This is a call for chapters for a forthcoming volume examining Historical
Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) tentatively titled *Cross Road
Blues:  HBCU’s and Cultural Paradigm Shifts in Higher Education. *

*Call for Chapters*

Since their inception, the mission of Historically Black Colleges and
Universities (HBCUs) has been to provide a quality education to African
Americans who, because of their socio-economic and political condition in
the United States of America, would not normally have had access to
institutions of higher learning.  However, the Supreme Court case *Brown v.
Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas* in 1954 forced the desegregation of
Traditional White Institutions (TWIs).  Over time, these institutions began
to compete with HBCUs for African American students and professors, and the
caché of HBCUs began to decline.

Some argue that while HBCUs, many of which are over a century old, have
made great contributions in all fields of human endeavor and have graduated
some of the African American community’s best and brightest, a sobering
reassessment of HBCUs and their role in higher education is needed in light
of the fact that some HBCUs have a reputation for declining academic
quality, face low student enrollment, struggle with financial instability,
and suffer from poor management. Others point out that in the face of a
current rise in racist rhetoric, the gutting of the voting rights act, and
loss of ground in almost every measure of economic, social, and quality of
life progress for African Americans, HBCU’s are needed now more than ever
to provide current and future generations of marginalized students access
to higher education. Affirmative Action, a program designed in part to
ameliorate decades of discrimination in admissions practices and “level the
playing field,” continues to suffer attacks even from those who benefitted
from it, yet the majority of African Americans who persist to graduation
still come from HBCUs.

It is our contention that the various issues regarding the purpose,
survival, progress and future of HBCUs must be addressed.  What is the
place of the HBCU given an educational paradigm shift pushed by
technological and demographic change? How is the HBCU to compete for
funding in an environment increasingly hostile to and suspicious of higher
education in general?

 HBCU’s are at a crossroads and the direction taken can mean the difference
between existence for another 100 years or extinction. Therefore, we are
compiling a book of original (unpublished) essays/articles that demonstrate
the breadth and depth of the HBCU and its place in higher education African
American/American history and culture—past, present and future.  Where has
it been, where is it now, where is it going?   In appealing to scholars and
audiences that are interdisciplinary, we welcome all areas of scholarly
inquiry and all methods and/or approaches. We are looking for chapters that
focus on but are not limited to the following:

 HBCUs: History and Legacy

HBCUs in Popular Culture

HBCUs, Protest, and the First Amendment

The Impact of Other Minorities and Hispanics on HBCUs

The Function(s) of HBCUs in a Post Millennium World

HBCUs and the Brain Drain of the Black Professorate

HBCUs and the Talented Tenth

The Politics of the HBCU

HBCUs and African American Cultural Identity

HBCUs and Black Leadership

HBCUs—Personal Experience Essays

HBCUs as Refuge

HBCUs and Public/Private Funding

HBCUs in the Technological Age

HBCUs and the Rise of the Black Middle Class

The Sociology of HBCUs

HBCUs and Obsolescence

HBCUs in Literature



HBCUs and Race

 HBCUs and Changes in Campus Demographics (What does it mean if an HBCU is
no longer largely populated by African American students or professors?)

If you are interested, along with your CV, send us a 300 word abstract by
March 1 to [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]  *Please type HBCUs
in the subject area*.

-- 
Know Justice; Know Peace,
Rev. Dr. E-K. Daufin
Professor of Communications
Alabama State University
National Media Size Equity Expert
Winner -- 2000 MaryAnn Yodelis-Smith
  Research Award AEJMC CSW
AEJMC MAC Membership Chair
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