Abstract

Still It's a Fight for Power

Chevigny, Bell Gale | August 22, 1994 issue

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This article presents the author's views on various socio-political problems faced by the African Americans in the U.S. One of the series problem was the growing unemployment among the black people. According to statistics from 1960 to 1990 joblessness among African-Americans went from 7.9 percent to 15.9 percent; over the same period there has been an exodus of blacks from the state, reducing their share of the population from 42 percent to 35.6 percent. Others lamented the "straying" of children, the loss of family and community strength. They blamed the influx of drugs, a falling away from the church or loss of "spiritual backbone," the persistence of racism and the divisive effects of integration.

See Also:

AFRICAN Americans -- Social conditions; AFRICAN Americans -- Employment; FAMILY conflict; UNEMPLOYMENT; RACISM; UNITED States
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