Sunday, March 4, 2012

DISENFRANCHISEMENT OF AFRICAN AMERICANS FROM HIGHER EDUCATION


By Jack Daniel
Distinguished Service Professor of Communication
University of Pittsburgh
First Published in Pittsburgh Urban Media

For several decades, African American alumni of the University of Pittsburgh partnered with the University to enhance the institution’s diversity mission. Just recently, 40 years of progress were celebrated. Now, in Pittsburgh and across America, not only diversity initiatives but higher education itself is under fiscal duress as evidenced by the Pennsylvania Governor’s proposal to radically reduce the University’s state appropriation.
In his February 29, 2012 statement before the Pennsylvania Senate Appropriations Committee, Chancellor Mark A. Nordenberg commented on the proposed cuts as follows:
• It would take our cumulative two-year cuts in state support to well over $100 million;
• It would reduce our state support, in absolute dollars, to levels that we have not seen since the mid-1980's, more than a quarter century ago and when the state’s own budget was about one-third of its current size; and
• It would reduce our state support, if adjusted for inflation, to the lowest level since Pitt became a state-related university.
Nordenberg also asserted, “In terms of proportionality, perhaps nothing is more telling than the proposed general fund budget’s bottom line. Overall state funding would be reduced by less than one-tenth of 1 percent or $22,456 million. The cuts proposed just for Pitt are more than double that amount...”
Herein, I add my opinion that the proposed cuts are exponentially devastating for African Americans, particularly if one forced option for Pitt is to significantly increase intuition. Given that [1] undergraduate Pitt tuition is above $15,000 annually for in-state students; [2] nationally, the top 10 most expensive colleges average nearly $44,000; and [3] the top ten most expensive public colleges’ out-of-state tuitions range between approximately $34,000 and $37,000, we are witnessing the economic disenfranchisement of not only the poor but also middle-class as well as most African Americans and many other racial minorities in particular! Lest there be doubt, consider the following facts.
In July 2011, the Pew Foundation reported that the median wealth of white households was 20 times that of African American households and 18 times that of Hispanics. The very next month, we learned that African American unemployment had jumped to 16.7%, its highest level since 1984, while the unemployment rate for whites fell slightly to 8%, thereby making good on the often stated observation that “recession” for whites equals “depression” for African Americans! Thus, for many African Americans, the pursuit of higher education is likely to entail accepting huge loans that would take a very significant part of their lives to repay, loans so great that the recipients would eventually join the growing ranks of those filing for bankruptcy after leaving college.
Still worse, the adverse fiscal attack on higher education combines with other forces to truly represent an all-out, multi-pronged attack on the future of African Americans in higher education. Just recently, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a case from Texas where a white student filed a racial discrimination complaint. This case could be the legal tsunami whose outcome might be that an ultra-conservative leaning Court will undermine the legitimate uses of race in making admissions decisions. Even if it does not do so, simply agreeing to hear the case further chills the climate for the pursuit of diversity in higher education. Already, “race-based” scholarships are prohibited and potential donors struggle to find ways to assist disadvantaged students of color under the umbrella of “diversity.”
Therefore, now is the time for Pitt’s African American alumni, the African American Pittsburgh and larger Pennsylvania communities, African Americans across the nation, and others of good will to “gird up their loins” for the battles that are likely to ensue in “high places.” Our voices need to be heard not only at the moment in Harrisburg, but also in all venues where the assault on equal opportunity is taking place. For example, witness the efforts to disenfranchise people of color from voting just in time for the upcoming Presidential election. Perhaps the current re-enactment of the 1965 Selma-Montgomery March to emphasize voters’ rights, workers’ rights, and public education is instructive regarding what must be done to help stem the tide of fiscal assaults on higher education. Maybe a timely March on Harrisburg would contribute to preventing ill-advised Commonwealth budget decisions that could force Pitt down the road to becoming a private institution, a move that could have tremendous adverse impact on educational opportunities for all Pennsylvania students.
Make no mistake about it; there are those who intend to “take back America.” Part of that process is to take back the prestigious public institutions of higher education to which African Americans fought so hard to gain access. What better way to block their further pursuit of the American dream than to implement a modern, fiscal rationale for standing in the doors of higher education? What better way to “correct those liberal-leaning” institutions that have accommodated diversity? At best, the proposed cuts to Pennsylvania higher education would lead to terrible unintended consequences for Pennsylvania higher education in general and for African Americans in particular. At worst, the proposed cuts could lead to draconian results. Why not avoid both alternatives by heeding President Obama’s February 27th challenge to governors to invest in education?
There is indisputable evidence that documents the connections between economic recovery, job creation, and socio-economic mobility. Thus, the very thought of performing radical surgery on the budgets of leading public universities should be sufficient cause to trigger a truly grass roots blue and white-collar response.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Professor Edits New Book

CoverDr. Shawn Long, Chair of the Department of Communication Studies at the University of North Carolina Charlotte, is the editor of a forthcoming book, Virtual Work and Human Interaction Research. From the promotional flyer:

ShawnLongWebVirtual Work and Human Interaction Research uses humanistic and social scientific inquiry from interdisciplinary and international perspectives to explore how individuals engage in the new virtual work paradigm. This book explores a wide range of topics including, but not limited to, boundary management in virtual work, shadowing virtual work practices, creative workers’attitudes in virtual work, high-touch interactivity in virtual experiences, surveys, interviews experimental, ethnography grounded-theory, and phenomenology in virtual work contexts.

Professor Conducting Study on the Meaning of Marriage

Dr. Ebony Utley, Assistant Professor of Communications at California State University Long Beach, is part of a research team conducting a study on the meaning of marriage for African Americans. They hope to expand the literature with the quantitative and qualitative results from their study. The team is inviting anyone that self-identifies as African American and is at least 18 years old, to take approximately 20 minutes to complete their confidential online survey about the meaning of marriage to African Americans. The goal is to have 1,000 participants and upon completion of the survey, participants are eligible to win a $50 gift card. If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Utley at ebony.utley@csulb.edu

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Black Herstory: Rosa Parks Did Much More than Sit on a Bus

By Rachel Griffin
Ms. Magazine Blog

As a Black feminist scholar, every February I find myself troubled by the ways that we simultaneously remember and forget women who look like me. Not that I’m satisfied with the memory of Black women every other month of the year but February–Black History Month–can be especially disappointing. I find myself wanting to rant to anyone within earshot, “Rosa Parks did more than sit on a bus!!!”
My urge to scream is rooted in our common cultural practice of remembering Parks only as a demure and delicate old seamstress who sparked the civil rights movement. The common assertion is that Parks’ moment in history began in December 1955 when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man in Montgomery, Ala. But we must confront this assertion, because each time we confine her memory to that moment we erase part of her admirable character, strategic intellect and indomitable spirit.
Read the rest here

Thursday, January 5, 2012

CALL FOR CHAPTER PROPOSALS: Claiming a seat at the table: Feminism, Underserved Women Of Color, Voice and Resistance

 
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 1, 2012 

Edited by 
Dr. Sonja M. Brown Givens 
SUNY Empire State College 
and 
Dr. Keisha Edwards Tassie 
Clayton State University 

"Class is much more than Marx's definition of relationship to the means of production. Class involves behavior, your basic assumptions, how you are taught to behave, what you expect from yourself and from others, your concept of a future, how you understand problems and solve them, how you think, feel, act." – bell hooks, 2000 from Where we stand: Class matters 

Project Overview 
If taken literally, representations of women of color in popular culture suggest that they are more empowered, more influential and wealthier than ever before. Minute-by-minute presentations of the lavish lives of celebrity women like Jennifer Lopez, BeyoncĂ© Knowles and Kim Kardashian arguably imply that class elevation and exorbitant consumerism afford women of color the privilege of voice.  By extension, women of color who are unable to acquire the commodity of voice (by means of their affluence) are relegated to a world of socio-political marginality and invisibility – a place often void of class consciousness with few avenues for active vocal participation (hooks, 2000). In this sense the terms poor and disprivileged provide limited means to understand the cognitive, behavioral, and psychological dimensions of class. In contrast, underserved women of color lack both material resources and acknowledgment – sometimes from within their own communities. This project illuminates the connections between class location(s) and communicative practices in relational, mediated, academic and interpersonal contexts.  
 

Objective 
This book will argue that (1) underserved women of color are virtually invisible in feminist scholarship; (2) their experiences communicating across class lines are challenging, at best; (3) their relegation is maximally institutional, and minimally material; (4) claiming voice for women of color is elusive because their role in feminist struggle is unclear. 

Target Audience 
The book is intended for use by scholars/professionals/practitioners in the areas of cultural studies, feminist/women’s studies, communication studies, sociology, psychology, community and human services, counseling and other related disciplines.