| Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "EXAMINING BLACK PANTHER PARTY": |
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Examining the Black Panther Party, 2005. An oral history paper examining the differing views of two individuals on the Black Panther Party. 3,139 words (approx. 12.6 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 91.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines the views of two ordinary people from the 1960s on the Black Panthers. It examines one who is white and one who is black and why they have the feelings they do in regards to the Black Panther Party. The individuals are from similar economic and geographic backgrounds, being that they both came from middle-class families and were from the San Francisco Bay area.
From the Paper "The Black Panther Party undeniably reeked fear in the hearts of many whites, because they saw it, and the media portrayed it, as a type of "Black Rage," in which African-Americans across the country were coming together "...seeking redemption for years of slavery" (Humphery Interviewee). Even though it is hard to distinguish exactly what that statement means, it is important to note that many whites viewed Black Power from this sort of Black Rage viewpoint or angle, in which "African-Americans were not seeking equality, but redemption for years of slavery"".
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The Black Panther Party, 2006. An overview of the Black Panther Party (BPP), its origins, activities and disintegration. 2,128 words (approx. 8.5 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 66.95 »
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Abstract In addition to looking at the reasons for the disintegration of the Black Panthers, this paper also traces the origins of the Party, examines how and why it started, describes its program and activities, the FBI's campaign against the Black Panthers, the trial of Black Panther members in court, the role of women in BPP, and the impact of the Party on the country.
Table of Contents
The Black Panther Party
Origin
Why was the Party Started?
The Ten-Point Program
Activities of the Black Panthers
War Against the Panthers
Black Panthers in Court
Black Panther Women
Alliances and Coalitions
Mistakes Made by the Black Panthers
Impact of the Party on the Country
From the Paper "The black community of Oakland, California was greatly perturbed due to the failure of Southern white policemen to provide adequate protection for its black residents and the increasing incidents of police brutality targeted at the blacks. The organizers of the Panthers, therefore, aimed to gain justice for black people and dedicated themselves to defend the black community from racist police oppression and brutality. Besides being considered as the perpetrators of injustice and violence against the black community, the police was perceived by the Panthers as the representatives of the status quo and the "establishment" who implemented its anti-Black agenda. Since the Panthers believed that they were fighting the "status quo" the BPP considered itself to be a "revolutionary" party, which was committed to wage a class struggle to overthrow the existing order. (Harris 169)"
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The Black Panther Party, 2001. A look at the inner workings of the Black Panther Party. 1,290 words (approx. 5.2 pages), 3 sources, $ 43.95 »
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Abstract This essay explores the organizational workings of the Black Panther Party. The author examines how the party can improve themselves in order to gain more members and compares and contrasts the Black Panther?s cost of membership with Iannaccone?s perspective of group commitment.
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From the Paper "The article, ?Why Strict Churches Are Strong?, emphasizes the importance of rational self-interest. It declares that rational choice theory explains the success of religious groups. The article states the success of strict and relaxed groups depends on the level of commitment its members hold (Iannaccone 1994). The Black Panther Party is an appropriate example of a non-religious group that includes the problem of commitment."
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Black Panther Party, 2002. A description of the politics and makeup of the Black Panther party. 1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 6 sources, $ 62.95 »
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Abstract This paper describes the radical nature of the Black Panther Party. It suggests that a chief goal was to protect African Americans from police actions that many blacks considered brutality.
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The History of the Black Panther Party, 1991. This paper discusses the origins, history and leadership of the Black Panther Party. 2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 7 sources, $ 87.95 »
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From the Paper The intention in the following pages is to explore the history of the Black Panther Party from its origins during the 1960s. There are those who identify the Black Panther Party with the present day militia movement, but their origins are quite different, even though their methods and intentions might seem to be similar.
Although the Black Panther Party is probably most associated in memory with the large urban cities of the north, it had its birth in the rural south. That birth was an outgrowth of white resistance in the south to any inclusion of black Americans in ... "
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Ku Klux Klan & Black Panther Party, 1997. Examines groups' origins, political ideologies, leadership, racial views, public's attitudes, violence and social impact. 2,700 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 13 sources, $ 95.95 »
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From the Paper "Although the Ku Klux Klan and the Black Panther Party both employed violence to obtain their objectives, few similarities exist between the two groups. The Ku Klux Klan was committed to maintaining the status quo, white supremacy, in the communities in which it operated. Their objective was to suppress the activities of people of color, whom they perceived as threats to the established order. In contrast, the Black Panthers considered themselves revolutionaries. Their goal was to elevate the oppressed masses of African-Americans and to overthrow the existing political system. Thus, the Klan sought to restore a sense of power to whites, while the Black Panthers sought to gain a rightful share of power for blacks.
The Ku Klux Klan is a name that describes two distinct groups of white racists in American history. The first Klan.."
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The FBI's Attempt to Deconstruct the Black Panther Movement, 2001. An in-depth look at the Black Panther Party with a focus on the civil rights movements. 6,050 words (approx. 24.2 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 143.95 »
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Abstract The paper muddles on the evolution of the African American struggle coupled with civil right movements formulated- specifically the Black Panther Party- and focuses on the question of what the organization is, where it originated and spread, and why it was so popular.
From the Paper Amid the turbulent struggle for equal rights for the black community in America numerous organizations and arenas emerged as potential facilitators of that laudable goal. The struggle was long and arduous, and various approaches arose as potential modalities to pursue the end most effectively. The Black Panther Party, which was established in 1966, was one such tactical approach. In its brief sojourn on the American scene, it attracted mega attention and an almost mythical status and reputation. Actions to cope with the potential repercussions of the Black Panther Party were numerous, and often violated associated constitutional norms within the American psyche for fairness and legal protection. Nevertheless to some powers that be on at that time, no more dangerous cadre of proponents of black rights existed then the Black Panther Party (Summers, 1993, 21). To those who opposed the methods, philosophy, and personas of the Black Panther Party, the need to crush the organization and nullify their influence within the societal complex of the United States was considered a crusade for the survival of this country itself. To truly analyze and come to terms with the importance and problematic issue of the Black Panther Party, it is necessary to review in some depth the overall complex involved in the struggle for black liberation in this country. The Black Panther Party occupies a decided niche in this puzzle, but it did not exist in a vacuum. It is a clear product and reaction to what preceded it.
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Neutralization, Private Justice and the Black Panther, 2002. An examination of Gresham Sykes and David Matza's model of justifications of deviant behavior and its application to the Black Panther Party. 2,692 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 80.95 »
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Abstract This paper analyzes Gresham Sykes and David Matza's five-part model of justifications of deviant behavior that is also known as techniques of neutralization. It looks at how the five techniques include denying responsibility, denying the injury, blaming the victim, condemning the authorities and appealing to higher principles or authorities. It discusses whether the Black Panther Party resorted to Sykes and Matza's techniques of neutralization to justify the criminality of their behavior and whether the social acceptability of their doctrine was aided by a social and cultural era in upheaval, particularly concerning the civil rights of blacks and America's involvement in Vietnam.
Outline
Introduction
Techniques of Neutralization
Denial of Responsibility
Denial of Injury
Denial of the Victim
Condemnation of the Condemners
Appeal to Higher Loyalties
Conclusion
From the Paper "Sykes and Matza argue that the third technique of neutralization is the criminal's attempt to deny that the victim can in fact be victimized. In other words, the criminal argues that that the victim is the wrongdoer and their own action is an attempt to create justice, not defy it. It was the whole basis of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense that the entire system of government as run by white Americans was a criminal and violent oppression of the civil rights and human dignity of American blacks. They had the right to bear arms to defend themselves against such injustice. Consider, for example, the ideology of the Party's intellectual leader in its early stages, Eldridge Cleaver."
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The Black Panthers, 2005. A discussion regarding the Black Panthers and their terrorist involvement. 1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 10 sources, $ 62.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the Black Panthers and their use of violence. According to this paper, they also engaged in activities that can only be labeled humanitarian for the good of local, poor communities.
This paper then examines the history and ideology of the Black Panthers, a new understanding of terrorism, and the relationship the organization had with the U.S. government. This paper concludes that the Black Panthers should be considered domestic terrorists, though perhaps not for the reasons we might expect.
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Black Panther, 2002. A discussion of the Balck Panther party. 1,900 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 5 sources, $ 71.95 »
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Abstract A paper on the concept and motivations of the Black Panther party.
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'Shades of Black - Conrad Black, his Rise and Fall', 2006. A discussion and review of Richard Siklos's well written biography of Conrad Black's career, "Shades of Black - Conrad Black, his Rise and Fall". 1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 1 source, $ 71.95 »
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Abstract This paper reviews "Shades of Black: Conrad Black - His Rise and Fall", Richard Siklos's well written biography of Conrad Black's career and dramatic collapse after 2002. The paper explains that Siklos interviewed more than 200 persons before a 1995 edition of which this volume is a revised expansion featuring another 50 interviews. Siklos also spent hours speaking to Black, indirectly attempting to account for his extravagance and need to impress others, atop his drive for power. Much is revealed through Siklos's notes on Black's wife, the former Barbara Amiel. The paper reports that Siklos leads the reader through a summary of Black's family background, his youth in north Toronto's Bride Path area, his expulsion from Upper Canada College, and later, Trinity College School, before Thornton Hall, Toronto.
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James Cone: Black Theology and the Black Christ, 2006. An analysis of the term theology and the essential concepts of "Black Theology" as it pertains to James Cone's idea of a "Black Christ". 4,374 words (approx. 17.5 pages), 15 sources, APA, $ 115.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how James Cone believes that if blacks, particularly African-Americans, don't wake up and change the traditional American image of Jesus, they will probably never grasp the true philosophy and mission of Jesus. It discusses how African-Americans must see Jesus as a black man that endured the struggle and how it is the duty of black preachers, pastors and theologians to advocate black theology, which includes the black image of Jesus, for the sake and survival of the African-American experience.
From the Paper "When one begins to think about God, questions arise as one lacks significant knowledge of God. When one begins to engage in such a dialogue, or entertains such questions, one has clearly entered the community of theology. The articles states: "The attempt to think about God leads immediately to a host of related question which are included under the term theology. First, there is the question of mans relationship to God, the ultimate source of things? Then we must ask about revelation to God, that is, how does man know what God is like? If God must reveal himself where and how is he revealed?" These are prospective questions that man can't escape when thinking about God or in dialogue about God. "
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The African-American Struggle, 2002. A history of the African-American struggle for equality with emphasis on the Black Panther Party. 3,185 words (approx. 12.7 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 92.95 »
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Abstract The paper presents a history of the African American struggle starting in the 1850's with the case of Dred Scott. It continues by explaining the status of African Americans during and after the civil war. The paper documents how, in the 1940's and 1950's, African Americans began to challenge the injustices they faced, particularly with regard to education. The paper continues to the 1960's with the rise of the Black Panther Party (BPP) and the Nation of Islam. The paper focuses on the aims and methods used by the BPP and how the FBI tried to discredit the BPP and other Black revolutionary organizations.
From the Paper "In 1954, the Supreme Court legitimately struck down the "separate but equal" doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson in its Brown v. Board of Education decision, which ruled that separate educational facilities were intrinsically unequal. Some areas readily embraced integration after Brown, while others submitted only after further prodding from the courts. School administrators rapidly realized that they faced many problems, such as increased violence and increased discrepancy in the abilities of students in the same classroom."
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"A Taste of Power" by Elaine Brown, 1999. Critical review of the Black Panther Party leader's personal & political autobiography. 1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 1 source, $ 63.95 »
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From the Paper " Elaine Brown's A Taste of Power: A Black Woman's Story is, one hopes, only one woman's story and not the story of the Black Panther Party as a whole. In this gossipy, self-obsessed, and superficial memoir, Brown appears to be not a serious leader of a vital and important activist group of the 1960s and 1970s, but a Party groupie with little interest in or understanding of the concepts and goals which inspired the Panthers, however naive and romantic most of those concepts and goals might have been. If Brown is truly the woman she seems to be, it does not say much for the Panthers as a group, considering that she did, in fact, become chairman of the group in the absence of her mentor and leader, Huey Newton. Knowing she would remain loyal to him, Newton likely picked Brown in order to prevent a takeover by one of his rivals."
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African-Americans and the Democratic Party, 1999. Examines the shift of the black vote to the Democrats beginning in 1928. Discusses economics, organization, abandonment of the Republican Party, Presidential elections, civil rights and the 1960s and the future. 1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 4 sources, $ 55.95 »
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Abstract Historically, African Americans were strong supporters of the Republican Party after the Civil War. Throughout the nineteenth century, The Republican Party were perceived as the champions of Emancipation while the Democrats were associated with white supremacy.
From the Paper "Historically, African Americans were strong supporters of the Republican Party after the Civil War. Throughout the nineteenth century, The Republican Party were perceived as the champions of Emancipation while the Democrats were associated with white supremacy. However, by the Great Depression and Franklin Delano Roosevelt's 1936 presidential campaign, African Americans had made a dramatic shift toward supporting the Democratic Party. African American support for the Democratic Party has remained steadfast in the sixty years since the New Deal. To a great extent, the change in African American perceptions of the two parties has changed because of the remarkable transformation these parties underwent from the beginning of the twentieth century through FDR's 1936 election. This paper will focus on the three presidential elections ..."
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