2019
DOI: 10.1108/9781787695535
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Mixed-Race in the US and UK: Comparing the Past, Present, and Future

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Cited by 12 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Loveman (2014:5) suggested that states naturalize racial categories rather than create racial categories but agreed that "states 'make race' by making race matter, directly and explicitly, in the lives of individual persons". Put together, racial categories as enacted by the nation-state serve to enumerate and monitor populations, exclude or devalue certain populations, assign benefits and access to others, and come to have meaning for individuals (Loveman 2014;Marx 1998;Mills 1997;Sims and Njaka 2020;Song 2003).…”
Section: Racial States and Racial Formationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Loveman (2014:5) suggested that states naturalize racial categories rather than create racial categories but agreed that "states 'make race' by making race matter, directly and explicitly, in the lives of individual persons". Put together, racial categories as enacted by the nation-state serve to enumerate and monitor populations, exclude or devalue certain populations, assign benefits and access to others, and come to have meaning for individuals (Loveman 2014;Marx 1998;Mills 1997;Sims and Njaka 2020;Song 2003).…”
Section: Racial States and Racial Formationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Coloureds represent part of the racial middle in South Africa. 3 Scholarship has shown that middling groups are catalysts for shaping, or sharpening, the boundaries and form of racial hierarchies, given their varied enumeration patterns, racial identity choices, and racial fluidity (Erasmus 2001;Sims and Njaka 2020;Song 2003;Wade 1995), and thus represent the formative place for studying racial formation (Daniel 2006;O'Brien 2008;Maghbouleh 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of the women who I spoke to highlighted how Black diasporic conversations on social media have provided them with the chance to learn about and discuss different geo-culturally specific histories and understandings of Black identity, including perceived (dis)connections between 'mixed-race' and Black identities in different parts of the world (Sims and Njaka 2019). Therefore, although digital spaces can be sites where Black people appear to overcome geographical borders and connect with each other across continents, such experiences may involve commentaries that uphold or contest other types of conceptual borders, or, boundaries-such as the perceived ones of Black identity, as constructed, deconstructed, and reconstructed by and through different people, politics, and places.…”
Section: Black Digital Dialogue Between Britain and The Usmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 1. Although research has shown that there are differences in the experiences of mixed-race people in the U.S. versus U.K. (Sims and Njaka, 2020) and South Africa (Laster Pirtle, 2014), this literature also shows that there is a broader globalization of mixedness (King-O’Riain et al, 2014) due to the nations’ shared histories and contemporary sociocultural exchanges (Dikötter, 2008; Goldberg, 2009). For this reason, and because they represent only two interviewees of 19, they were not removed from the sample despite the particular focus of this manuscript being on the context of the United States. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%