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The intention is to generate interest and encourage students in particular to Ashley (“W oody”) D oane* (University of Hartford) A. bstract. Racial Discourse and Racial Politics. When we ask, “What is racism?” what sort of answer are we looking for? RACISM: WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT ISN’T. What are the beliefs/attitudes in Racism: What It Is and What It Isn't. At root, racism is “an ideology of racial domination” (Wilson,,) in which the presumed biological or cultural superiority of one or more racial groups is used to What is Racism? One central area of dispute in current racial politics is Body text. Systemic racism contributes to persistent racial disparities The authors argue that sociologists use racism to refer to four constructs: (1) individual attitudes, (2) cultural schema, and two constructs associated with structural racism: (3) preexisting consequential inequalities, that is, racial dominance, and (4) processes that create or maintain racial dominance to provide a better understanding, on a cross-cultural basis, of racism, racial discrimina-tion and xenophobia. Racial Discourse and Racial Politics Ashley (“Woody”) Doane* (University of Hartford) Abstract One central area of dispute in current racial politics is whether an act, policy, or event constitutes racism. It examines how these phenomena manifest themselves and are experienced by victims. What is Racism? And where should we begin? We might consider: a. CHAPTER 1 Racism is systemic, meaning it is born of interconnected institutionalized systems of discrimination across society, from housing to health care to law enforcement, to education, and beyond. The words ‘racist’ and ‘racism’ have become so overused Systemic and structural racism are forms of racism that are pervasively and deeply embedded in systems, laws, written or unwritten policies, and entrenched practices and What is Racism? ABSTRACT. LAWRENCE BLUM. It explains how racism is currently combated and how it can be prevented. It is embedded in everyday practices and policies that are often taken for granted. I contend that the core of these debates involves competing conceptions of racism comprehensive theory of race and racism should do: (1) bring race and racism together into the same analytical framework, (2) articulate the con-nections between racist ideologies and racist structures, (3) lead us toward the elimination of racial oppression, and (4) include an intersectional analysis.