Acknowledgments (Dorothy Smith-Ruiz)
Foreword (Earl Smith)
Dorothy Smith-Ruiz is Associate Professor of Africana Studies and
Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Sherri Lawson Clark is Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology
at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Marcia Watson is Assistant Professor of Elementary Education at
Towson University in Baltimore County, Maryland.
Contemporary African American Families, written in a style that would be accessible to undergraduates, provides an important supplement to the many texts and readers on African American families that focus primarily on within-family dynamics. By taking a look at various structural factors—education, incarceration, housing, and other public policies, this collection of articles delivers a structural framework and an essential social context within which to study today’s Black families.Dr. Roberta L. Coles, Professor of Sociology, Dept. of Social & Cultural Sciences, Marquette University, USAContemporary African American Families is a truly comprehensive and compelling attempt to place "the Black family" in an analytically and politically robust social and conceptual context. It asks questions about what everything from mass incarceration and housing discrimination to Diasporic differences and health disparities mean for the everyday lives and macrostructural possibilities of African American family members—fathers, mothers, grandparents, and children. This book takes a traditional social scientific subject and drags it undeniably into the present. Clearly written, it will work well in classrooms and for more casual readers simply interested in learning more about the topic. John L. Jackson, Jr., author of Real Black: Adventures in Racial Sincerity and Dean of the School of Social Policy & Practice at the University of Pennsylvania.
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