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Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race

Editors: Professors Lawrence D. Bobo and Michael C. Dawson
Senior Associate Editor: Professor Tommie Shelby
Director of Publications: Laurie Calhoun
Publications Coordinator: Carmella Schraecher
E-mail: dbreview@fas.harvard.edu

The Du Bois Review, launched in the spring of 2004, is a scholarly, multidisciplinary, and multicultural journal devoted to social science research and criticism about race. The journal provides a forum for discussion and increased understanding of race and society from a range of disciplines, including but not limited to economics, political science, sociology, anthropology, law, communications, public policy, psychology, linguistics, and history. The editors of this peer-reviewed journal are Professor Lawrence D. Bobo (Stanford University) and Professor Michael C. Dawson (University of Chicago), with Professor Tommie Shelby (Harvard University) serving as Senior Associate Editor.

Published by Cambridge University Press, each issue of the Du Bois Review contains between 200 and 225 pages and has four major sections. The first is a Statement from the Editors that provides a commentary on the state and the study of race as well as an overview of the issue. The second section, State of the Discipline, presents lead essays that synthetically critique broad areas of research regarding race. The third section, State of the Art, offers three to five major research articles. These articles are peer reviewed and rival the quality of those published in the best journals in the social sciences. The fourth section, State of the Discourse, comprises major review essays, each of which comments on two to four seminal books, controversies, and/or strands of research in the study of race. The essays exploring “controversies” present the various sides of critical debate within society as well as the scholarly study of race.

Now entering its fifth year, the Du Bois Review has already made a name for itself among sociologists, political scientists, historians, and other scholars whose work focuses upon race. The first DBR special issue, Katrina: Unmasking Race, Poverty, and Politics in the 21st Century (Volume 3, no. 1), was widely acclaimed. DBR Volume 3, no. 2, includes articles on reparations, interracial marriage, multiracial studies, the importance of the work of W. E. B. Du Bois for the development of twentieth-century social science, and a lively discourse section on the unique situation of Black women, in both society and the academy.

Volume 4 of the Du Bois Review, Engaging Immigration: Social, Economic, and Policy Perspectives, is devoted entirely to immigration. To subscribe to the Du Bois Review, please go to: http://www.cambridge.org/journals/journal_catalogue.asp?mnemonic=dbr

The Table of Contents for DBR Volume 4, no. 1, is given below, and the issue is now downloadable in pdf format (by subscribers) at http://journals.cambridge.org.ezp1.harvard.edu/action/displayIssue?jid=DBR&volumeId=4&issueId=01

 

Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, Volume 4, no. 1, Spring 2007, Engaging Immigration: Social, Economic, and Policy Perspectives

EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION 
Immigration: Crossing Borders and Crosses to Bear
Lawrence D. Bobo and Michael C. Dawson
1
STATE OF THE DISCIPLINE 
Migration and Social Stratification: Bipluralism and the Western Democratic State
Gerald D. Jaynes
5
Who Opposes Immigration? Comparing German with North American Findings
Thomas F. Pettigrew, Ulrich Wagner, and Oliver Christ
19
STATE OF THE ART 
Comfort Zones: Immigration, Acculturation, and the Neighborhood Racial-Composition Preferences of Latinos and Asians
Camille Zubrinsky Charles
41
Immigration and the Future of Black Power in U.S. Cities
Karen M. Kaufmann
79
Black Americans and Latino Immigrants in a Southern City: Friendly Neighbors or Economic Competitors?
Paula D. McClain, Monique L. Lyle, Niambi M. Carter, Victoria M. DeFrancesco Soto, Gerald F. Lackey, Kendra Davenport Cotton, Shayla C. Nunnally, Thomas J. Scotto, Jeffrey D. Grynaviski, and J. Alan Kendrick
97
Are America’s Civil Rights Laws Still Relevant?
John D. Skrentny
119
Recent Immigration and Race: Continuity and Change
Milton Vickerman
141
Who Fights: Substitution, Commutation, and “Green Card Troops”
Cara Wong
167
Becoming Ethnic or Becoming American? Reflecting on the Divergent Pathways to Social Mobility and Assimilation among the New Second Generation
Min Zhou and Jennifer Lee
189
STATE OF THE DISCOURSE 
A May to Remember: Adversarial Images of Immigrants in U.S. Newspapers 207 during the 2006 Policy Debate
Otto Santa Ana and Sandra L. Treviño, with Michael J. Bailey, Kristen Bodossian, and Antonio de Necochea
207
Multiculturalism Goes Imperial: Immigrants, Animals, and the Suppression of Moral Dialogue
Claire Jean Kim
233
Moving Stories: Immigrant Youth Adapt to Change
Marcelo Suárez-Orozco and Carola Suárez-Orozco
251