In this paper, I examine John Ayotunde (Tunde) Isola Bewaji’s discussion ofCharles W. Mills’, racial contract theory. Bewaji critiques the theory’s structure, content, and conclusions. He argues against its structure by advocating for an epistemological understanding, instead of a historical racial contractarian perception of it. Bewaji contends with the theory’s content by emphasizing how racial distinctions naturally occur, against Mills’ claim that they politically take place in Western society from antiquity to modernity. Finally, he challenges Mills’ idealist racial contract theory conclusions, by asserting his realist position on them
Over the past few years I have read a number of articles by Professor Charles Mills. I have found hi...
classic text of second-wave feminism, and is widely and deservedly seen as constituting one of the m...
This thesis project conducts an investigation into the evolution of the American polity through the ...
Charles Mills??? The Racial Contract describes a tacit, ongoing social contract whereby the interest...
Contract and Domination offers a bold challenge to contemporary contract theory, arguing that it sho...
This article presents the main terms of the racial contract, as they appear in the subcontracts of M...
In his work, "The Racial Contract and the Case for Epistemic Marxism," Wenz seeks to use the epistem...
This collection of essays explores various applications of Charles Mills' theory established in his ...
Chapter 3 looks at the work of Charles Mills, taking in a range of his scholarship including his mos...
The publication of works such as Why Race Matters, by Michael Levin (1997) and The Bell Curve, by Ri...
Charles Mills' philosophical position has undergone a number of subtle shifts over the past 30 years...
In this Essay, the Author examines contract doctrine\u27s weaknesses as applied to issues of race an...
This study explores the aspects of Akan culture prior to the popularized beginnings of contract theo...
The contract between the state and its citizens—the social contract—is typically understood as the f...
In Edgington's "Where the Racial Contract and the New Jim Crow Collide," the reader will find that t...
Over the past few years I have read a number of articles by Professor Charles Mills. I have found hi...
classic text of second-wave feminism, and is widely and deservedly seen as constituting one of the m...
This thesis project conducts an investigation into the evolution of the American polity through the ...
Charles Mills??? The Racial Contract describes a tacit, ongoing social contract whereby the interest...
Contract and Domination offers a bold challenge to contemporary contract theory, arguing that it sho...
This article presents the main terms of the racial contract, as they appear in the subcontracts of M...
In his work, "The Racial Contract and the Case for Epistemic Marxism," Wenz seeks to use the epistem...
This collection of essays explores various applications of Charles Mills' theory established in his ...
Chapter 3 looks at the work of Charles Mills, taking in a range of his scholarship including his mos...
The publication of works such as Why Race Matters, by Michael Levin (1997) and The Bell Curve, by Ri...
Charles Mills' philosophical position has undergone a number of subtle shifts over the past 30 years...
In this Essay, the Author examines contract doctrine\u27s weaknesses as applied to issues of race an...
This study explores the aspects of Akan culture prior to the popularized beginnings of contract theo...
The contract between the state and its citizens—the social contract—is typically understood as the f...
In Edgington's "Where the Racial Contract and the New Jim Crow Collide," the reader will find that t...
Over the past few years I have read a number of articles by Professor Charles Mills. I have found hi...
classic text of second-wave feminism, and is widely and deservedly seen as constituting one of the m...
This thesis project conducts an investigation into the evolution of the American polity through the ...