Contents
Contributors
Foreword (Eduardo Duran)
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I. Introduction
1.
What Is Internalized Oppression, and So What?
E. J. R. David and Annie O. Derthick
Part II. America’s Indigenous Peoples
2.
The Internalized Oppression of North American Indigenous
Peoples
John Gonzalez, Estelle Simard, Twyla Baker-Demaray, and Chase Iron
Eyes
3.
Internalized Oppression and Alaska Native Peoples: “We Have to Go
Through the Problem”
Jordan Lewis, James Allen, and Elizabeth Fleagle
4.
Internalized Oppression Among Pacific Island Peoples
Michael Salzman and Poka Laenui
Part III. Marginalized Racial/Ethnic Communities
5.
Self-Hatred, Self-Doubt, and Assimilation in Latina/o Communities:
Las Consecuencias de Colonizacion y Opresion
Carlos P. Hipolito-Delgado, Stephany Gallegos Payan, and Teresa I.
Baca
6.
Internalized Racial Oppression in the African American
Community
Tamba-Kuii M. Bailey, Wendi S. Williams, and Brian Favors
7.
Asian Americans and Internalized Oppression: Do We Deserve
This?
James B. Millan and Alvin N. Alvarez
Part IV. Socially Devalued Groups
8.
Girls, Women, and Internalized Sexism
Steve Bearman and Marielle Amrhein
9.
Internalized Oppression and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and
Transgender Community
Kevin L. Nadal and RJ Mendoza
10.
Disability and Internalized Oppression
Brian Watermeyer and Tristan Görgens
Afterword (James M. Jones)
Index
E. J. R. David, PhD is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Alaska Anchorage.
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