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First published on July 16, 2008 Journal of Black Studies 2008, doi:10.1177/0021934708318622
Understanding African Diaspora Political Activism: The Rise and Fall of the Black Star Line
Ramla Bandele*
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rbandele{at}IUPUI.edu.
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Abstract |
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The authors work explores one way the African diaspora found resources and strategies to participate in transnational politics. She completed an empirical study of the Universal Negro Improvement Associations Black Star Line and how it became the diasporic project that could bring about an economic enclave for diaspora trade among sister communities and West Africa. The effort was championed by many diaspora communities because it was seen as a solution to racial discrimination in transportation that hindered the mobility of Black travelers, migrant labor, and trade. The study provides a glimpse of activism in the fascinating parallax that we call the African diaspora by uncovering additional factors that help explain how this project gained traction and support; then it provides a detailed analysis of its demise.

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