(Part 2) Reddit mentions: The best regional geography books

We found 50 Reddit comments discussing the best regional geography books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 26 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

23. Africa in World Politics: Engaging A Changing Global Order

Used Book in Good Condition
Africa in World Politics: Engaging A Changing Global Order
Specs:
Height9 Inches
Length6.5 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJanuary 2013
Weight0.9 Pounds
Width1 Inches
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24. Explaining Pakistan's Foreign Policy: Escaping India (Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series)

Explaining Pakistan's Foreign Policy: Escaping India (Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series)
Specs:
Height9.25 Inches
Length6.25 Inches
Number of items1
Weight1.15963149812 Pounds
Width0.75 Inches
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25. The World Today: Concepts and Regions in Geography

The World Today: Concepts and Regions in Geography
Specs:
Height10.767695 Inches
Length9.271635 Inches
Number of items1
Weight2.57499922016 Pounds
Width0.712597 Inches
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26. American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass

American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass
Specs:
Height9.32 Inches
Length6.08 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.7605948039 Pounds
Width0.81 Inches
▼ Read Reddit mentions

🎓 Reddit experts on regional geography books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where regional geography books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 50
Number of comments: 3
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 12
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 2
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 2
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Regional:

u/mindbleach · 1 pointr/AskReddit

The video is part of a "Let's Play" for 50 Cent: Blood On The Sand. (Let's Play emerged as a form of follow-along entertainment from games forums. Reasonably skilled players with a humorous or well-informed approach would start threads titled e.g. 'Let's play Metroid' and then do so, often with audience participation for character names, in-game choices, etc. As an introduction I'd recommend Let's Play Trespasser, possibly the best video LP to date.) Chip Cheezum played the game in sections and then recorded color commentary (no pun intended) with General Ironicus. In this clip Ironicus is reading a long excerpt from American Apartheid to quell off-topic linguistic discussions within the thread. His conclusion after finishing is worth hearing.

In a similarly boring helicopter rail-shooter section of the game, he reads Massey & Denton's impressions of gender politics as presented in rap and hip-hop, neatly dissecting some major aspects of the game's plot. Chip's only immediate reply is "while you were reading that, I killed, like, a thousand guys."

u/Boron17 · 3 pointsr/chicago

I mentioned this somewhere else in this thread, but I really enjoyed American Apartheid, which goes into detail about this. We read it for my urban studies class... Heres the Amazon link: http://www.amazon.com/American-Apartheid-Segregation-Making-Underclass/dp/0674018214?ie=UTF8&keywords=American%20Apartheid&qid=1462765389&ref_=sr_1_1&sr=8-1

u/TallMattBari · 3 pointsr/AskReddit

In the op there was no direct comparison that the law and restrictions in place in SW Michigan were the same as Apartheid South Africa. Just that the levels of racial segregation are.

That these levels exist without the overt structures present in South Africa, in my opinion are cause for greater alarm. Even though I do think that zoning laws that preserve class distinctions are a "law preventing either race from mingling" when socio-economic class and race are so intertwined as they are in this particular region. Also, a great book about preferences of racial mixture in neighborhoods is American Apartheid

http://www.amazon.com/American-Apartheid-Segregation-Making-Underclass/dp/0674018214

u/NeonSeal · 3 pointsr/changemyview

Man I just want to say that this is an incredibly white-washed view of modern racism. Throughout the course of American history, Black people have suffered from institutional racism that has barred their access to the voting process, property, land access, economic opportunity, social security access, veteran's rights, personal freedom, you name it. This continues into the modern day. These modern issues will not be fixed by colorblindness; instead, they can only be fixed through race conscious affirmative action.

Here are some great books if you want to get more informed on historical and modern racism, proper reactions to it, and why "colorblindness" is not an acceptable form of dealing with it:

u/marx051 · 0 pointsr/videos

> Without their industrious and creative drive, we would be poorer as a nation.

Well we wouldn't really exist as a nation if it wasn't for the toils of the underclass (which is disproportionately black). We owe the founding of our country to our slaves, not just the White men who are revered as the founding fathers. Keep in mind that parts of the black community has continued to be the backbone of society despite abject poverty and blatant discrimination. Racism was only formally struck down during my grandparents era, and has continued in subtle and informal ways (including comments like yours). This thread went from being about a black performer (who does not represent all black people) to a racially charged sarcastic comment.

One could not sit here and type a reddit comment that would fully address everything wrong with your comment, it would take a book to do that. I'd recommend American Apartheid if you are really interested in developing an articulate and well-informed perspective.

u/Captain_DuClark · 3 pointsr/pics

There is nothing natural or inevitable about American ghettoes, they were created because of racist federal, state, and local policy. Because of redlining, the explicitly racist policy of the Federal Housing Authority to deny backing of home loans for Black people while granting them for whites, as well as because of racially restrictive housing covenants, Black people did not have access to the main wealth building tool of the middle class, home ownership in neighborhoods where homes had actual value. This forced black people into racially segregated neighborhoods that became ghettoes.

I'd recommend reading this article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redlining#History

And this one as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racial_segregation_in_the_United_States#Hypersegregation

If you want to go in-depth check out these books:

American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0674018214/ref=redir_mdp_mobile

Making the Second Ghetto: Race and Housing in Chicago 1940-1960 http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0226342441?pc_redir=1410759795&robot_redir=1

u/niclasfg · 2 pointsr/learnmath

I think you should look att "An introduction to topology and modern analysis" by simmons.

http://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Topology-Modern-Analysis-Simmons/dp/0070856958

u/Phoenix_jz · 2 pointsr/WorldOfWarships

> the Roma was destroyed by the Germans at dock

This may be of interest to you.

I didn't realize there were docks west of the Straits of Bonifacio

u/doughscraper · 1 pointr/books

Sure. This is not a list of what I consider the most important books on the subject but rather my attempt to select good works with similar profiles to the books found on the list.

The Fate of Africa - Meredith

The Boer War, Pakenham

Britain's Gulag, Elkins

Neoliberal Frontiers, Ethnography of Sovereignty in W. Africa, Chalfin

Africa in World Politics, Harbeson

African Perspectives on Colonialism






u/Bernard_Woolley · 1 pointr/bakchodi

Rs. 5,106 now. It's an academic work with a limited print run. Hence the high price, I'm guessing.

u/pilgrimboy · 6 pointsr/news

Here is the geography textbook used in college courses: http://www.amazon.com/World-Today-Concepts-Regions-Geography/dp/1118411595/ref=sr_1_29?ie=UTF8&qid=1450440640&sr=8-29&keywords=world+geography

You will see that it's main focus is how people live, not the locations. It a study on how the locations in which they live influence the way that they live.

I think part of your disagreement may be over what geography actually is.

u/sc2012 · 5 pointsr/todayilearned

You'd be surprised that today, it's rare to be black in an all-white neighborhood. Even education today is more segregated than it was in 1968 (the height of the civil rights movement).

"White flight" has resulted in all-minority neighborhoods in America. This results in less funding for local schools, lower property values, and fewer businesses wanting to establish themselves in low-income, racially segregated areas. This means that even grocery stores that sell fresh fruits and vegetables don't want to be in a low-income, high-minority neighborhood, limiting their access to healthful foods. Instead, they rely on the local corner store that doesn't even primarily sell food.

There isn't just an unequal standard of living, but also unequal access to opportunity. Your network (from family to your college alumni) can be so important when you're trying to find a job, but if you couldn't afford to go to college and your family has always been working class, you're already set up to have unequal opportunities compared to the kid whose parents are lawyers or doctors. Even if you look in the news today, you'll see instances of discrimination by banks, hiring managers, and federal regulations.

If you're really serious about learning more about why it's more difficult to be Black in America today, I urge you to pick up a book. Here are some of my suggestions:

American Apartheid by Douglas Massey and Nancy Denton

The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander

The Shame of the Nation by Jonathan Kozol

u/Black_Gay_Man · 25 pointsr/news

Your proclivity for discussing black pathologies and large scale civil unrest without proper context makes me call your intellectual honesty into question.

  1. You summarily dismissed the Kerner Commission's findings as blacks rioting over "injustice" without actually quoting anything from the report to support your stance, and it's also a willfully reductive dismissal of their conclusions.

  2. You ludicrously blamed segregated cities on fear of black criminality while ignoring housing discrimination and white racism as primary factors.

  3. You incorrectly proscribed having children out of wedlock as a cause rather than a symptom of a problem.

  4. You cherry picked the black on black murder rate while ignoring the fact that almost all murders are intra-racial for whites and blacks and that the uproar against the police has a totally different implication and resonance in black communities.

  5. You failed to put the rioting of the Civil Rights Era in a larger context of failed avenues for political redress after years of non-violent protesting and petitioning the government for full citizenship.

  6. You made facile, racist comments about the ethics and culture of the blacks people at large in Ferguson because of a few images of those with tatoos and jewelry.

    Here is a link of a thread I began on the root causes of the unrest in Ferguson and throughout US history. I'm genuinely curious to hear your responses. Given the tone and misrepresentations prevalent in your post, it seems like you're more interested in circle jerking in an echo chamber. I'm willing to be proven wrong though.
u/Virgilijus · 3 pointsr/funny

I'm not strictly talking about slavery. I'm talking about how they are treated and viewed now. Just look at the ghettos we have in America. In Massey and Denton's book American Apartheid they find a lot of interesting statistics. The largest amount of isolation any non-black minority has ever had (meaning, what percent of this population would have to move to make the overall population relatively uniform) was 56% for the Milwaukee Italian community in 1910. But by 1970, the lowest isolation percentage for blacks anywhere in the US was 56% San Francisco (pp 49). The highest in 1970 was 89% in Chicago. They also go into detail of how they were initially brought to those urban areas; to break union strikes in downtown factories. Combine that with WWI breaking out and extreme xenophobia with many European ethnicities, even more came. This lead to overcrowding, poor wages and conditions, white flight, and a continually worsening circle.

That was (and is) a horrible situation that isn't getting much attention: most criticism is put towards the people trying to adapt to the poor conditions and not how the conditions got there. This, in turn, breeds horrible stereotypes and more negative images and treatment in a feedback loop. While other minorities have experience mistreatment and oppression, I don't think any have been this persistent and horrible (though debating levels of oppression is inviting a pity party, which I would like to avoid).

u/Sihplak · 11 pointsr/CapitalismVSocialism

For one, race isn't genetic, it's socially constructed. Hereditary traits are not race. The reason that this is the case is that race is seen and treated drastically differently in various countries (e.g. compare Brazil to the U.S. and its immensely different), and racism and race relations divided along lines of white and black developed with the discovery of the Americas by Europeans. Race as a concept is 100% arbitrary with no scientific backing and no possible genetic or biological backing. Saying otherwise is to give false statements from a position of having no understanding of human biology and anatomy. Reference

For two, correlation is not causation. The more likely cause for IQ correlating with race is the material conditions that various racial groups have been subjected to. For instance, in the U.S., black people were the most heavily effected by systemic race-based slavery, and were the only group to ever experience ghettoization in America, which lasted for decades, with effects still seen today. Black people were continuously subjected to worse living conditions, establishing poverty related issues such as lead poisoning from outdated housing infrastructure, poor education from bad school systems, etc. Reference

For three, White Supremacism can take more forms than just Nazism, gas chambers, and slave plantations. Sports being comprised of mostly black players was not the case in the early-mid 20th century. This is why, for instance, Jackie Robinson was extremely controversial. Most sports were played by almost exclusively white people. Furthermore, sports having such a disproportionate prominence of black players is still evidence of racism and white supremacist cultural norms as it now has foundations in associating blackness with physical prowess -- i.e. associating hyper-masculinity with blackness -- and for many players was and is viewed as their way of getting out of poverty. Because of the poverty conditions many black communities experience, many children of marginalized racial minorities often end up associating with a "star script", regardless of the realistic likelihood of achieving the career they want (e.g. rapper, NBA player, etc.). Reference