Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Anti-blackness in America has persisted throughout history in various forms. When talking about racism in the U.S. it is painted as a black and white issue without acknowledging that white supremacy ideals are embedded in various cultures and societies. Anti-blackness is perpetuated through different systems such as education, media, social class, and access or lack thereof to different resources. Systemic racism (Institutional racism) creates the constant impediment of progress by setting up barriers for people of color that otherwise would not be present or evident for those who are white or white passing. While the term racism is generally used to describe discrimination against any non white group of people based on racial identity of skin color, anti-blackness refers more specifically to the disenfranchisement and structural violence experienced by Black people of the African diaspora. Anti-blackness, as it exists now, is understood to be historically rooted in the widespread racialization, enslavement, and displacement of captive Africans impacted by the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. Even centuries after the formal end of chattel slavery in the U.S. and decades after the end of Jim Crow segregation, it is commonly understood that the nation continues to deal with residual realities of racism, anti-Blackness, and inequality."@en }
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- Anti-Blackness_in_the_United_States abstract "Anti-blackness in America has persisted throughout history in various forms. When talking about racism in the U.S. it is painted as a black and white issue without acknowledging that white supremacy ideals are embedded in various cultures and societies. Anti-blackness is perpetuated through different systems such as education, media, social class, and access or lack thereof to different resources. Systemic racism (Institutional racism) creates the constant impediment of progress by setting up barriers for people of color that otherwise would not be present or evident for those who are white or white passing. While the term racism is generally used to describe discrimination against any non white group of people based on racial identity of skin color, anti-blackness refers more specifically to the disenfranchisement and structural violence experienced by Black people of the African diaspora. Anti-blackness, as it exists now, is understood to be historically rooted in the widespread racialization, enslavement, and displacement of captive Africans impacted by the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. Even centuries after the formal end of chattel slavery in the U.S. and decades after the end of Jim Crow segregation, it is commonly understood that the nation continues to deal with residual realities of racism, anti-Blackness, and inequality.".
- Q22906394 abstract "Anti-blackness in America has persisted throughout history in various forms. When talking about racism in the U.S. it is painted as a black and white issue without acknowledging that white supremacy ideals are embedded in various cultures and societies. Anti-blackness is perpetuated through different systems such as education, media, social class, and access or lack thereof to different resources. Systemic racism (Institutional racism) creates the constant impediment of progress by setting up barriers for people of color that otherwise would not be present or evident for those who are white or white passing. While the term racism is generally used to describe discrimination against any non white group of people based on racial identity of skin color, anti-blackness refers more specifically to the disenfranchisement and structural violence experienced by Black people of the African diaspora. Anti-blackness, as it exists now, is understood to be historically rooted in the widespread racialization, enslavement, and displacement of captive Africans impacted by the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. Even centuries after the formal end of chattel slavery in the U.S. and decades after the end of Jim Crow segregation, it is commonly understood that the nation continues to deal with residual realities of racism, anti-Blackness, and inequality.".