Race and Wealth Disparities: A Multidisciplinary Discourse
By (Author) Beverly Moran
University Press of America
University Press of America
27th February 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
Social, group or collective psychology
Social classes
339.22089
Paperback
210
Width 153mm, Height 228mm, Spine 17mm
304g
Race and Wealth Disparities is a multidisciplinary reader on the subject of race and wealth primarily, yet not exclusively, within the United States. The authors represent a number of social science and humanities' perspectives from anthropology, economics, education policy, history, literature and law, to management, political science, social psychology and sociology. The authors also represent an attempt to create a dialogue across institutions with four of the authors representing Fisk University, a historically Black University. Because of this unique approach of having authors from ten different disciplines address questions of race and wealth, this study is able to provide substantive information about race and wealth disparities as well as giving the reader a greater and more textured understanding of multidisciplinary work. In this regard, the text models a multidisciplinary conversation in a way that is meant to help others enter into interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary work. The essays came out of a series of workshops between professors from fourteen different disciplines and four different universities, therefore, the essays are meant to explain the disciplines these professors represent as well as to convey and analyze the subject at hand.
Beverly Moran has won a number of teaching awards, a Fulbright award and a grant from the Ford Foundation, Anne E. Casey Foundation, Rotary, etc. She was a visiting professor at the University of Colorado, the University of Asmara in Eritrea, and the University of Giessen in Germany. Since coming to Vanderbilt she has served on the executive committee of the Association of American Law Schools, the Board of Governors of the Society of American Law Teachers and as the first director of the Vanderbilt University Center for the Americas. Professor Moran's interests also include law and development, interdisciplinary scholarship and comparative law.