Financial Aid for African Americans, 1999-2001

Financial Aid for African Americans, 1999-2001
Author: Gail A. Schlachter
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1999-06
Genre: African American college students
ISBN: 9780918276766

Describes 1,500 funding opportunities available to African-Americans from high school to professional level for education, research, travel, training, career development, or innovative effort, and is arranged alphabetically within six categories.

American Reference Books Annual, 2002

American Reference Books Annual, 2002
Author: Bohdan S. Wynar
Publisher: Libraries Unlimited
Total Pages: 840
Release: 2002-05
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781563089114

This source of information on comtemporary American reference works is intended for the library and information community. It has nearly 1600 descriptive and evaluative entries, and reviews material from more than 300 publishers in nearly 500 subject areas. It should help the user keep abreast of reference publications in all fields, answer everyday questions and build up reference collections.

African American Women and HIV/AIDS

African American Women and HIV/AIDS
Author: Dorie J. Gilbert
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 286
Release: 2003-03-30
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0313039070

AIDS is the second-leading cause of death among African American women between the ages of 18 and 44. African American women constitute 63% of all cases of AIDS among women in the United States. This volume brings together the collective wisdom of scholars, researchers, and social work professionals dealing with these concerns. Focusing attention on the primary population of women impacted by AIDS, this book presents culturally sensitive responses that meet the specific needs of African American women. An historical and current overview of the alarming HIV infection rate among African Americans, in particular women, introduces the crisis. Subsequent chapters highlight HIV/AIDS prevention and intervention strategies that are successfully impacting the African American population. Guided by a feminist perspective and grounded in social construction theory, social work theory, and social work practice, this volume privileges the voice of African American women, the group that is the most disenfranchised—and least accurately represented—in AIDS-related research and writing. This essential guide sheds light on a calamity too often overlooked, making it especially valuable for scholars, students, researchers, and practitioners involved with HIV/AIDS issues in the African American community, and with women's and black studies.

African Americans in the U.S. Economy

African Americans in the U.S. Economy
Author: Cecilia Conrad
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Total Pages: 420
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780742543782

The forty-three chapters in African Americans in the U.S. Economy focus on various aspects of the economic status of African Americans, past and present. Taken together, these essays present two related themes: first, when it comes to economics, race matters; second, racial economic discrimination and inequality persist despite the optimistic predictions of standard economic analysis that racial discrimination cannot thrive in a free-market economy. Visit our website for sample chapters!

Choice

Choice
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 614
Release: 2000
Genre: Academic libraries
ISBN:

The Broken Cisterns of African American Education

The Broken Cisterns of African American Education
Author: M. Christopher Brown
Publisher: IAP
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2008-12-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1607529742

The failure of American education to achieve racial diversity has resulted from the inability of educational researchers, policy makers and judicial officials to disentangle the complex definitions that have emerged in a post-segregated society. More specifically, the capricious aim of post-segregated educational settings leads to the confusing and often conflicting interchangeable usage of terms desegregated, integrated and diversity. This ambituity is further confounded by the imprecise definitions of equity, equality and opportunity. The proposed book will examine the role of language post-Brown v. Board of Education and the effects of that language on educational policy and practice. He also examines how the fundamental implications of language within post-Brown court cases, in pre- through post-secondary education, demonstrate the unspecified outcomes for desegregation and integration while concomitantly demand an educational continuum of equitable distribution. The arguments will further interrogate how education policy and practices implicitly contain a scholarly roadmap to forge equal opportunity and access, fifty years after Brown.