Black Lives Matter in Latin America

Black Lives Matter in Latin America portes grátis

Black Lives Matter in Latin America

Continuities in Racism, Cross-National Resistance and Mobilization in the Americas

Morrison, Minion K. C; Mitchell-Walthour, Gladys Lanier; Luiz Pereira Oliveira, Cloves

Springer International Publishing AG

03/2024

549

Dura

Inglês

9783031399039

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1: The Race and Democracy Project and Black Lives Matter: Continuities in Racism, Cross-National Resistance and Mobilization in the Americas.- Chapter 2: Racial Politics: Central Themes in Academic Production in the Social Sciences in Brazil (2012-2019).- Chapter 3: Sophisticated Violence Against Blacks in the Time of Affirmative Action: Previsions of Violent Racial Conflict or Academic Terror?.- Chapter 4: Covid-19 and Necropolitics: The Absence of Intersectionality (Race and Gender) in Data on the Pandemic in Brazil- Chapter 5: The Diversity of Representation: Gender, Race and Ethnicity in the 2020 Brazilian municipal elections.- Chapter 6: The New Bahian Enigma: Why Hasn't Black Rome Ever Elected a Black Mayor? A Case Study of the Campaigns of Edvaldo Brito and Mario Kertesz in the 1985 Municipal Elections.- Chapter 7: The Electoral Political Participation of the Afro-Colombian, Black, Raizal, and Palenquera Population and the Construction of a Different Political Culture in Colombia.- Chapter 8: The Black Movement and Institutional Activism in Colombia (1991-2018).- Chapter 9: Afroperuvian Citizenship: An Unfulfilled Promise after 200 years of Republican Independence.- Chapter 10: Affirmative Action for Afro Descendants in the Uruguayan Parliament.- Chapter 11: The Construction of Racial Equality Policy at the Municipal Level in Brazil.- Chapter 12: Between Business, Solidarity mobilization and Political Participation: Ethnic Entrepreneurship in the New Black Diaspora in Sao Paulo.- Chapter 13 Decolonial Antiracist Feminist Digital Activism: Naming Carolina Maria de Jesus, Lelia Gonzalez and Marielle Franco on Twitter.- Chapter 13: Decolonial Antiracist Feminist Digital Activism: Naming Carolina Maria de Jesus, Lelia Gonzalez and Marielle Franco on Twitter.- Chapter 14: Alternative Black Media during Repression: Black Brazilian YouTubers Fight for Social Justice during the Far-Right Era.- Chapter 15: Palenqueras and Quilombolas: Black Femininities, Work and Conviviality.- Chapter 16: Who Are the Black Revolutionaries? Resistance in Cuba and the State Boundaries that Endure. Chapter 17: Conclusion.
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Black Lives Matter;Latin America;Black activism;Social media;Brazil;Peru;Colombia;Affirmative action;Inclusion