Transcription of RACE Project BIBLIOGRAPHY
1 February 2007 RACE Project BIBLIOGRAPHY Organizational Statements ..2 Anthropology ..2 Census ..11 Education ..12 Genetics and Genomics ..18 History ..33 Language ..38 Racism ..39 Global 2 Organizational Statements American Anthropological Association. 1999 [Adopted 1998]. American Anthropological Association Statement on "Race." American Anthropologist 100(3): 7122713. < > American Anthropological Association. 1994. American Anthropological Association Statement on "Race" and Intelligence. < > American Association of Physical Anthropologists. 1996. AAPA Statement on Biological Aspects of Race.
2 American Journal of Physical Anthropology 101: 5692570. < > American Sociological Association. 2003. The importance of collecting data and doing social scientific research on race. Washington, DC: American Sociological Association. < > International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences. Proposed Replacement Statement for the UNESCO Documents on Biological Aspects of Race. < > Anthropology Adams, Jr. R, ed. 2005. "Interrogating race and national consciousness in the Diaspora: the series." Transforming Anthropology 13(2): 1502164. Adams, Jr. R, ed. 2006. "Interrogating race and national consciousness in the Diaspora: the series.
3 " Transforming Anthropology 14(1): 772101. Armelagos G, Goodman AH. 1998. Race and racism in anthropology. In Building a New Biocultural Synthesis: Political-Economic Perspectives on Human Biology, ed. AH Goodman and TL Leatherman, pp. 3592377. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Baker LD. 1998. From savage to Negro: anthropology and the construction of race, 1896-1954. Berkeley: University of California Press. Blakey ML. 1991. Man and nature, white and other. In Decolonizing Anthropology, ed. FV Harrison. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association, 15223. [On the naturalization of white supremacy through the creation and institutional reproduction of racial classifications.]
4 ] Blakey ML. 1999. Scientific racism and the biological concept of race. Literature and Psychology 45: 29243. [An overview and critical discussion of the origins and history of racial science from Linnaeus to the 1990s. Blakey contends that understanding race as 3 a socially constructed and scientifically invalid system of biological categories is insufficient but necessary for undermining contemporary institutional racism.] Blakey ML. 2001. Bioarchaeology of the African Diaspora in the Americas: its origins and scope. Annual Review of Anthropology 30: 3872422. Brace CL. 2005.
5 "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word. New York: Oxford University Press. [An historical overview of perceptions of human variation before and since the emergence of the idea of race. The introductory chapter explains why race inadequately describes and explains human biological variation.] Briggs CL. 2005. Communicability, racial discourse and disease. Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 2692291. Brown RA, Armelagos GJ. 2001. Apportionment of racial diversity: a review. Evolutionary Anthropology 10: 34240. Cowlishaw GK. 2000. Censoring race in 'post2colonial' anthropology. Critique of Anthropology 20(2): 1012123.
6 Diaz2 Barriga M, O'Connell VA, Fermin M. 2004. Race, gender and mentoring in anthropology departments. Drake St. C. 1987 and 1990. Black Folk Here and There: An Essay in History and Anthropology. Volumes 1 and 2. Los Angeles: Center for Afro2 American Studies, University of California at Los Angeles. Dressler WW, Oths KS, Gravlee CG. 2005. Race and ethnicity in public health research: models to explain health disparities. Annual Review of Anthropology 34: 2312252. Echo2 Hawk R, Zimmerman LJ. 2006. Beyond racism: some opinions about racialism and American archaeology. The American Indian Quarterly 30(3&4): 4612485.
7 Epperson TW. 2004. Critical race theory and the archaeology of the African diaspora. Historical Archaeology 38(1): 1012108. [Special issue: Transcending Boundaries, Transforming the Discipline: African Diaspora Archaeologies in the New Millennium] Farber P. 2003. Race2mixing and science in the United States. Endeavour 27(4): 1662170. Fausto2 Sterling A. 2004. Refashioning race: DNA and the politics of health care. differences 15(3): 1237. Firmin A. 2002 [1885]. The Equality of the Human Races. Translated by A Charles. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. [A thorough response to Joseph Arthur Comte de Gobineau's influential work in scientific racism, Essay on the Inequality of Human Races 4 by recently "rediscovered" nineteenth-century Haitian anthropologist.]
8 Ant nor Firmin refutes polygenists' claims of blacks' as a separate, racially inferior species on both scientific and moral grounds with arguments that resonate with contemporary findings on the structure of human variation. Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban's introduction establishes Firmin's foundational role in anthropology, Pan-Africanism and anti-racist theory.] Fluehr2 Lobban C. 2005. Race and Racism: An Introduction. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press. Goodman AH. 1997. Bred in the Bone? The Sciences March/April: 20 25. [On the misuse of race in science, with special emphasis on forensic identification.
9 Goodman shows that even "experts" at racial classification are unable to do so reliably and extends this critique to a discussion of how confusion over the structure of human variation and uncritical acceptance of biological race has negative everyday, though sometimes unintended, consequences.] Goodman AH. 1997. The problematic of "race" in contemporary biological anthropology. In Biological Anthropology: The State of the Science. Second edition, ed. NT Boaz and LD Wolfe, pp. 2212243. Bend, Oregon: International Inst. of Human Evolutionary Research. Goodman AH. 1998. Archaeology and human biological variation.
10 Conference on New England Archaeology Newsletter 17:128. Goodman AH. 2000. Biological diversity and cultural diversity: from race to radical bioculturalism. In Cultural Diversity in the United States: A Critical Reader, ed. I Susser and T Patterson, pp. 43259. Oxford and Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers. Goodman AH. 2000. Why genes don't count (for racial differences in health). American Journal of Public Health 90(11): 169921702. [A critique of uses of race as a proxy for genetic variation in disease expression. Goodman suggests that scientists who define genetic variation racially often do so as a result of two unwarranted assumptions.]