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Racial Inequality in the Land of Ple...
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Robinson, Michelle.
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Racial Inequality in the Land of Plenty: Black Life in Madison, Wisconsin - Educational and Housing Disenfranchisement, Political Struggle and Community Resiliency.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Racial Inequality in the Land of Plenty: Black Life in Madison, Wisconsin - Educational and Housing Disenfranchisement, Political Struggle and Community Resiliency./
Author:
Robinson, Michelle.
Published:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2018,
Description:
212 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International79-11A.
Subject:
Sociology. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10814456
ISBN:
9780355924664
Racial Inequality in the Land of Plenty: Black Life in Madison, Wisconsin - Educational and Housing Disenfranchisement, Political Struggle and Community Resiliency.
Robinson, Michelle.
Racial Inequality in the Land of Plenty: Black Life in Madison, Wisconsin - Educational and Housing Disenfranchisement, Political Struggle and Community Resiliency.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2018 - 212 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 79-11, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2018.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
In contrast with much of urban sociology that has followed Black experience in large, diverse, urban, non-Southern cities like Chicago, New York and Los Angeles, this case study focuses on a small, progressive Midwestern city, Madison, Wisconsin and its surrounding county (Dane). It also attempts to offer a theoretical analysis of racism that reflects the gap between how it is practiced in this context and the classic Southern forms of white supremacy. It builds on prior research on Dane County that revealed highly racialized disparities in critical indicators of wellbeing, some of the largest of such differences in the nation. Explaining the paradox of finding such racialized poverty and marginalization where we might least expect it - in such an affluent, politically progressive place - is the core challenge for this study. Taking a historical approach, I examine the growth and development of the Black community in Madison during the twentieth century and into the first decade of the twenty-first, using Milwaukee as a comparison. I identify three ideologies that developed in Madison and Wisconsin more broadly: civic nationalism, Northern racial liberalism, and northern racism. In my first empirical chapter, I examine the timing of Black migration and how white residents of Wisconsin responded. I found that the civic nationalism that the state's government and its citizens had embraced and the immigrant diversity of early statehood gave way to an exclusive definition of Northern European Christians as deserving to be Americans. In Madison, Jews and Italians experienced institutionalized marginalization and discrimination alongside Black citizens. My second empirical chapter examines the racial tensions birthed from changing demography, focusing on the development of housing policy and the pursuit of Fair Housing as part of the civil rights struggle, emphasizing the differences in how this developed in Madison and Milwaukee. This chapter highlights the ways that whites used organizations and networks, law and policy, and their own mobility to create and police racial boundaries in neighborhoods and communities in order to maintain their preferred racial demography in the face of both white and Black migrations. The third empirical chapter continues the focus on white backlash against the growing Black population and the residential segregation it produced but considers how it was expressed in the organization of the state's education system. This chapter highlights how Chapter 220 and Open Enrollment policies came into existence through racial struggles and how both local- and state-level education policies maintain white access to schools that have few Black students at the expense of schools that serve larger numbers of Black students. The broader argument of the dissertation is that choice is a critical component of democratic citizenship according to civic nationalism, but Northern racial liberalism permits white citizens to monopolize choice for their benefit, at the expense of Black citizens. In Madison, specifically, and Wisconsin generally, policies and practices facilitate the exercise of white choice in service of preserving the racial order. Northern racism is a historically constructed denial of equal access to citizenship rights to Black residents and a core factor facilitating the production and maintenance of racial inequality in contemporary times.
ISBN: 9780355924664Subjects--Topical Terms:
516174
Sociology.
Racial Inequality in the Land of Plenty: Black Life in Madison, Wisconsin - Educational and Housing Disenfranchisement, Political Struggle and Community Resiliency.
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In contrast with much of urban sociology that has followed Black experience in large, diverse, urban, non-Southern cities like Chicago, New York and Los Angeles, this case study focuses on a small, progressive Midwestern city, Madison, Wisconsin and its surrounding county (Dane). It also attempts to offer a theoretical analysis of racism that reflects the gap between how it is practiced in this context and the classic Southern forms of white supremacy. It builds on prior research on Dane County that revealed highly racialized disparities in critical indicators of wellbeing, some of the largest of such differences in the nation. Explaining the paradox of finding such racialized poverty and marginalization where we might least expect it - in such an affluent, politically progressive place - is the core challenge for this study. Taking a historical approach, I examine the growth and development of the Black community in Madison during the twentieth century and into the first decade of the twenty-first, using Milwaukee as a comparison. I identify three ideologies that developed in Madison and Wisconsin more broadly: civic nationalism, Northern racial liberalism, and northern racism. In my first empirical chapter, I examine the timing of Black migration and how white residents of Wisconsin responded. I found that the civic nationalism that the state's government and its citizens had embraced and the immigrant diversity of early statehood gave way to an exclusive definition of Northern European Christians as deserving to be Americans. In Madison, Jews and Italians experienced institutionalized marginalization and discrimination alongside Black citizens. My second empirical chapter examines the racial tensions birthed from changing demography, focusing on the development of housing policy and the pursuit of Fair Housing as part of the civil rights struggle, emphasizing the differences in how this developed in Madison and Milwaukee. This chapter highlights the ways that whites used organizations and networks, law and policy, and their own mobility to create and police racial boundaries in neighborhoods and communities in order to maintain their preferred racial demography in the face of both white and Black migrations. The third empirical chapter continues the focus on white backlash against the growing Black population and the residential segregation it produced but considers how it was expressed in the organization of the state's education system. This chapter highlights how Chapter 220 and Open Enrollment policies came into existence through racial struggles and how both local- and state-level education policies maintain white access to schools that have few Black students at the expense of schools that serve larger numbers of Black students. The broader argument of the dissertation is that choice is a critical component of democratic citizenship according to civic nationalism, but Northern racial liberalism permits white citizens to monopolize choice for their benefit, at the expense of Black citizens. In Madison, specifically, and Wisconsin generally, policies and practices facilitate the exercise of white choice in service of preserving the racial order. Northern racism is a historically constructed denial of equal access to citizenship rights to Black residents and a core factor facilitating the production and maintenance of racial inequality in contemporary times.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10814456
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