioners of the politics of respectability seek
advancement through communion with prevailing majority group
structures of political, economic, and social power.47 They seek upper-
middle class status within those structures by approximating white
dialect, dress, profession and physical space.48 “Respectability”
practitioners who succeed in these endeavors gain access to mainstream
“sociopolitical capital”—the ability to infiltrate “institutions,
government and other organizations.”49
Though respectability practitioners today have muted their
overtly submissive response to white dominance, they continue to
preach assimilation to white culture, apparently their only marker for
true success. Blackness, on the other hand, is associated with laziness,
with financially well-off black folks the exception to the rule.50
Respectability politics seems quite comfortable with the idea that
“problems for [unsuccessful] African-Americans are rooted in absent
black fathers and failures of blacks to do enough to help themselves.”51
Bill Cosby’s diatribes against the black poor provided a
particularly unfortunate example of respectability practitioners seeking
to find “interest convergence” with upper-middle-class whites.52 In his
43
RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 6 (citing PHILLIP BRIAN HARPER, ARE WE NOT MEN: MASCULINE
ANXIETY AND THE PROBLEM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY ix (1996)).
44 Harold McDougall, Guns, Machismo, Martin and Zimmerman, HUFFINGTON POST (July 17, 2013, 12:43
PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harold-a-mcdougall/george-zimmerman-guns
masculinity_b_3600456.html.
45 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 6 (citing HARPER, supra note 43, at ix).
46 RICHARDSON, supra note 29, at 49-52.
47 Ware and Davis, supra note 43, at 537-38.
48 Memorandum from Tabias Wilson for Professor Harold McDougall (Aug. 1, 2015) (on file with author);
Ware and Davis, supra note 42, at 536-39.
49 Tabias Wilson cites black entrepreneurs, HBCU leadership, and federal political leaders as examples.
Memorandum from Tabias Wilson for Professor Harold McDougall (June 30, 2015) (on file with author).
50 Memorandum from Tabias Wilson reflecting on Chapter 1 of BLACK BALTIMORE for Professor Harold
McDougall, (July 8, 2015) (on file with author).
51 Jessica Washington & Perry Bacon Jr., How ‘Black Lives Matter’ Activists Are Shaping the 2016
Campaign, NBC NEWS (July 31, 2015, 5:00 AM), http://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/how-black-lives-
matter-activists-are-shaping-2016-campaign-n401146.
52 Cf. Prof. Derrick Bell’s “interest convergence theory,” which “holds that whites will support minority
rights only when it’s in their interest as well. For example, [Bell] saw the Supreme Court’s landmark 1954
school-desegregation decision, Brown v. Board of Education, as a part of a Cold War effort to improve
America’s standing among Third World countries.” Will Oremus, Did Obama Hug a Radical?, SLATE (Mar.
9 2012),
51
HOWARD HUMAN & CIVIL RIGHTS LAW REVIEW
May 2004 speech at an NAACP event celebrating the fiftieth
anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education decision, Cosby
characterized poor black males as “knuckleheads [who are] walking
around [not wanting to] learn English.”53 He scorned black vernacular
speech as less than “respectable.”54 Michael Eric Dyson, one of Cosby’s
critics and a person with working-class origins, identified Cosby’s
screed as especially dangerous because it “aggressively ignore[d]
[w]hite society’s responsibility in creating the problems he want[ed] the
poor to fix on their own.”55
An important by-product of the politics of respectability is the
spatial segregation of the black community by class.56 The 1968 Fair
Housing Act allowed Blacks to access white suburban neighborhoods
for the first time.57 “Black flight” ensued, as the black middle-class
moved from the inner cities into suburban neighborhoods that better
reflected their class position.58
Since this transition, the proportion of Blacks in the middle class
has more than doubled.59 However, the number of poor Blacks living in
extremely poor inner-city neighborhoods has also doubled.60 In fact, the
disparity between the top and bottom fifth of the Black population in
terms of income, education, victimization by violence, and job status is
now greater than the disparity between the top and bottom fifth of the
white population.61
A class divide has thus emerged, with poor and working-class
Blacks on one side, and the Black middle-class on the other. William
Julius Wilson, for example, argues that “[t]he economic advancement
of the most privileged members of the black community and the
ongoing subordination of economically disadvantaged blacks means
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/explainer/2012/03/derrick_bell_controversy_what_s_crit
ical_race_theory_and_is_it_radical_.html.
53 Steven King, Bill Cosby on Civil Rights, WASH. POST (May 23, 2004), www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/audio/2005/05/02/AU2005050201059.html.
54 Ms. Peterkin notes the irony of Cosby’s present crucifixion by the white media, exploiting the stereotype
of the hyper-sexualized black male, placing Cosby outside the respectability politics he once preached.
Memorandum from Monique Peterkin for Professor Harold McDougall (July 16, 2015) (on file with author).
55 Michael Eric Dyson, Is Bill Cosby Right? Or Has the Black Middle Class Lost Its Mind?, HARV. EDUC.
REV., http://hepg.org/her-home/issues/harvard-educational-review-volume-76-issue-2/herbooknote/is-bill-
cosby-right-_11.
56 Ware and Davis, supra note 42, at 562-67.
57 Karyn Lacy, Race, Privilege and the Growing Class Divide, 38 ETHNIC & RACIAL STUD. REV. 1246,
1247 (2015).
58 Id. at 1248.
59 See generally Zoltan L. Hajnal, Black Class Exceptionalism: Insights from Direct Democracy on the Race
Versus Class Debate, 71 PUB. OPINION Q. 560 (2007); see Ware and Davis, supra note 42, at 533-35.
60 Hajnal, supra note 59, at 560.
61 Id. at 561.
52
CLASS CONTRADICTIONS
that it no longer makes sense to think of blacks as one homogenous
group.”62
Low income and working class Blacks often have conflicting
objectives with middle and upper class Black Americans, despite
middle-class, “respectable” black organizations’ claims to speak for all.
Many middle-class Blacks are “[h]omeowners, concentrated in suburbia
and financially stable, allowing them to provide their children with
luxuries such as their own car when they turn sixteen and a prestigious
private school education.”63 Middle-class Blacks who never resided in
poor neighborhoods may not appreciate the experiences of poor and
working-class Blacks.64 Poor and working-class Blacks face issues such
as lack of educational resources, employment opportunities, and
neighborhood violence, for example.
Black flight from segregated, inner-city neighborhoods may
have been a “necessary survival act for middle and upper class
blacks.”65 At the same time, the Black elite’s increasing stake in
American capitalism has prompted its “most vocal leaders to [take] up
the role of policing the majority of Blacks left behind,”66 causing one
author to postulate a “Black silent majority.”67 Another author calls
those left behind “the Abandoned,” referring to them as “a large and
growing underclass concentrated in the inner cities and depressed
pockets of the rural South . . . [in danger of] permanent pathology and
underclass status . . . .”68
In the wake of the “American Spring” protests around police
violence toward members of the black community, “respectable” groups
responded with myriad conferences, attended almost exclusively by
establishment types.69 Their primary approach is to appeal to the moral
62 Lacy, supra note 57, at 1248.
63 Lacy, supra note 57, at 1249.
64 Susan Welch & Lorn Foster, Class and Conservatism in the Black Community, 15 AM. POL. Q. 445 (1987)
(suggesting middle-class Blacks are more conservative in their views compared with poor-working class
Blacks).
65 Wilson, supra note 50.
66 Petersen-Smith, infra note 72.
67 Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Punitive Aspirations, N.Y. TIMES SUNDAY BOOK REVIEW (Sept. 27, 2015), …
The Art of Protest
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The Art of Protest
Culture and Activism from the Civil Rights
Movement to the Streets of Seattle
T. V. Reed
University of Minnesota Press
Minneapolis • London
The companion Web site to The Art of Protest includes audio and visual materials,
bibliographies, discographies, filmographies, and links to historical and current
social movements, as well as a supplementary chapter, “Peace Symbols: Posters in
Movements against the Wars in Vietnam and Iraq.” Visit the book’s Web site at
http://www.upress.umn.edu/artofprotest.
Lines from “A Poem about My Rights,” by June Jordan, are from Naming Our
Destiny: New and Selected Poems (New York: Thunder’s Mouth Press, 1989).
Copyright 1989 by June Jordan. Reprinted by permission of the publisher
Thunder’s Mouth Press, a division of Avalon Publishing Group.
Lines from “Trying to Talk with a Man,” by Adrienne Rich, are from The Fact of a
Doorframe: Selected Poems, 1950–2001 (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.,
1973). Copyright 2002 by Adrienne Rich, copyright 1973 by W. W. Norton &
Company, Inc. Reprinted by permission of the author and W. W. Norton &
Company, Inc.
An earlier version of chapter 5 appeared in Wicazo Sa Review 16, no. 2 (2001):
75–96. An earlier version of chapter 6 appeared in Cercles 3 (2001). Portions of
chapter 8 appeared as “Toward an Environmental Justice Ecocriticism,” in Joni
Adamson, Mei Mei Evans, and Rachel Stein, eds., The Environmental Justice Reader
(Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2003).
Copyright 2005 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota
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Reed, T. V. (Thomas Vernon)
The art of protest : culture and activism from the civil rights movement to
the streets of Seattle / T. V. Reed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8166-3770-9 (hc : alk. paper) — ISBN 0-8166-3771-7 (pb : alk. paper)
1. Radicalism — United States. 2. Protest movements — United States.
3. Social movements in art. 4. Social movements in literature. 5. Radicalism
in art. 6. Radicalism in literature. 7. Radicalism — Songs and music — History
and criticism. I. Title.
HN90.R3R395 2005
303.48'4 — dc22 2005011442
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
The University of Minnesota is an equal-opportunity educator and employer.
12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
http://www.upress.umn.edu/artofprotest
http://www.upress.umn.edu
This book is dedicated to Ella Baker, Bernice Johnson Reagon,
and the millions of political-cultural workers, past, present, and
future, who march alongside them toward freedom and justice.
This page intentionally left blank
Beauty walks a razor’s edge
— Bob Dylan
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Acknowledgments xi
Introduction xiii
ONE
Singing Civil Rights: The Freedom Song Tradition 1
TWO
Scenarios for Revolution: The Drama of the Black Panthers 40
THREE
The Poetical Is the Political:
Feminist Poetry and the Poetics of Women’s Rights 75
FOUR
Revolutionary Walls: Chicano/a Murals, Chicano/a Movements 103
FIVE
Old Cowboys, New Indians:
Hollywood Frames the American Indian Movement 129
SIX
“We Are [Not] the World”:
Famine, Apartheid, and the Politics of Rock Music 156
SEVEN
ACTing UP against AIDS:
The (Very) Graphic Arts in a Moment of Crisis 179
EIGHT
Environmental Justice Ecocriticism:
Race, Class, Gender, and Literary Ecologies 218
NINE
Will the Revolution Be Cybercast?
New Media, the Battle of Seattle, and Global Justice 240
Contents
TEN
Reflections on the Cultural Study of Social Movements 286
Notes 317
Index 345
All books are collective projects, but one of this scope is more than usu-
ally indebted to a host of people who helped make it possible. The map
that eventually became the territory of this book was first produced with
the aid of a Mellon Fellowship at the Humanities Center of Wesleyan
University. During my year there I was particularly grateful for the sup-
port of Richard Ohmann and for the friendship of Paula Rabinowitz,
the other “mellow felon” that cycle. At a crucial later stage in the project,
I received similar support from the Center for Cultural Studies at the
University of California, Santa Cruz. Center co-directors Gail Hershatter
and Chris Connolly provided a brilliantly stimulating environment, and
Hayden White quite literally gave me the space to work. The Fulbright
scholar program offered me the chance to work out some of the ideas in
this book with a bright group of students and faculty at Freie Universität
in Berlin, Germany. I am indebted to Margit Mayer and Bruce Spear for
their intellectual stimulation and hospitality during my stay there at the
John F. Kennedy Institut für Nordamerikastudien.
Among my many supportive colleagues in the American studies pro-
gram and English department at Washington State University, I would
especially like to thank Joan Burbick, Alex Hammond, Alex Kuo, Victor
Villanueva, Sue Armitage, and Shawn Michelle Smith for their friendship
and inspiring examples of committed scholarship and pedagogy. Among
my friends in the Santa Cruz diaspora, I especially thank Katie King,
Chela Sandoval, Barry Schwartz, Zoe Sofoulis, and Don Beggs. A number
of graduate students at Washington State also gave support and insight
xi
Acknowledgments
as the project evolved. I note in particular the influence of Christina
Castañeda, John Hausdoerffer, Sarah Hentges, Azfar Hussain, Melissa
Hussain, Jennifer Mata, Lori Safin, Allyson Wolf, and Tony Zaragoza;
their scholarly activism and activist scholarship gives me hope for the
future.
Many of these chapters began as presentations at national meetings
of the American Studies Association, my larger academic home, and I
am grateful for the work of scholars Hazel Carby, Michael Cowan, Michael
Denning, Paul Lauter, George Lipsitz, Lisa Lowe, Alvina Quintana, Jan-
Michael Rivera, Vicki Ruiz, George Sanchez, Steve Sumida, and Robert
Warrior, among many others, who make those conferences such stimu-
lating intellectual sites. Lauter and Carlo Rotello also provided crucially
important critical readings of the book in manuscript.
A less direct but more fulsome debt is owed to hundreds of cultural
workers for justice (of whom for me Bernice Johnson Reagon was the
paradigm and remains the paragon), who created the committed “art of
change” my work attempts to reflect and reflect on. This book is a trib-
ute to these indefatigable cultural workers, in the hope that I have done
at least partial justice to their brilliant, unceasing efforts.
Closer to home, two people played an immense role in this book.
Scholar-activist Noël Sturgeon, both as a model of engaged intellectual-
political labor and as my most trusted consultant on the substance of
this work, is owed an incalculable debt. Hart Sturgeon-Reed, who grew
from infant to teenager during the production of this book, inspires me
with his intellectual acuity, lightens my life with his wit, and reminds
me constantly of why we must struggle to leave the next generation a
better foundation from which to fight the good fight for social, economic,
environmental, and cultural justice. I am deeply grateful to Noël and Hart
for their love, and offer mine back to them along with the “acknowledg-
ment” that they are the most important people in my world. The love
and support of my sister Linda Ware, my mother Alice Reed, and my
niece Michelle Spencer have also been a crucial part of the world out of
which this writing has emerged, as has been my connection to a host of
wonderful relatives in the Reed–Sturgeon network. Finally, many thanks
to scholar-activist-editor Richard Morrison and all the other folks at
the University of Minnesota Press who brought this book and the com-
panion Web site out into the wider world.
xii Acknowledgments
This book hopes to prove useful to three main types of readers. For stu-
dents and general readers new to the subject, it presents an introduction
to social movements through the rich, kaleidoscopic lens of artistic and
cultural expression. For scholars of social movements, it offers intrigu-
ing observations on particular movements and useful insights into var-
ious ways to think about the relations between culture and social change.
For activists, it seeks to offer inspiration and a tool kit of ideas about
how art and culture can further movement goals. These three sets of
readers overlap, of course, in the form of scholar activists or activist
students, but to the extent that they sometimes speak different languages,
or have different interests, I hope that each type of reader will be patient
when encountering portions of chapters that may speak more clearly to
another of these audiences. Finding a style equally appropriate to all
has been my goal, but no doubt I have not always succeeded.
Social movements — the unauthorized, unofficial, anti-institutional,
collective action of ordinary citizens trying to change their world — have
shaped our politics, our culture, and our political culture as much as
any other single force. Studying movements matters because they have
played crucial roles in making national and world history. I have focused
in this book on movements in the United States, but throughout I show
how those movements have been connected to global changes. The
United States was created through a social movement, the American
Revolution, and social movements have helped make and remake our
nation since. Social movements, as the term implies, have been a moving
Introduction
xiii
force, one of the most dynamic elements in the development of U.S. so-
ciety and the culture. In particular, I believe “progressive” social move-
ments like the ones at the heart of this book have been crucial in taking
the important but vague and still unfulfilled promises of “freedom” and
“democracy” announced in the revolution’s best known manifesto, the
Declaration of Independence, and given them more reality, more sub-
stance, and wider applicability to the majority of people — women, people
of color, the poor — who were initially excluded from those promises.
More than fifty years of scholarly analysis has not generated an agreed-
upon definition of social movements. But that is less of a problem than
one might think, since both ordinary folks and ordinary scholars, though
they may argue about borderline cases, know a movement when they
see one. And seeing one may be precisely the point. One of the foremost
scholars of social movements, Charles Tilly, argues convincingly that the
essence of movements entails “repeated public displays” of alternative
political and cultural values by a collection of people acting together out-
side officially sanctioned channels.1 (It is because those official channels
have failed some people that movements arise.) Movements, in contrast
to their tamer, more institutionalized cousins, political parties and lobby-
ists, seek to bring about social change primarily through the medium of
“repeated public displays,” or, as I would put it, through dramatic action.
I like Tilly’s definition because it plays to the prejudice of this book in
focusing on some of the most dramatic movements of the past several
decades. This book tells the stories of some key social movements in the
second half of the twentieth century. While movements can be found
across the political spectrum, I have limited myself to an interlinked set
on the “progressive,” left side of this spectrum. Within these limits, I have
chosen movements that I think have been especially important, but there
are many other equally worthy ones that I have been unable to include.
I make no claim to providing a comprehensive study of progressive
movements since the 1950s. But I believe this book gives a good sense of
major developments in a central tradition of dramatic protest, resistance,
and change. I hope my book inspires readers to delve more deeply into
movements and issues I can only touch the surface of, and into move-
ments I have been forced by constraints of time to omit or only glanc-
ingly mention.
At the same time, I have sought in other chapters to make clear that
as centrally important as dramatic, public action has been to social move-
xiv Introduction
ments, it is by no means the totality of their activity, or the sole source
of their impact. I have tried to show that dramatic actions are them-
selves the products of usually rather undramatic, mundane daily acts of
preparation, and that the impact of dramatic moments is only as great as
the follow-up forms of daily organizing that accompany them. In several
chapters, most obviously in those on the women’s and environmental
movements, I try to show that dramatic movement events happen in
other, less celebrated spaces, including apartment living rooms, aca-
demic offices, and classrooms.
The particular movements I have chosen to focus on have played and
continue to play a crucial role in expanding freedoms and giving greater
substance to the American claim to be a democracy of, by, and for “the
people.” In that sense, they are the movements that have, to paraphrase
poet Langston Hughes, made America America, a place that has not yet
been but one day yet must be a free and just society.2 These interlinked
movements, from the 1950s through the early twenty-first century, built
on ones that came before — from the revolution itself to the antislavery
movement, populist farmer and labor movements, woman’s suffrage,
and a host of others — and they built on each other as well.
The movements chronicled in this book begin with the great African
American civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. That movement
was not only of tremendous importance in itself, but it also created a
master framework for protest that set in play key ideas, tactics, and forms
of resistance for the many movements that soon followed. Indeed, many
of these subsequent movements are also, among other things, “civil rights”
struggles. They are struggles for the right to equal and fair treatment,
and equal and fair access to the economic, political, and cultural goods
of the society. The word civil means pertaining to the life we live in
common, in community, and that is what these movements both assert
the right to and attempt to practice in their own work. Many movements
form strong cultures of their own, called “movement cultures,” which
offer alternative models of what our collective civil and civic lives might
be like, as part of their argument about the ways we have continually
fallen short of creating a just, egalitarian community.
This is the first book of comparative movement analysis to focus on
the cultural dimension of movements.3 In focusing mainly on the cul-
tural elements within and the cultural impact of movements, this book
seeks to fill a gap: scholars of social movements have had too little to
Introduction xv
say about culture, and cultural studies scholars have had too little to say
about movements. I use the concept of “culture” in three broad, inter-
related ways in the chapters that follow. First, I examine social move-
ments as sub- or counter-cultures to dominant cultures in the country.
Second, I look at the production of cultural texts (poetry, painting,
music, murals, film, fiction, and so forth) in and around social move-
ments. Third, and most broadly, I examine how the cultural texts, ideas,
identities, and values generated by resistance movements have reshaped
the general contours of U.S. culture (in the sense of “whole way of life”).
The study of social movements has been carried out by several differ-
ent kinds of investigators. Academics, including anthropologists, com-
munication scholars, historians, political scientists, and especially soci-
ologists, have examined movements from the perspective of their own
areas of expertise. Nonacademics, especially journalists and movement
activists themselves, have also contributed greatly to our understanding
of movements. Overall, sociologists have certainly produced both the
greatest volume of studies and the most systematic work. This book
owes a great deal to the many sociologists who have studied both the
particular movements I examine and the processes of social movements
overall. But as sociologists themselves have noted, until fairly recently
they have neglected the specifically cultural dimensions of social move-
ment activity.
Social scientists have concentrated primarily on the ways in which
movements have been forces of political change — changes in laws, legis-
lation, voting patterns, government institutions, and so on. They have
done a valuable service by subjecting movements to intensive and exten-
sive study, but this work has been limited by a strong bias toward the
most quantifiable elements of movements: numbers of participants,
amount of money raised, laws passed in response, shaping of voting
patterns, and so on. By comparison, social movements as forces of cul-
tural change have been relatively neglected. One key reason for this is
that culture is a messy business; it is a less easily measured object of
analysis than Supreme Court rulings, congressional bills, or income pat-
terns. But to ignore a whole terrain and its impact just because it is not
easily quantifiable seems highly unscientific, if not downright strange.
Movements are much more than the sum of quantifiable elements.
Movements, especially the kind talked about in this book, are deeply
transformative experiences for those who take part in them and deeply
xvi Introduction
transformative to those who are, sometimes quite indirectly or subtly but
pervasively, shaped by the ideas, feelings, styles, and behaviors emerging
from them. It takes nothing away from other important kinds of analysis
to say that we need far more work on the cultural forms active within
movements and the cultural forces movements unleash.
Cultural studies scholars, as the name suggests, have focused strongly
on questions of culture. But their prime target has been trends in popu-
lar culture, and subcultures that do not take the directly political form I
call “social movement cultures.” Much cultural studies work has offered
brilliant interpretive readings of cultural texts (movies, TV shows, pop
music, or fashion), but this work has not always been well grounded in
relation to the institutions and structural social forces that shape and
move through culture. In my view, the best cultural studies work has
attended to three interrelated levels of analysis: cultural production, the
texts produced, and audience reception of those texts. I will employ all
three of these at points in this book, but I am particularly interested in
movements as sites for the production and reception of cultural texts.
When I do use textual analysis, I am generally less interested in the for-
mal qualities of texts or in the attempt to read their larger cultural mean-
ings, than in their relation to each other within social movements as
part of the “cultural field.” French social theorist Pierre Bourdieu coined
the term cultural field for the social space where cultural texts exist in
relation to each other and in relation to texts in other social, political,
and economic fields.
Though not based in extensive new empirical research, this book seeks
to encourage a body of work, sometimes called “social cultural studies,”
that draws upon and synthesizes the best work from empirical history
and social science with the interpretive tools of the cultural studies tra-
dition.4 While I value formal textual analysis, and have done much of it
in previous work, I think it has been overvalued in cultural studies to
the neglect of meaning-making contexts. In this book, I have been more
interested in social movements as sites for the production and reception
of cultural texts than in the formal interpretation of these texts. Or, put
differently, the texts I am interested in most are the movements them-
selves, with their cultural productions as a means to that end.
I have tried to be precise in characterizing the relations between cul-
ture and the movements I explore here, but I am not interested in setting
up a single, systematic mode of exploring the movement-culture dynamic.
Introduction xvii
Instead, I am interested in exploring a variety of ways in which culture
matters to movements and movements matter to culture. Let me boldly
assert here one of my key premises: that those forces labeled cultural may
at times have a deeper and more widespread impact on most of our lives
than political or economic forces. But my intent is not to argue for the
greater importance of culture, just for its importance alongside and en-
tangled with political, social, and economic forces that have traditionally
gained more attention. These divisions — social, economic, political, cul-
tural — are, after all, themselves cultural concepts, not real things neatly
dividing the world. And giving culture a stronger footing in this list will
allow us to better understand the interactions of all these interwoven
forces.
Chapter Outline
This book consists of a set of interpretations of some of the key U.S.
social movements from the 1950s to the beginning of the twenty-first
century. Each chapter is designed to serve as an introduction to a move-
ment for those who know little about it, but also to offer a new angle of
vision to those who know the movement well. While I have been a par-
ticipant in many of these movements, I make no claim to be doing the
kind of work called “participant-observation.” And while I have done
original research on several of these movements, I make no claims to
having unearthed significant amounts of new empirical information. I
am acutely aware that to talk about close to a dozen movements and as
many different cultural forms borders on hubris. But while my range is
ambitious, my claims are modest. My main goal has been to creatively
reinterpret and synthesize elements from the large body of literature
available on each of these movements in light of questions of culture.
Relying on a great deal of rich secondary work by scholars and activists
before me, I have tried to offer fresh readings and to place them in jux-
taposition in mutually illuminating ways. This has meant incurring more
than the usual amount of debt to other authors, whom I hope I have
adequately thanked in my notes and acknowledgments. In addition to
these forms of recognition, however, I have made this book a tribute
to all the movement cultural workers whose texts and insights have made
it possible.
The movements I focus on are interrelated. I have emphasized a strand
of movements sometimes called the “direct action” tradition. These
xviii Introduction
movements have relied heavily on such direct action forms as civil dis-
obedience, sit-ins, strikes, boycotts, building or land takeovers, and other
dramatic confrontations. One key theme I argue throughout, however, is
that the “mobilizing” engendered by dramatic actions is only ultimately
effective when matched by active, in-depth, patient “organizing” of peo-
ple to take control of their own lives. This distinction, which I take from
the great civil rights activist/theorist Ella Baker, means that surrounding
the drama of social change there takes place much undramatic day-to-
day activity that alone can consolidate the work of a movement’s “ritual
public displays.” As I trace the particular features of each movement, I
also try to show how a growing set of influences diffused from move-
ment to movement, building a repertoire of ideas, tactics, strategies,
cultural forms, and styles.
The chapters are also intended to represent a range of examples of
ways in which culture has mattered to movements. The examples both
demonstrate how various art forms — music, murals, poetry, and so
forth — have made particular contributions to movement cultures and
social change, and raise more general questions about how culture works
in and around movements. Each chapter is designed both to historicize
the movement on which it focuses and to show that movement to be
very much alive today. The chapters cover a range of kinds of culture,
including folk culture (spirituals in the civil rights movement), high
culture (poetry in the women’s and fiction in the environmental move-
ments), and pop culture (rock music in the anti-apartheid movement,
Hollywood films and the American Indian movement), though these
categories are not mutually exclusive, especially in movement culture
contexts where they are often radically transformed.
Chapter 1 argues that music played a crucial role in virtually every
dimension of the African American civil rights movement. It traces the
rise and varied use of “freedom songs,” as activists transformed deep-
seated black religious and secular musical traditions into a major resource
for the struggle against racial injustice. Chapter 2 focuses on the black
power phase of the African American liberation struggle, demonstrating
that the Black Panther Party can be seen as engaging in a deadly serious
form of political drama on the national and world stage. The chapter,
like most of this book, challenges easy distinctions between culture and
politics, in this case between literary dramas and the “theater” of poli-
tics. Chapter 3 looks at the emergence and development of a new, radical
Introduction xix
wave of women’s movements beginning in the mid-1960s. Here I focus
on the role of poetry as one site of feminist consciousness-raising action
and as a resource in the formation of a variety of contested feminist
identities rooted in differences of race, ethnicity, class, sexuality, and
nationality, as they have evolved up to the present. Chapter 4 treats the
Chicano/a movement, focusing on the ways in which the thousands of
murals produced in and around the brown power movimiento embody
and reflect the political and cultural changes the movement generates in
its efforts to bring justice to U.S. communities of Mexican descent.
Where the first four chapters deal with cultural forms generated within
movements, the next two chapters deal with relations between move-
ments and mainstream popular culture. Chapter 5 focuses on the group
that called itself the American Indian Movement (AIM), one of the key
organizations in the wider Native American red power movement. This
chapter examines the ways in which the movement’s story has been told
through the widely circulated, if inevitably distorting, medium of the
Hollywood film. Chapter 6 takes a look at the role played by pop and
rock music in movements of the mid-1980s, especially the student-based
anti-apartheid movement. Student movements, from the 1930s through
the 1960s and the 1980s and into the present, have used popular culture
as an organizing tool. In focusing on one of these waves of student
activism, I try to show the important potential, as well as the limits, of
using pop culture as a force in the promotion of social movements.
Chapter 7 analyzes the brilliant use of graphic arts (posters, T-shirts,
banners, stickers) by ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), the
movement group at the forefront of the fight against HIV/AIDS. I focus
on how the group mobilized both the gay community and other affected
populations through a direct action campaign illustrating how homo-
phobia, racism, sexism, and class prejudice had created a deadly “epi-
demic of signification” that stalled progress in saving lives.
Chapter 8 directly addresses the relationship between academia and
social movements, challenging the assumption that the former is all
theory, the latter all practice. I complicate both sides of this image by
reminding readers that academic culture is a site through which move-
ments are practiced, and by suggesting that movements are theory-
making sites just as surely as is academia. I consider the work I am doing
throughout the book as support for the work of social movements, but
this chapter makes this point in a more direct way by talking about an
xx Introduction
intellectual formation that has grown out of a movement context. The
chapter does this by describing and arguing on behalf of an emerging
trend in academic literary and cultural study that I call “environmental
justice ecocriticism.” I argue for the need to expand this field in the ser-
vice of the grassroots environmental justice …
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The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
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The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
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effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
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One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
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Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident