Race & Class

Race & Class A journal on racism, empire and globalisation Race & Class is a journal on racism, empire and globalisation. Sivanandan

Reviews Editor: Liz Fekete

In a climate tending to ever subtler restriction of dissenting views, it offers a platform for radical, informed and liberatory scholarship. Editorial Working Committee:

Colin Prescod
Lee Bridges
Arun Kundnani
Barbara Ransby
Victoria Brittain
Neil Lazarus
Bill Rolston
Nancy Murray
Chris Searle
Avery Gordon
Gholam Khiabany
Timothy Brennan

Editors: Jenny Bourne and Hazel Waters

Advisory Editor: A.

📚RACE & CLASS IS OUT NOW!The January 2024 issue includes articles on ‘county lines’ & the targeting & stigmatisation of ...
15/01/2024

📚RACE & CLASS IS OUT NOW!

The January 2024 issue includes articles on ‘county lines’ & the targeting & stigmatisation of young black men, an analysis of policies of deliberate disablement & debilitation in Palestine, sectarianism as racism in Turkey & more.

Order online here:

The lead article in the January 2024 issue of  Race & Class shows how the development of drug policing strategies to identify those ‘at risk’ of involvement in ‘county lines’ targets and stigmatises young black men. Other articles include an analysis of policies of deliberate disablement a...

'County lines’: racism, safeguarding & statecraft in Britain by Insa Koch, Patrick Williams  & Lauren Wroe✍️A new piece ...
22/11/2023

'County lines’: racism, safeguarding & statecraft in Britain by Insa Koch, Patrick Williams & Lauren Wroe

✍️A new piece of research that finds the 'County Lines' safeguarding to target and stigmatise black youth.

As reported in the Observer, the piece finds the development of drug policing strategies to identify those ‘at risk’ of involvement in ‘county lines’ is criminalising young Black boys and young men. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/nov/19/police-county-lines-strategy-cruelly-targets-black-youth-in-uk

Read the full article here: https://irr.org.uk/article/county-lines-racism-safeguarding-and-statecraft-in-britain/

  ‘County lines’: racism, safeguarding and statecraft in Britain by Insa Koch, Lauren Wroe and Patrick Williams, three leading experts in law, criminal justice and legal and social policy, is published in the IRR’s journal Race & Class. ‘County Lines’ refers to the government and police.....

🆕RACE & CLASS OUT NOW🗣️An anatomy of the British ‘War on Woke’The October 2023 issue of  Race & Class provides a cutting...
10/10/2023

🆕RACE & CLASS OUT NOW

🗣️An anatomy of the British ‘War on Woke’

The October 2023 issue of Race & Class provides a cutting-edge analysis of the British ‘War on Woke’, as well as the role of ethnic minorities in the Conservative party.

What does the ambiguous, catch-all term ‘woke’ actually mean, and how has it become central to the UK’s political discourse today? Now in print in the October 2023 issue of Race & Class, ‘An anatomy of the British War on Woke’ by sociologists Huw C. Davies and Sheena E. MacRae, could not be more timely. The authors map out how an intensive ideological campaign against social justice movements is mobilising far-right tropes and conspiracy theories within mainstream British political discourse, revealing how motifs such as ‘cultural marxism’, ‘critical race theory’ and ‘woke ideology’ are being used to target progressive politics. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231164905

Accompanying this article in the October issue is an analysis of the 2022 Conservative leadership campaign, of ethnic minority candidates who were also considered the most right-wing of the senior leadership. The authors (Rima Saini, Michael Bankole and Neema Begum) through critical discourse analysis of narratives related to race, borders, immigration and the ‘nation’ by contenders Rishi Sunak, Sajid Javid, Nadhim Zahawi, Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch position them as ethnic minority ‘post-racial gatekeepers’, intensifying a trend within the Conservative Party of legitimising the racial status quo through nominal ethnic minority representation. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231164599

Order a physical copy here: https://irr.org.uk/article/an-anatomy-of-the-british-war-on-woke/

  The October 2023 issue of  Race & Class provides a cutting-edge analysis of the British ‘War on Woke’, as well as the role of ethnic minorities in the Conservative party.  What does the ambiguous, catch-all term ‘woke’ actually mean, and how has it become central to the UK’s polit...

18/07/2023

As the Illegal Migration Bill passes in the House of Lords and the Bibby Stockholm barge docks in Dover, we remember the words of A. Sivanandan

🆕RACE & CLASS OUT NOW🔥'New Circuits of Anti- Racism'Guest-edited by the IRR’s new Chair John Narayan, this issue brings ...
04/07/2023

🆕RACE & CLASS OUT NOW

🔥'New Circuits of Anti- Racism'

Guest-edited by the IRR’s new Chair John Narayan, this issue brings together debates on abolition, reparations, internationalism & racial capitalism taken from the IRR50 conference & beyond. https://irr.org.uk/article/abolition-internationalism-and-communities-of-resistance/

Fifty years ago, the IRR overturned ‘race relations’ orthodoxies and set parameters for a committed anti-racism.

50 years on, the IRR, with radical scholar activists, examined ‘New Circuits of Anti-Racism’ at a conference gathering. https://irr.org.uk/article/irr50/

ABOLITION & INSTITUTIONAL RACISM

We are thrilled to present a keynote conversation from Barbara Ransby & Dereka Purnell, who outline the entangled workings of capitalism, racism & patriarchy, & how trans & q***r activists are shaping visions for liberation. https://journals.sagepub.com/share/JXS5DQMSYY9UYNZETM62?target=10.1177/03063968231175036

Adam Elliott-Cooper shows the links between UK abolitionism now with Black Power politics & anti-colonialism in the c20th, questioning the failings of liberal anti-racism & the reluctance of authorities to accept the existence of institutional racism. https://journals.sagepub.com/share/S3B5CTMBQVIKZDMGRSYE?target=10.1177/03063968231166901

RESISTANCE & FIGHTBACK

The myriad ways in which communities are fighting back is the topic of an edited roundtable discussion with five UK-based anti-racist activist authors, Shanice Octavia McBean, Azfar Shafi,
Ilyas Nagdee, Remi Joseph-Salisbury & Laura Connelly.
https://journals.sagepub.com/share/RJCIJBKSMWSDFWFTKCSB?target=10.1177/03063968231168013

INTERNATIONALISM & IMPERIALISM

Communities of resistance, as well as being rooted locally, must also build solidarity on a transnational level. Akram Salhab explores the radical possibilities of internationalism, looking at London historically. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231166907

Avery Gordon takes stock of shifts in the global order that have produced challenging conditions of debt, austerity, capitalist crisis & authoritarianisms, & asks how to build radical internationalism today. https://journals.sagepub.com/share/N7JYPRXTTFXWWQGVHM3A?target=10.1177/03063968231167361

Some answers are provided by John Narayan, who recalls Sivanandan’s political economy which anchors anti-racism to an anti-imperial, international political economy, which, he argues, must be at the heart of how anti-racism addresses the current crisis. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231168779

Also on internationalism Jason C Mueller asks, 'Does the US owe reparations to Somalia?' His piece offers an empirical & theoretical examination of what the US has done in Somalia, considering the political, economic & ideological elements of these acts. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231155358

THE INFLUENCE OF A. SIVANANDAN

Founder of this journal & key mover in the reorientation of ‘race thinking’ in the UK, Sivanandan is a central thread woven throughout the special issue, with contributors using his work to understand the present moment.

Anthropologist Miriyam Aouragh returns to Sivanandan’s writing and her own notion of ‘radical kinship’ in order to explore how to organise together and build on commonalities. https://t.co/9YZ70GoTmj

And Tamil fiction writer Priya Guns on how Sivanandan’s literary work has shaped her pursuit to make radical art in a neoliberal globalist world. https://journals.sagepub.com/share/VRUNATMBRX86BYNY2MSV?target=10.1177/03063968231166909

New conditions may suggest the need of ‘new circuits’, but these can build on lessons of the past.

Framing this issue are reflections from Race & Class Joint Editor Jenny Bourne & former IRR chair & film-maker Colin Prescod: https://journals.sagepub.com/share/HS7ESEGVK4DU4I3WPGWY?target=10.1177/03063968231167799

Don't miss out on buying a copy of this notable special issue 🔥

You can purchase the July 2023 issue on our website here📚 https://irr.org.uk/product/pre-order-race-class-july-2023/

Accompanying this special issue, readers can listen to an exclusive series of podcasts, produced by Surviving Society Podcast & watch each IRR50 session from our conference via Youtube or our website 📺👇 https://irr.org.uk/article/watch-and-listen-irr50/

Read the full press release here: https://irr.org.uk/article/abolition-internationalism-and-communities-of-resistance/

09/05/2023

A roundtable discussion with key anti-racist organisers who have recently co-written important new books on anti-racism, abolition, feminism and the role of the academy. With Azfar Shafi, Ilyas Nagde

OUT NOW! The April 2023 issue of Race & Class offers a challenge to how Europe is understood and explores the origins an...
17/04/2023

OUT NOW!

The April 2023 issue of Race & Class offers a challenge to how Europe is understood and explores the origins and impacts of civilisational racism. https://irr.org.uk/article/remapping-europes-racisms/

IRR director Liz Fekete analyses the consequences of the war in Ukraine from an anti-racist, internationalist viewpoint, taking issue with simplistic and partial positions. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231152093

Fekete attacks the Eurocentrism that divides the world into a civilisational hierarchy of the enlightened West & the backward tyrannical ‘other’ – a framework that, she argues, obscures the dynamics of global imperialisms today & creates new forms of civilisational racism.

Rachel Brown, assistant professor of Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies , examines how Filipina caregiver Rose Fostanes, winner of X-Factor Israel, was used to reframe Israel as multicultural and economically empowering for migrants.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968221143908

Brown's piece shows us how civilisational racism functions in the comparative racialisation of migrants & refugees in Europe & beyond. The piece sheds light on the debtor/creditor relation in the context of Israeli settler colonialism & the country’s reliance on migrant labour.

Dušan Bjelić, sociologist & pioneer of Balkan Studies in the US, discusses why European Studies as a whole has been so reluctant to accept Robinson’s work on medieval history.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231153561

The enslavement of foreign labour in Europe, was, as Cedric Robinson argues, foundational to the West’s culture of racialism. Bjelić's piece shows us that Robinson's work uncovers the erased history of European slavery & how European culture was racialist from the very beginning.

Racial capitalism is alive & well in Sweden. Inspired by Cedric Robinson’s work, Paula Mulinari, associate professor & sociology professor Anders Neergaard explore the impact of new employment protection regulation implemented in Sweden.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231153561

They analyse the positions of three trade unions on the new regulation - on the face of it colour-blind but with racialised effects as regards the non-white sectors of the working- and middle-classes.

Oscar Herzog Astaburuaga’s commentary on the Hanau massacre reveals how German state agencies failed to acknowledge the danger of the extreme Right, whilst exonerating the police, & state agencies, & ultimately failing survivors & families of the deceased.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968231156376

Earlier this year IRR news published Britannia Enchained, a four-part series examining the state of human rights in the UK by former human rights barrister, Frances Webber. A longer version features in our April issue of Race & Class: Policing rights in the UK 2022: an audit.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/03063968231157564?journalCode=racb

Read the whole issue online or order a copy from our website.

https://irr.org.uk/article/remapping-europes-racisms/

The April 2023 issue of Race & Class offers a challenge to how Europe is understood and explores the origins and impacts of civilisational racism.

'I am asking people in the West to consider their blindspots when it comes to acknowledging the inherent racism, violenc...
15/03/2023

'I am asking people in the West to consider their blindspots when it comes to acknowledging the inherent racism, violence and civilisational hierarchies of its imperialisms.'

Liz Fekete writes for Stop the War Coalition on the need for a global perspective of the war in Ukraine

Liz Fekete: This war demands that we take a global perspective untainted by Eurocentrism Finding a Voice,...

As rallies take place across Europe to mark the first anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and calls for a pea...
24/02/2023

As rallies take place across Europe to mark the first anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and calls for a peace process to end the conflict grow, Liz Fekete, a leading expert on European racism, pinpoints the need to examine how new geopolitics, changing imperialisms and the entrenching of a racism built on a 19th century-style civilisational hierarchy and revanchist nationalisms are emerging in the fall-out of the war.

This is one of the first attempts to analyse the consequences of the war from an anti-racist, internationalist viewpoint. Fekete believes that while civilisational frameworks have reached fever pitch in Russia, civilisational hierarchies are also becoming entrenched in policy circles in Europe. She uses the term civilisational racism to denote the hierarchical arrangement of nations ranked according to adherence to western values which updates the 19th century colonial discourse around the hierarchy of superior and inferior races.[1]

Eurocentrism is most obvious in the hierarchies that now exists in terms of Europe’s response to the 23 wars currently raging around the world, as well as the refugees these wars create. Civilisational racism has been manifest in the marking out of non-ethnic Ukrainians – such as Roma and African students fleeing Ukraine. Civilisational hierarchies persist at every stage of the asylum process and at the two-tier border regime in countries like Poland. Welcome though the use of the Temporary Protection Directive for Ukrainian refugees is, this 2001 legislation could have been used before for Syrian refugees, for example.

As the EU seeks to build a consensus in favour of further militarisation of the conflict, there is silence about the dangers posed by right-wing ethnic nationalism and historical revisionism in central and eastern Europe and the Baltic States. This is particularly worrying as nationalist leaders in many of these countries are pursuing ethnic policies and culture wars over history and remembrance of their role in the Holocaust, even as they demand that power in the EU shifts eastwards.

Fekete shows that in the rush to build a consensus around additional arming of Ukraine, in the face of a narrative that Russia is the sole imperial power, there has been a reluctance to report on criticism of EU policies coming from the Global South. We have to acknowledge that today we live in a complex system of competing imperialisms, not just one. Since many countries have had recent experience of western imperialism, the EU’s blind-spot allows Putin (even as he attempts to ‘recolonise’ Ukraine) to present himself as the global leader against western colonialism, standing in solidarity with demands from the South to complete the process of decolonisation.

‘What this conflict has thrown up’, concludes Liz Fekete, ‘is new geopolitics which challenges us to address the consequences of civilisational racism. In Europe and North America, radical internationalists and anti-racists have, by and large, been unable to break through a highly emotive pro-war discourse in ways that could amplify the perspectives emanating from the Global South. This urgently needs to change.’

Liz Fekete examines new geopolitics, changing imperialisms and the entrenching of civilisational racism are emerging from the war in Ukraine.

OUT NOWBreaking the ‘colour bar’: the stories of Pearl Prescod and Len Johnson In 2023's first issue of , the authors ex...
19/01/2023

OUT NOW

Breaking the ‘colour bar’: the stories of Pearl Prescod and Len Johnson

In 2023's first issue of , the authors explore the forgotten histories of these two key figures, tracing their life, work and activism. Order now!

https://irr.org.uk/article/breaking-the-colour-bar-the-stories-of-pearl-prescod-and-len-johnson/

Len Johnson was a Black boxer and Communist activist based in Manchester. Pearl Prescod was a singer, campaigner and the first Black female actor at the National Theatre

Historians Shirin Hirsch and Geoff Brown recount Johnson’s success in overturning the ‘colour bar’ in a Manchester pub in 1953, highlighting the importance of black political organising in the city.

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968221139993

The authors explore Johnson’s role in the Communist party and its relationship with the Pan-Africanist movement in order to place this story within the wider anti-racist politics of Manchester in the 1940s and ‘50s.

Have you heard of Pearl Prescod?

Race & Class Joint Editor, Jenny Bourne, & coordinator of the IRR’s Black History Collection, Anya Edmond-Pettitt, challenge the narrative of an undifferentiated ‘Windrush Generation’ through tracing Pearl Prescod's life

https://journals.sagepub.com/share/SUZVUEXFTKHJPUQWEWV7?target=10.1177/03063968221131260

Pearl was part of a generation of artists, performers, singers and intellectuals whose contribution to anti-racist struggle is under researched.

Listen to Pearl singing ‘We shall overcome’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2u_wSzzRaY

Pearl’s activism and artistic endeavours tell a story of resistance.

As the authors write, ‘She is an important and fascinating woman who deserves to take her place in the history of British actors and activists, but she is just one example of many who have been forgotten.'

To find out more about Pearl’s life, read an IRR pamphlet celebrating her achievements and placing her life in a broader frame: https://irr.org.uk/article/pearl-prescod-a-black-life-lived-large/

As Colin Prescod writes, the archive is a ‘site of struggle’, that links the local to the global.

The stories of Len and Pearl reveal how a cultural revolution was born out of resistance to both Empire and racism in Britain.
https://journals.sagepub.com/share/PPCRRXJ4HQMJJFUEDJBK?target=10.1177/0306396816686278

For activists, educators, researchers and those working in arts and culture, these two articles are indispensable resources that underline the importance of archives in the anti-racist movement.

https://irr.org.uk/article/breaking-the-colour-bar-the-stories-of-pearl-prescod-and-len-johnson/

Order here: https://irr.org.uk/product/race-class-january-2023/

Gift buying sorted ✅
03/12/2022

Gift buying sorted ✅

The latest edition of Race & Class, Patterns of Racism, and a choice of three books by A. Sivanandan and Liz Fekete plus a tote bag.

The half I give away will change the half I keep’Today marks 50 years since John Berger won the Booker prize for his nov...
23/11/2022

The half I give away will change the half I keep’

Today marks 50 years since John Berger won the Booker prize for his novel G. In his speech at CafĂŠ Royal, he shared half the prize money with the British Black panthers and the other half funded his research on migrant workers.

Martyn Hudson reflects on its implications of that speech for anti-racist struggles in the 70s & the present day in our latest issue of Race & Class: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/03063968221123260 -ref-bibr6-03063968221123260

The half he kept was used for a study of migrant workers in Europe which became A Seventh Man.

The same year as Berger's The Booker Prize speech, the IRR was radically transformed by staff and members who overthrew the management. Notably the IRR chair was Booker Brothers head Michael Caine, whose family had made their fortune through plantations in British Guyana.

In his speech, Berger drew attention to Booker’s involvement in the colonial exploitation of the Caribbean, which would resonate with the new direction of the work the IRR would take.

‘A truth-sayer in an age of lies’

The IRR’s relationship with Berger became very special, and a few years later, Berger joined the Race & Class editorial committee.

Read Siva’s welcome of Berger at a 2007 event: https://asivanandan.com/john-berger-tribute/

📖Following the death of Berger in 2017, Race & Class collected articles by and on him: https://journals.sagepub.com/topic/collections-rac/rac-1-celebration-of-john-berger/rac

📰Read a tribute by Race & Class joint-editor Jenny Bourne: https://irr.org.uk/article/john-berger-1926-2017/

📕Plus a special issue of Race & Class: https://irr.org.uk/product/race-class-1992-john-berger-a-celebration/

Berger’s words continue to give us hope for today. As he wrote in a special issue of Race & Class on ‘the threat of globalism’:

‘First, a horizon has to be discovered. And for this we have to refind hope - against all the odds of what the new order pretends and perpetrates.'

Get our latest issue plus all this great stuff for just ÂŁ25 !
21/11/2022

Get our latest issue plus all this great stuff for just ÂŁ25 !

The latest edition of Race & Class, Patterns of Racism, and a choice of three books by A. Sivanandan and Liz Fekete plus a tote bag.

📚The latest issue of Race & Class maps transnational connections – the repression of Black Power, the offshoring of refu...
09/11/2022

📚The latest issue of Race & Class maps transnational connections – the repression of Black Power, the offshoring of refugees, culture wars & more: https://irr.org.uk/article/transnational-repression/

📄Articles

Ben Gowland traces the British state’s involvement in the transnational repression of Black Power in the Caribbean in 60s & 70s, showing how it was mirrored in the repression of Black Power in Britain.

Frances Webber’s commentary on the ‘racialisation of citizenship’ reveals how changes to citizenship law in Britain have created a contingent, disposable & second-class citizenship for ethnic minorities. Webber’s piece is draw from her recent IRR report, ‘Citizenship: from right to privilege’, available from the IRR website.

Judith Teichman explores the root causes of polarisation in Left populist politics in Latin America, looking at colonial conquest, socio-economic inequality in the post-independence period, and nation-building myths.

In ‘Who is behind the “war on woke” Liz Fekete interviews Ralph Wilson & Isaac Kamola, the authors of Free Speech & Koch Money: manufacturing a campus culture war in order to draw out possible lessons to apply in the UK & elsewhere.

Jerry Harris’ article on ‘The conflict between national and transnational power: the Russian trap’ explores how the invasion of Ukraine takes place within the context of transnational economic ties.

✍️Commentary

As the Danish government plans to send asylum seekers to Rwanda, Sigrid Corry investigates recent plans for the offshoring & externalisation of the Danish border that attempt to expel people through an increasingly carceral border regime.

To mark 50 years since John Berger’s Booker prize acceptance speech, Martyn Hudson reflects on its implications for anti-racist struggles in the 70s and the present day.

📖Reviews

Return of a Native: learning from the land by Vron Ware (Kate Bernstock)

Pre-order a physical copy for ÂŁ6 from the IRR website here: https://irr.org.uk/product/race-class-october-2022-pre-order/

You can also read the articles online via Sage publishing: https://journals.sagepub.com/home/RAC

🔊 PODCASTArun Kundnani speaks to Politics Theory Other about his Race & Class piece, 'The racial constitution of neolibe...
06/09/2022

🔊 PODCAST

Arun Kundnani speaks to Politics Theory Other about his Race & Class piece, 'The racial constitution of neoliberalism' and how more liberal forms of anti-racism have created a gulf between race politics and class politics.

https://soundcloud.com/poltheoryother/the-racial-constitution-of-neoliberalism-w-arun-kudnani?utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

Arun Kudnani joins PTO to talk about his article, The Racial Constitution of Neoliberalism which appeared in the Race & Class journal. We talked about how neoliberalism has generated novel forms of ra

📚New Race & Class available now! Racism, radicalisation and Europe's 'Thin Blue Line'. Order at bit.ly/RandCJuly22In a d...
21/07/2022

📚New Race & Class available now!

Racism, radicalisation and Europe's 'Thin Blue Line'. Order at bit.ly/RandCJuly22

In a double-length lead article of the July issue of Race & Class, IRR director Liz Fekete warns of a deepening ‘culture of extremism’ amongst police officers across Europe, highlighting numerous cases of racist and misogynistic attitudes and far right entryism amongst police officers.

Documenting cases from across Europe, the article has been covered by The Observer (UK) and in European publications in Belgium, Spain, Italy, Portugal and more.

The edition also features:

📄 Articles

Moralising racial regimes: surveillance and control after Singapore’s ‘Little India riots’ by Joe Greener

Torrens Title: property, race and (infra)structures of feeling in the settler colony by Andrew Brooks and Astrid Lorange

✍️Commentary

Revisiting ‘resilience’ in light of racism, ‘othering’ and resistance by Wendy Sims-Schouten and Patricia Gilbert

📖 Reviews

Unsilencing Gaza: reflections on resistance by Sara Roy; Rethinking Statehood in Palestine: self-determination and decolonization beyond partition edited by Leila Farsakh (Nancy Murray)

Legacy of Violence: a history of the British Empire by Caroline Elkins (John Newsinger)

Available to order now with the lead article free to read online for 6 months

11/07/2022
Out Now 🚨Racism, radicalisation and Europe’s ‘Thin Blue Line’. IRR Director Liz Fekete warns of a deepening ‘culture of ...
10/07/2022

Out Now 🚨

Racism, radicalisation and Europe’s ‘Thin Blue Line’.

IRR Director Liz Fekete warns of a deepening ‘culture of extremism’ amongst police officers across Europe, in a double-length lead article for the July issue of Race & Class.

Read online for free or order your copy from the Institute of Race Relations website

IRR director Liz Fekete warns of a deepening ‘culture of extremism’ amongst police officers across Europe and the UK.

Following the horrific events in Buffalo, many are highlighting the prevalance of the 'Great replacement theory' circula...
17/05/2022

Following the horrific events in Buffalo, many are highlighting the prevalance of the 'Great replacement theory' circulating on far Right networks and conservative media.

To understand the theory and its implications, read Sophia Siddiqui's pathbreaking article.

https://journals.sagepub.com/share/D8B7KH6QM535Y5SKMYQB?target=10.1177/03063968211037219

In this challenging article, the author marries the notion of reproduction, both biological and social, to new forms of political and popular racism in Europe wherein the family and breeding to kee...

18/04/2022

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