Oppression: a socio-history of Black-White relations in America |
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Contents
The Nature of Oppression | 1 |
The Culture of Black Oppression | 11 |
Economic Oppression | 43 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionists Africans biological black Americans black children black inferiority black parents black slaves black soldiers blacks and whites Bureau chapter cities Civil Rights Act codified core values cultural beliefs desegregation discriminatory dominant beliefs early economic elected enacted enforcement equal example exclusion federal government force free blacks Freedmen's Bureau housing industrial institutional integration Jim Crow Jim Crow laws job market large numbers laws legislation legitimated low-wage labor ment military movement NAACP Negroes North northern numbers of blacks opportunities oppression of blacks organizations patterns percent period plantation policies population position practices programs progressive beliefs proslavery public schools race racial integration racial oppression racial segregation racism racist beliefs result schools for blacks segregation slavery Social Darwinism society South South Carolina southern blacks strikebreakers structural arrangements structure of oppression Supreme Court theory threat tion U.S. Congress U.S. Department U.S. Supreme Court unions urban vote W.E.B. Dubois white Americans