How non-Christian religious groups should be politically recognized within Western multicultural societies has proved to be a pressing contemporary issue. This article examines some ways in which American policies regarding religion and multiculturalism have shaped Hindu Indian American organizations, forms of public expression and activism. Specifically, I look at three examples of the impact of such policies on Hindu Indian Americans representing strategic arenas in the socio-political recognition of ethnic groups, and also crucial moments in the institutionalization of an American Hinduism. I also show how the activism of Hindu Americans is reshaping the contours of religion, society and politics in the United States.
policy recommendations for improving the reprehensible condition of the Brazilian disadvantaged.This book would have benefited from some additional editing (e.g., several inconsistent statistics, repeated sections, and some tables without sources). Despite this minor quibble, the author makes a major contribution to the understanding of race relations, making this book required reading for anyone interested in the topics of race or Brazil.
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