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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper using the insights of Nathan Huggins, Matthew Frye Jacobson, David Roediger, William Julius Wilson and Howard Winant to assess how still-emerging globalization of business may affect the preservation and development of racial inequalities already present in developed nations, particularly the United States. Certainly there is no overseeing committee intent on keeping people of color subordinate to white groups, whatever degree of “whiteness” those groups hold. The effects seen appear as that is the case, however. Without concerted attention to developing situations, it is likely that the racial balance and division of labor that existed in the past could become part of other countries’ histories, too. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSraceGlobal.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of Britains colonies were populated with adventuresome individuals with independent spirits, but the 13 colonies in the New World held a still different variety of independence and strength of will.
Social lives were inextricably entwined with religious lives in the early years. It was the community that banded together for protection from outside threats. Individuals would come
together to defend and protect the community, but then disband when the crisis ended to return to their own families business of survival. Evolution of US Racism
John Winthrop, an early governor and a church leader, had set a course in which only church members could be elected to office or appointed to
non-elected stations. Winthrop was certain that God had made a covenant with the settlers and that the world would be watching how the Puritans behaved in their new land;
Winthrop was determined that they would not be found lacking in their determination or commitment to God. This attitude persisted well into the Revolutionary era.
By the end of the 18th century, the cultural differences in North and South that would become increasingly distinct in the future already affected the new countrys
political arena. Virginia was an important state that provided many political figures, but most southern states were largely marginalized in their ability to be active in the new federal
government of the new country. In "Bowling for Columbine," filmmaker Michael Moore argues that it is the history of fear that has brought
America to the point today that we lead the world in gun-related violence. Moore explains that Southern whites lived in fear and felt the need to protect themselves against
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