Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
Due to developments in the political landscape of the United States, diversity, equity, and inclusion no longer stand securely as shared principles in much of civic and social life. This session will be comprised of papers that critically explore whether the effort to erase these principles warrants new thinking about racial and ethnic coalition-building in modern times. Submissions can address the potential for such coalition building, including the contemporary pitfalls, challenges, and possibilities for doing so. They may also draw from empirical research and sociological theorizing to address the character of such coalition formation, including why and how they have come into being and whether they can or should endure.
Afro Latinidad: An Ethnography on Liminality and the Possibilities for Coalition Building - Katie Linette Acosta, Georgia State University
How Does Interracial Coalition Evolve Over Time? Issue Framing and the Racial Boundaries of Political Alliance - Muna Adem, University of Notre Dame; Brenton Kalinowski, Indiana University-Bloomington; Dina G. Okamoto, Indiana University-Bloomington
Negotiating Indo-Caribbean ethnoracial identities, coalition-building, and anti-Blackness during the 2020 Black Lives Matter Movement - Cristine Sabrina Khan, Stony Brook University
Solidarity Without Groups: How Non-White Meta-Categories Constrain and Enable Intra-Minority Coalition-Building - Mari Sanchez, Harvard University
“They Be Hating, But We Stay United”: Cross-Racial Feminist Memory Activism in Black-Asian Coalition Building - Jiyoun Yoo, University of Illinois at Chicago