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Journal Article
New Political Science (2016) 38 (1): 1–22.
Published: 01 March 2016
... that it was the combination of that course and the threat of violence on the part of African Americans that fully explain those two victories. A close reading of the texts and actions of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X is indispensable for my claim. The archival evidence, as well, makes a convincing case for the CRA...
View articletitled, Violence and/or Nonviolence in the Success of the Civil Rights Movement: The <span class="search-highlight">Malcolm</span> X-Martin Luther King, Jr. Nexus
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for article titled, Violence and/or Nonviolence in the Success of the Civil Rights Movement: The <span class="search-highlight">Malcolm</span> X-Martin Luther King, Jr. Nexus
Journal Article
New Political Science (1998) 20 (4): 489–491.
Published: 01 December 1998
...Ken Shulman; George Katsiaficas © 1998 Caucus for a New Political Science 1998 New Political Science, Volume 20, Number 4, 1998 489 An Open Letter to the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) Attention: Malcolm Rogers, Director The Board of Trustees You really should give them back. Those magnificent...
View articletitled, An Open Letter to the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA): Attention; <span class="search-highlight">Malcolm</span> Rogers, Director The Board of Trustees
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for article titled, An Open Letter to the Museum of Fine Arts (MFA): Attention; <span class="search-highlight">Malcolm</span> Rogers, Director The Board of Trustees
Journal Article
New Political Science (2017) 39 (3): 350–368.
Published: 01 September 2017
...Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn Abstract This article extends the concept of regulatory capture to a prominent element of responses to the 2007–2008 global financial crisis overlooked in political science: the out-of-court settlements undertaken between regulators and financial firms. In outsourcing...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2010) 32 (1): 65–82.
Published: 01 March 2010
...Chad Lavin; Chris Russill Abstract In recent years, epidemiology has made a leap from specialized literature to popular discourse. Thanks in part to Malcolm Gladwell’s bestselling treatment of “social epidemics,” The Tipping Point, nearly every facet of social and political life—from fashion trends...
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New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 285–292.
Published: 01 June 1999
... which most alarmed the defenders of privilege. Malcolm X is thus shown, in the sequence preceding his assassination (1965), concluding a public lecture with the words, "I, for one, will join in with anyone, I don't care what color you are, as long as you want to change this miserable condition...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 245–259.
Published: 01 June 1999
...; Douglas quoted in "Revolutionary Art: A Tool for Liberation," taken from a speech delivered at Malcolm X College (Chicago) at the First Revolutionary Artist Conference, June 8, 1970. Reprinted in The Black Panther (July 4,1970), pp. 12-13. For an extended analysis of the role of the media in shaping...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2016) 38 (3): 371–389.
Published: 01 September 2016
... to liberty and political equality. It should be noted that King's deployment of such a binary was strategic, given the rise of Malcolm X and the specter of radical black nationalism. Malcolm X represented the anti-patriotic alternative to King, going so far as to say that he was 'not an American' that he...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 217–230.
Published: 01 June 1999
...), a Southern civil rights group which was later taken in a more militant direction by "Black Power" leader Kwame Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael), was targeted for surveillance in 1960.15 Efforts were stepped up in the first part of the 1960s against King, Malcolm X, Ture and the Black Panther Party...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2003) 25 (4): 477–507.
Published: 01 December 2003
... of the Student Organization for Black Unity (SOBU). He later founded Malcolm X Liberation University (MXLU) in Durham, North Carolina (later relocated to Greensboro) which was designed to facilitate social change through the training and development of radical cadre. A stunning orator, resourceful...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (1): 58–74.
Published: 01 March 2022
... and Malcolm X's works. While similarly concerned with 13Barnor Hesse and Juliet Hooker, "On Black Political Thought inside Global Black Protest," South Atlantic Quarterly 116, no. 3 (2017): 449. 14 1 bo rrow this phrase from Ustundag, who formulated it in light of her interviews with the Kurdish guerilla...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1995) 17 (1-2): 151–171.
Published: 01 November 1995
...," in her memoirs, The Downing Street Years (New York: HarperCollins, 1993), 618-624. 20. Thatcher comments thus upon the actions of Malcolm Rifkind, a leading Scottish Conservative, and at the time in question Secretary of State for Scotland: "Malcolm Rifkind now also fell back with a vengeance on the old...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2010) 32 (4): 531–545.
Published: 01 December 2010
... a decade earlier-May 19, 1968 precisely, when the New York-based group Last Poets (Felipe Luciano, Gylan Kain, and David Nelson) got together to celebrate Malcolm X's birthday in Mt. Morris park in Harlem.10 Their flowing vocal styles were the precursors to rap music, and while they epitomized a pro-black...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (1): 75–89.
Published: 01 March 2022
... persistent in Malcolm X's autobiography, whose conversionary frames were likely influenced by Alex Haley.57 Cleaver also uses redemptive language: confessing the injustice of his past defense of rape as "an insurrectionary act" in Soul on Ice, he claims "that is why I started to write. To save myself."58...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 131–155.
Published: 01 June 1999
... of Islam, and was deeply influenced by former prisoner turned revolutionary Malcolm X. In Soledad state prison in California, Carter met the radical intellectual inmate Eldridge Cleaver, who taught Soledad's African American History and Culture class. His associations and the changing political...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (3): 346–365.
Published: 01 September 2014
..., whose prominent members include Malcolm Gladwell and Evgeny Morozov, based their claims on the fact that only a minority of people in the Arab countries had internet access and even fewer mobile internet access. Moreover, they considered social media tools as "irrelevant gadgets, more useful...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (2): 238–265.
Published: 01 June 2014
... that may be to the good. Looking Forward, Honoring Joel In the week leading up to the roundtable on Joel's work, one of my undergraduate classes discussed the political thought of Malcolm X. In so many ways, Joel's rare combination of cool analysis, fierce passion, and profound humor recalls the example...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 157–169.
Published: 01 June 1999
... and oppression. Sadly, this was never done; let us now examine what was done. With the exception of the paramilitary "Fruit of Islam," due primarily to the tireless efforts of the Nation of Islam's Malcolm X, there was no Black fighting formation in 1960. Unfortunately, the Fruit of Islam's efforts were centered...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2019) 41 (4): 622–653.
Published: 01 December 2019
... and never saw the two types of tactics as mutually exclusive choices. While diversity of tactics is generally considered a recent concept that traces it origins to the 1960s, primarily in the works of Malcolm X and Howard Zinn,12 I argue that diversity of tactics was actually first articulated in 1850...
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New Political Science (2003) 25 (2): 293–298.
Published: 01 June 2003
... seems to have no outside at all. CHAMSY EL-OJEILI The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand 1 Guy Debord, Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, translated by Malcolm Imrie (London: Verso, 1990). ...
Journal Article
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New Political Science (1999) 21 (2): 125–130.
Published: 01 June 1999
.... The Panthers were a significant part of the overall movement to transform racial injustice. Although society today celebrates Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr., dozens of activists from the movement remain unjustly imprisoned. We include a synopsis of the cases of Albert Woodfox and Herman Wallace. Known...
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