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Ethnic and Racial Studies
Volume 20; Issue 01
Please note, PDF files are only available for those entries marked with a '*'
Contents
Rehabilitating stereotypes: Pierre L. van den Berghe, PP. 01-16
* Explaining xenophobia and racism: a critical review of current research approaches: Andreas Wimmer, PP. 17-41
* Nationalism and racial Hellenism in nineteenth-century England and France: Athena S. Leoussi, PP. 42-68
* Responding to racialized divisions within the workforce - the experience of black and Asian police officers in England: Simon Holdaway, PP. 69-90
* Spouses or babies? Race, poverty and pathways to family formation in urban America: Haya Stier, Marta Tienda, PP. 91-122
* The conceptualization of an Albanian nation: Stark Draper, PP. 123-144
* Fortress Holland? Support for ethnocentric policies among the 1994-electorate of The Netherlands: Peer Scheepers, Hans Schmeets, Albert Felling, PP. 145-159
Issues in the analysis of ethnicity in the 1991 British Census: evidence from microdata: Angela Dale, Clare Holdsworth, PP. 160-181
The construction of a conceptual vision: 'Ethnic Groups' and the 1991 UK Census: PP. 182-194
America's paradox: PP. 195-199
Americans all: black and single-parent families in the inner city: PP. 200-201
Ethnic and Racial Studies
Volume 20; Issue 02
Contents
Religion and ethnicity: dual and alternative sources of identity among young British Pakistanis: Jessica Jacobson, PP. 238-256
"Jews and Judaism in contemporary Europe: religion or ethnic group?": Jonathan Webber, PP. 257-279
Religion and ethnicity: Judaism in the ethnic consciousness of contemporary Russian Jews: Valeriy Chervyakov, Zvi Gitelman, Vladimir Shapiro, PP. 280-305
Black Christianity in Britain: Patrick Kalilombe, PP. 306-324
Religion and identity in India: Sudipta Kaviraj, PP. 325-344
Indigenous discrimination: the ideological basis for local discrimination against hunter-gatherer minorities in sub-Saharan Africa: James Woodburn, PP. 345-361
Melting pot, salad bowl - cauldron? Manipulation and mobilization of ethnic and religious identities in Central Asia: Shirin Akiner, PP. 362-398
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