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Volume IX - Summer
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Order this volume
(Available in print only)
Table of Contents
Articles Black Middle Class Poverty Consciousness:
Class and Leadership Within 20th Century Black
America
Christopher
Tyson
Abstract America
about intraracial class conflict. These discussions often rely too heavily
on essentialist or fixed notions of socioeconomic class that preclude a
more historically grounded discussion of the formation of class identities
within the race. While the contemporary black middle class is
unprecedented in size and character, its identity must be viewed within
the context of past struggles against racial and class oppression within
and outside of the black community. Since poverty is a constant variable
in the black experience, how the black middle class has responded to black
poverty is a key indicator of the class-consciousness within the group and
its implications for future struggles. This article explores the
development of the black middle class since emancipation and examines the
complexities within black society and American society that shape black
middle-class poverty consciousness.
Economic
Salvation: Homeownership and the
Black
Church
Wayne
L. Thornhill
Abstract
This paper argues
that the black church through its aggregate resources of more than $50
billion deposited into financial institutions and its historical economic
role in the African American community can help to increase the
homeownership rates of Blacks. The black church has the economic
influence, captive audience, and credibility to influence the
homeownership rates of African Americans. The traditional benefits and
risks are considered, yet the paper raises a unique psychological barrier
by and by affecting Blacks that the church is uniquely positioned to
address. Church members who give to the church could receive down-payment
gifts from the church family; non-itemizers could receive homeownership
credit for their charitable giving to the church, and ministers could
integrate economic empowerment into the message of salvation to increase
homeownership. The black church has a long and strong history of building
wealth through landownership and education. Its legacy can be transferred
to increase African American homeownership and contribute to the social
policy discussion.
Federal
Housing Dollars and the Demise of African American Housing Community-Based
Organizations: How Racism Rears Its Ugly Head in a Government
Institution—A Case Study
(Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
) Michael Bonds
Abstract
This
article describes how racial politics in Milwaukee, Wis., impacted the
allocation of federal housing dollars between 1988 and 1997 to
community-based organizations (CBOs) by examining one public
bureaucracy’s practices to determine if they were applied fairly to
African American and Caucasian CBOs. An analysis of public housing records
found that African American CBOs suffered major cuts in all housing
categories. They were held to higher performance standards than Caucasian
CBOs, which penalized these African American CBOs. Finally, African
American CBOs lost millions of federal housing dollars, and the jobs and
subcontracts associated with them.
The
Ouémé Child Survival Program: Sustaining Livelihoods
Kendra Blackett and
Carmen Coles
Abstract
Child Survival Program (OCSP), a four-year pilot program (1997-2001),
funded by USAID and administered by
Africare
,
Benin
. OCSP sought to
improve the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of communities in the Pobè
Health Zone through the selection and training of 54 community health
workers (CHWs). After interviews with actors of the public health
infrastructure, the CHWs, and their supervising committees, as well as a
review of the malaria statistics for the Pobè Health Zone, the evaluators
have concluded the following:
- Procurement,
supervision, and training relied heavily on Africare
- The
centralized coordinating unit is dysfunctional
- Procurement
is a major factor that links the community to the public health
infrastructure
- Rates
for simple malaria have consistently decreased
As a result of these
findings, the evaluators recommend that 1) CHWs should be fully integrated
into the public health infrastructure; 2) NGOs should create a sense of
ownership among community members; and 3) such projects, which rely on a
synergy between local and governmental actors, should incorporate a
rights-based approach to the training of community actors.
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Speeches
Shared
Responsibility and Shared Sacrifice in a Time of War
Forum
Event with U.S. Congressman Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) on
February 10,
2003
More
Perfect
Union
:
From Civil Rights to Constitutional Rights
Forum
Event with U.S. Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr., (D-Ill.) on
February 24,
2003
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Interviews
Perspectives
from Ron Kirk
Interviewed by Daniel Delk
In 2002, Ron Kirk made history when he became the first African American
to win a primary runoff for the Senate in
Texas
. Although Kirk did not win the election, he continues to build coalitions
and advocate for improved education and economic opportunities for people
across
Texas
.
Ron
Kirk was born in 1954 to a family active in the Civil Rights Movement in
Austin,
Texas
. He was born the youngest of four children to Lee Kirk, the first black
postal clerk in Austin, and Willie Mae, a schoolteacher.
Following
high school, Kirk moved to
Sherman
to study political science and sociology at
Austin
College
. There he received a Bachelor of Arts in 1976 and returned to
Austin
to earn a Juris Doctor from the
University
of
Texas School
of Law in 1979.
After
law school, Kirk worked as a legislative assistant to Sen. Lloyd Bentsen
(D-Tex.). Since then, he has served as assistant city attorney of Dallas,
secretary of state of
Texas
under Gov. Anne Richards, and two–time mayor of
Dallas
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