The Limits of Black Politics in the Post–Civil Rights Era |
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Authors: | Bilal Dabir Sekou |
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Institution: | Department of Social Science, Hillyer College, University of Hartford, 200 Bloomfield Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut, 06117 |
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Abstract: | Pluralist theorists have long contended that to exercise power and influence in the American political system, blacks should come together like any other organized interest group, form coalitions with other like-minded people (white liberals), and advocate for policy reforms. Beginning during the “Black Power” era, the goal of putting black faces in high places to help address black concerns became a driving force in black politics. The deteriorating social and economic status of many in the black community, however, has not been prevented by either the political incorporation of more than 11,000 black elected officials or even the election of the nation’s first black president. This article will show how the inherent limitations of the pluralist interest-group strategy and a growing white backlash fueled by an awareness of changing demographics in the country has spawned an economic and political crisis in black America. |
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Keywords: | bias coalitions interest groups mobilization race white backlash |
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