Posts Tagged ‘Discussion Blog’
New York’s immigration fueled ethnic heterogeneity and daily economic processes have and will continue to remain reliant on one another as time progresses. This relationship can be described as mutualistic: both mediums benefit from the activities of the other without being hindered by these very same activities. This beneficial cooperation can be seen in play […]
April 14, 2016 | Comments »
The migration of impoverished workers from developing countries to those already developed is akin to a transaction. By tending to work deemed unsatisfactory by middle to upper-class women, migrant workers improve their families’ financial backing to the extent that they become the primary breadwinners within their households. The term household is used loosely in describing […]
April 12, 2016 | Comments »
The site, Be More, describes a very relevant issue in today’s societies: implicit biases. The site reads, “Implicit biases are ingrained habits of thought…are outside of awareness but their implications are clear to those affected by them.” Reading about implicit biases, I realize I experience it all the time, not consciously but subconsciously making assumption […]
April 5, 2016 | Comments »
Exploring the website Be More was a great experience as it was a departure from the normal 60-70 page readings due every week. Frankly, I enjoyed it much more than the usual readings since the website was interactive and easier to understand. The readings are cool too, but I liked the idea of exploring a […]
April 5, 2016 | Comments »
In “Racism Without Racists”, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva sheds light a means of social stratification regarded as Latin Americanization. Through this proposed model, a triracial divide forms between those deemed white, honorary white, and collective black (Bonilla-Silva 180). Purportedly, those who occupy a high space in this racial ladder, those in the white and high level honorary […]
March 15, 2016 | Comments »
Eduardo Bonilla-Silva offered an interesting plan to assuage racial conflicts in Racism without Racists. He proposed something he called a “triracial system”. Explaining the structure of the system he writes, “the emerging triracial system will be comprised of ‘whites’ at the top, an intermediary group of ‘honorary whites’-similar to the coloreds in South Africa during formal […]
March 14, 2016 | Comments »
In initiating a racially-fueled social structure, an individual’s personal exposure to a racial group may become diluted by preconceived notions of a racial group’s characteristic behavior, as described by the general populace. Stereotypes pose significant threat to those who are being stereotyped. Michael Omi and Howard Winant of “Racial Formation in the United States” bring […]
March 8, 2016 | Comments »
In “Black Behind the Ears”, Ginetta E.B. Candelario brought up an interesting point about how Dominicans in America used a tactic of embracing their “Latino identity” in order to combat “anti-black racism” and to distance themselves from their African heritage. Giving an example of this, Candelario writes, “Doña Campos clearly understood that she and her children […]
March 7, 2016 | Comments »
Amongst the varied points raised in Peter Kwong’s “What’s Wrong with the U.S. Immigration Debate?”, stands an issue that is touched upon seldom: the ever-increasing ethnic disunity created between documented and undocumented individuals of the same race through the passage of legislation and the continued exploitation of said legislation. These laws are many and far […]
March 1, 2016 | Comments »
While reading “Making the Model Minority Myth” by Robert. G. Lee, I could not help but laugh at how true of a description of Asians in America we were given. A lot of the characteristics of Asian Americans talked about in the article resonated with me because as an Asian American myself I can say […]
March 1, 2016 | Comments »