Over the past decade I’ve published articles on American institutional legitimacy in the wake of the contentious 2000 Presidential election, about the effects of long-term black political empowerment on black participation, about the role of media narratives on black attitudes about HIV/AIDS, and about the determinants of support for black nationalism, among others. But with my first book Stare in the Darkness: The Limits of Hip-hop and Black Politics I’ve become particularly interested in black politics in the wake of the neoliberal turn.
Select Publications:
- 2012. “The Neoliberal Turn in Black Politics.” Souls (14:139-159).
- 2011. Stare in the Darkness: The Limits of Hip-hop and Black Politics.University of Minnesota Press.
- 2010. “Context, Black Empowerment, and African American Political Participation.”American Politics Research 38:909-30. (with Harwood McClerking)
- 2010. “Episodic Frames, Hiv/Aids, and African American Public Opinion.” Political Research Quarterly 63:257-68.
- 2009. “Revisiting Local Incorporation and Black Political Participation.” Urban Affairs Review 2:274-285. (with Harwood McClerking)
- 2007. “AIDS, Context, and Black Politics.” National Political Science Review 11:87-102. (with Rena Boss-Victoria)
- 2005.“True to Our Native Land: Distinguishing Attitudinal Support for Pan-Africanism from Black Nationalism.” The Dubois Review: Social Science Research on Race.2 (1): 91-111. (with Todd Shaw and Rob Brown)
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