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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page paper discussing the origins of racism and its effects in politics. Despite federal laws disallowing it, the realities of today’s living arrangements is that, in cities, Blacks and whites still are separated by political boundaries, as surely as they were separated in the years surrounding the Civil War. The overrepresentation of Black individuals in the inner city is no accident. Neither was it by design, but the effects are the same as if it had been. Political systems help to marginalize African Americans, and then work to preserve the status quo they have created. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSracePolit.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
laws disallowing it, the realities of todays living arrangements is that, in cities, Blacks and whites still are separated by political boundaries, as surely as they were separated in the
years surrounding the Civil War. The overrepresentation of Black individuals in the inner city is no accident. Neither was it by design, but the effects are the same
as if it had been. Political systems help to marginalize African Americans, and then work to preserve the status quo they have created. Roots of Racism
By the dawn of the 19th century, Britain and America were over the differences of opinion that led to the Revolutionary War and separation of the
United States from Great Britain in the late 18th century. Britain was a world power and prosperous: the people could train their attention on other matters. Queen
Victoria reigned for most of the 19th century, insisting on standards of morality and apparent morality that had not been so evident in official circles before. Individuals adopted rules
and standards of behavior designed to serve "appearances." Young women did not go out into society with young men without a chaperone; men of all ages were expected to
protect women at all times from any misfortune that could occur. Whether that misfortune could lead to or result in physical harm or was simply a matter of convenience
or pride made little difference. Women were to be protected. It is from the Victorian age that the litany of good manners came to dictate that men always
walk on the outside of the sidewalk - protecting women companions from splashes from the road or from splashes from above as housewives threw out the weeks bathwater onto the
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