Racial and Ethnic Politics in the U.S. Final Exam Review Sheet
The exam will include 20 multiple-choice questions (40%), a choice of 4 of 8-10 identifications (important concepts/people from the course) (20%), and an essay (40%). It will cover all material covered since the beginning of the quarter through readings, blogs, and material covered in class. For this exam you can have the following resources with you: your reading reflections, syllabus, and identifying essential political issues handout.
All information related to, and not limited to, the following topics may be included in the exam:
- Social Construction of Race and Ethnicity
- Essentialism
- Social construction (or “constructionism”)
- How we construct categories of difference and inequalities
- Socialization – what is it and what influences it?
- What is the importance of our perspective/history in how we view race/ethnicity?
- How do we identify and challenge assumptions?
- Differences and similarities between race and ethnicity
- Identifications: White privilege, Enculturation, Ethnocentrism, Cultural relativism, essentialism, social construction, poverty threshold,
- Historical Construction of Race and Ethnicity
- How have different groups defined race (government, society, individuals)
- Institutional racism (definition and examples – education, slavery, redlining)
- Development of slavery in the U.S. (how it grew? Why? How did its defense change over time?)
- Demographic trends (how has the diversity of the U.S. Changed (and how has it been classified – census)
- Historical construction of whiteness (Whiteness of a different color, invisibility, role in race and ethnic political debates and policy, white privilege)
- Racial formations
- Identifications: historical construction, institutional racism/discrimination, indentured servants, Plessy v Ferguson, Brown v. Board of Education
- Immigration
- 1st, 2nd, 3rd generation immigrants
- “old” and “new” immigrants
- Changes in US immigration policy
- Naturalization act of 1790
- Chinese exclusion act of 1882
- Immigration act of 1924 (Reed-Johnson Act)
- Immigration act of 1965
- Refugee act of 1980
- Immigration reform and control act of 1986
- 1990 immigration act
- Where do most immigrants live in the US
- Characteristics of immigrants today (housing, economy, jobs, education, income, citizenship status)
- Documented vs. undocumented immigrants (status, changes, recent policy proposals, DREAMers, etc.)
- Effect of immigration on the future of US (diversity, birth rate, changing opinions on immigration)
- Effect of Trump/Obama administration policies/proposals regarding these American populations
- Identifications: old immigrants, new immigrants, naturalization act of 1790, Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, Immigration Act of 1924 (Reed-Johnson Act), Immigration Act of 1965, quotas,
- Native American Politics
- Civil rights (definition)
- Methods of taking land, economic and political power from Native American tribes
- Efforts to regain political power
- Native American status today (case study: Dakota Access Pipeline)
- How are Native Americans similar and different from other marginalized racial and ethnic groups?
- Identifications: Indian Removal Act (1830), National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), Implicit Assessemnt Test (IAT), Dakota Access Pipeline, Nation
- African American Politics
- Slavery (historical buildup, rationale, and resistance)
- Civil war amendments (13th, 14th, 15th)
- Reconstruction and Black Codes
- Jim Crow (literacy test)
- Violent intimidation (KKK, White Citizens Council, lynching)
- Shifts in population
- Civil Rights Movement (strategies, successes, failures)
- Hurricane Katrina
- Economic and political standing
- Reparations
- Identifications: black codes, reconstruction, Jim crow, literacy tests, grandfather clause, poll tax, lynching, Plessy v Ferguson, NAACP, SCLC, SNCC, majority-minority districts, representation, reparations
- Asian American Politics
- Historical context (Okihiro Reading)
- Diversity among Asian Americans
- Efforts toward progress
- Being “yellow”
- Economic and political standing
- Model minority (myth or fact?)
- Identifications: model minority, People v. Hall, Gong Lum v. Rice, Korematsu vs, US
- Arab Americans, Muslim Americans, Jewish Americans, post 9/11
- Separation of church and state (myth or fact?) – 1st amendment, origin of the phrase – Jefferson
- Religious representation in Congress
- Similarities and differences between Arab Americans, Muslim, Americans, and People from the Middle East
- Effect of 9/11 on these populations (rights, discrimination, efforts toward assimilation)
- Impact of Trump campaign/election/travel ban
- Jewish Americans (diversity, historical changes, discrimination, economic and political standing)
- Effect of Trump administration policies/proposals regarding these American populations
- Religious diversity in America
- Identifications: Islamaphobia, Anti-Semitism, separation of church and state, 1st Amendment, Establishment Clause
- Latino Politics
- Identification and diversity (different groups, census, ethnicity)
- Latino vs. Hispanic
- Discrimination
- Rodney Hero – Two tiered pluralism
- Changing Latino population
- Political issues (immigration, education, languages, etc…)
- Sonia Sotomayor
- Effect of Trump administration policies/proposals regarding Latinos
- Identifications: Hispanic, Latino, two-tiered pluralism, undocumented immigrants, Sonia Sotomayor, Rodney Hero
- Media
- Powers of the media: Oversight, Agenda Setting, Framing, Priming
- Role of news coverage (findings from journal articles and studies from your reading)
- Visibility of various groups on TV (news vs popular entertainment)
- Changes in who is represented on TV/Movies
- Identifications: Oversight, Agenda Setting, Framing, Priming
- Economics
- Important terms: wealth, income, employment rate, underemployed, Poverty rate
- How is the poverty rate determined
- Discrimination in hiring practices
- Urban neighborhoods
- Wealth gap and economic situation in U.S. (how do various groups compare and contrast here)
- Economic status of African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans
- Effect of the recent recession on different groups.
- Identifications: wealth, income, employment rate, underemployed, Poverty rate
- Electoral Politics and Representation
- How do different groups vote (exit polls)
- Representation (descriptive vs. substantive and symbolic)
- Arguments for descriptive/substantive representatives
- Current representation in congress
- Majority minority districts (gerrymandering, effect on minorities and the parties)
- 2008 election (Obama effect, effect on race relations, “post racial” concept)
- 2016 election (what role did race/ethnicity play in the election? How has it mattered afterward?)
- Identifications: descriptive representation, substantive representation, symbolic representation, group representation, Barack Obama, Donald Trump
- Affirmative Action
- Definition
- Historical buildup (political actions and court decisions)
- Use in employment and education (effects on other stakeholders)
- Modern debate (Bakke, prop 209, Michigan cases, Seattle case)
- College enrollment
- Long term goal
- Identifications: affirmative action, reverse discrimination, Bakke v. Regents, JFK, Lyndon Johnson, Howard Commencement Address, Steelworkers v. Weber
- Law and the Justice System
- Racial profiling (definition and changing application post 9/11)
- How states have monitored traffic stops (what have they found?)
- Prisons in America (overcrowding, growth of prison population, reasons for growth, racial and ethnic inequalities, role of the war on drugs
- Black Lives Matter (buildup, goals, motivations, reactions pos/neg)
- Identifications: racial profiling, Black Lives Matter, Ferguson, War on Drugs,
- Future of Racial and Ethnic Politics in the US
- Major themes from blogs and presentations
ESSAY: your essay will ask you to identify and evaluate a political issue related to the course. You will be expected to use the four step process to identify political issues including providing a political plan to help improve this situation. You will be expected to cite several of the readings from the course.