American Race Relations and the Legacy of British Colonialism

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A01=Thomas H. Stanton
abolitionist movements
American colonial society
Author_Thomas H. Stanton
Black White Race Relations
British colonialism
British legacy
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Category=NHK
Category=NHTR
Citizens Of The United States
Civic Networks
civil rights history
Colonial Administration
Colonial Plural Society
colony's economy
Colony's Experience
Colony’s Experience
comparative colonial studies
Contemporary Societies
Declaration Of Independence
Divided Society
Dual Legal System
Dual State
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ernst Fraenkel
Fourteenth Amendment
Free Negroes
Freed Woman
HOLC
Irish Joint Stock Companies
legal institutional analysis
Mulatto
Plural Society
postcolonial social stratification
racial legal systems
Ship Owners
structural inequality in former colonies
Violate

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032173955
  • Weight: 108g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Colonial rule distorts a colony’s economy and its society, and British rule was no exception. British policies led to a stratified American colonial society with slaves on the bottom and white settlers on top. The divided society functioned through laws that imposed rules and defined roles of the respective races. This occurred in other colonies too, often leading to strife that continues today. Especially since World War II the United States seems finally to have been able to remove many laws and practices that had created barriers between races in the divided society. Appeals to legitimacy, such as by abolitionists and the Civil Rights Movement, were essential to change laws from support of the divided society to instruments for disestablishing it. Thanks to the rule of law – another important British legacy -- the U.S. is much farther along than many former colonies in making progress. By highlighting the history of the interplay of two fundamental concepts, the divided society and the rule of law, and briefly contrasting the experiences of other former colonies, this book shows how the United States has made significant long-term progress, although incomplete, and ways for this to continue today.

Thomas H. Stanton is a former President of the Association for Federal Enterprise Risk Management and currently teaches as an adjunct faculty member at the Center for Advanced Governmental Studies at the Johns Hopkins University. Website: www.thomas-stanton.com.

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