PART I: TRANSDISCIPLINARITY
Academic Disciplines
A Social Justice Model
A Case Study
PART II: THE PROBLEM DEFINED
The Urban Male
Education Civil Rights Law
Patriarchy and Black Masculinity
PART III: THE CAUSE ATTRIBUTED
Females
Matriarchy and Feminism
Racism and Class Privilege
PART IV: THE SOLUTION PROPOSED
The Settlement agreement
'For Black Boys Only'
Black Nationalism
PART V: THE OUTCOME ACHIEVED
The Academies
Twenty Years Later
Remembering our Black Girls
Critical Race, Feminism, and Education: A Social Justice Model provides a transformative next step in the evolution of critical race and Black feminist scholarship. Focusing on praxis, the relationship between the construction of race, class, and gender categories and social justice outcomes is analyzed. An applied transdisciplinary model - integrating law, sociology, history, and social movement theory - demonstrates how marginalized groups are oppressed by ideologies of power and privilege in the legal system, the education system, and the media. Pratt-Clarke documents the effects of racism, patriarchy, classism, and nationalism on Black females and males in the single-sex school debate.
Menah A.E. Pratt-Clarke is Assistant Provost and Associate Director of the Office of Equal Opportunity and Access at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.