The Interaction of Identity and Space or Place
Prompt: From your perspective, how is the interaction of identity and space or place relevant to intelligence or human security? Based on the articles by Erhkamp and by Hopkins et al., where do you see convergences between identity, space or place, and threat? That is, were there examples from the articles that demonstrated some potential threat linked to the interaction of identity with space or place?
Minority immigrant groups frequently transform the spaces they routinely inhabit in ways that reflect their respective cultures, a practice that can result in contestation over the public space with the majority population who may view these changes as threatening their fundamental sense of normality and their conception of those spaces (Ehrkamp, 2008). This trend has some unfortunate outcomes, including most especially reinforcing any preexisting negative stereotypes about minority groups (Ehrkamp, 2008). This ugly reality has assumed even greater importance and relevance in recent years as the world continues to become heavily polarized over a wide array of culture-related issues.
Likewise, a study by Hopkins et al. (2017) found that youth from non-Muslim groups such as Sikh, Hindu, Black, and Caribbean regularly encounter misrecognition...
…changes to ensure equal participation and representation in society for all ethnic and religious groups.Perhaps the biggest threat involved in this calculus is the potential for cross-cultural misunderstandings to escalate into violent conflict, just as it has since time immemorial. The main difference today, of course, is that the convergences between identity, space or place has assumed global dimensions which transcend the local and regional conflicts of the past. Indeed, today, these types of cross-cultural misunderstandings represent yet another existential threat to the future of humankind. In sum, many of the potential threats that are linked to the interaction of identity…
References
Ehrkamp, P. (2008). Risking publicity: Masculinities and the racialization of public neighborhood space. Social & Cultural Geography, 9(2),117-132.
Hopkins, P., Botterill, K., Sanghera, G., and Arshad, R. (2017). Encountering misrecognition: Being mistaken for being Muslim. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 107(4), 934-948.
Minority Groups: Why They Have Failed to Make Significant Gains despite Having Lived in the U.S. For A Longer Time The fact that minority groups have failed to make it up the ranks in the U.S. stratification system remains a query everyone has to battle with. One cannot stop to imagine how such old groups would fail to make the gains that the ordinary u.s citizens and the recent immigrants. It will
Stereotyping effects not only other people image of an ethnic group but it can also influence the self-image of that group. [Tatum, 1999] describes a discussion with her children while driving them to school. A drove past a Black teenager running down the street." Why is that boy running?" my son asked. "I don't know," I said absentmindedly. "Maybe he stole something." I nearly slammed on the brakes. "Why would you
Racism affecting Native and African-American in the U.S. The topic that was chosen for this essay is minority groups that have failed to make broad gains in the United States stratification system. The essay delves into the reasoning behind why African and Native Americans struggle despite each groups long residence in America. The Native Americans have been persecuted since the white man came to the United States, which is ironic because
But most people he socialized with were for him members of a secondary group. My friend socialized with them for the purpose of getting used to a new social environment, practice his English, and find new friends. But his relationship with most people in the neighborhood and at school was not based on the kind of social intimacy that characterized his relationship with other Kurdish refugees in the neighborhood.
Unintentional Appropriation in Cultures The cultural appropriation concept of using another culture's symbol, genres, artifacts, rituals, or technologies, as per Rogers is just inescapable when two of them had to meet at a certain point of time. This includes both the virtual as well as the representational contacts. Such appropriations involve in exploiting the marginalized and colonized cultures and help in the survival of subordinated cultures. Their resistance to dominant cultures
A very large number of Mexicans and Puerto Ricans came into the country in order to get away from poverty and to find a way to make a living. The 20th-century Cuban migration, which started in 1959 when Fidel Castro took over the government of Cuba, was mostly for political motivations (The Story of Hispanics in the Americas, n.d.). According to data collected by the United States Department of Commerce,
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