David Domke & Christopher Parker: Obama, the Tea Party, and Racism

Posted in Barack Obama, Live Events, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2012-09-24 23:54Z by Steven

David Domke & Christopher Parker: Obama, the Tea Party, and Racism

Town Hall Seattle
Great Hall; enter on Eight Avenue
2012-09-24, 19:30-21:00 PDT (Local Time)

David Domke, Chair of the University of Washington Department of Communications and a winner of the school’s Distinguished Teaching Award, believes President Barack Obama has been subjected to historically unprecedented disrespect by legislators and many citizens. Is this evidence of racism toward our first African-American president? What role has the Tea Party played in this animosity? What does public-opinion data tell us; what do we learn from public rhetoric; and what does news coverage suggest? Speaking to the data, UW Professor of Social Justice and Political Science and author of the forthcoming book Change They Can’t Believe In, Christopher Parker joins Dr. Domke in a candid, evidence-based conversation around this explosive topic. Presented as part of the Town Hall Civic series, with Elliott Bay Book Company. 

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Count Yourself In California: The Census on Multiracial ID’s

Posted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Identity Development/Psychology, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2010-03-21 21:41Z by Steven

Count Yourself In California: The Census on Multiracial ID’s

Spot.Us
2010-03-18

Denise L. Poon

When she fills out her 2010 Census form this week, Mei-Ling Malone is looking forward to answering Question #9 ― “the race question.” She’s adamant about documenting her multiracial background. 

Malone, who studied multiracial politics at UC [University of California] Irvine and is now pursuing a doctorate at UCLA, has an African American father and a Taiwanese mother. For Malone, 26, this is her first opportunity to respond to a Census and possibly provide a different answer to the race question than what her parents may have noted for her 10 years ago.

President Obama is called our first black president, yet his mother was white,” she said. “For a majority of people who are black and multiracial, we are physically viewed as black, and treated, or discriminated as such. I’m glad that when I indicate I’m multiracial, I’m also counted as black.”…

…The actual data collection process works as follows: The Census Bureau first takes responses from 2010 Census forms and scans and captures the answers. Then, this information is turned into electronic text. For Question #9, an “auto coder” ― a computer program that classifies and tabulates write-in information ― then tabulates the data into different multiracial combinations of the initial race groups.

The five major race categories, as defined by the OMB, plus the “Some Other Race” category, can be put together in 57 possible unique combinations of two, three, four, five or six races. When this information is added to data of the six single-race groups, the Census Bureau will have 63 different tabulated categories…

“For those who may think that the option to identify with more than one race is trivial, they are mistaken,” said Christopher Parker, a professor of political science at the University of Washington. “Marking more than one box can affect both the enforcement of civil rights and inform the political behavior of those who choose more than one racial category with which to identify.”…

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Race representation in this year’s Common Book

Posted in Articles, Barack Obama, Live Events, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-04 05:03Z by Steven

Race representation in this year’s Common Book

University of Washington News Laboratory
Department of Communication
December 2009

Kaetlyn Cordingley
UW News Lab

Each year, First Year Programs chooses a book as a means to bind the incoming freshman class together. This year’s book was Barack Obama’s “Dreams from My Father.”

Coincidentally, on the same evening that President Obama addressed a sea of gray-clad cadets at Westpoint, three members of the UW faculty discussed Obama’s candor and his struggles with multiraciality in his autobiography with hundreds of UW freshmen who had read the book.

The book demands introspection from its readers and frames the “freshman experience” in a whole new way, said University of Washington faculty member Ralina Joseph Dec. 1.

Panelists were Communication Professor Dr. Joseph and Drs. Luis Fraga and Christopher Parker, of the Political Science Department.

The professors spoke candidly about their own experiences with multiculturalism and minority identification…

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