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Word: professor (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...First of all, you have to think about religious traditions as cultural phenomenon embedded in context—social and political and literary and artistic,” says Professor Ali S. Asani, professor of Indo-Muslim and Islamic Religion and Cultures and Associate Director of Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Islamic Studies Program. “Great works of Christian secular music are tied closely to piety. We are used to thinking about religion in theological forms. Religion is such a complex phenomenon that religious discourse can be found in many other forms. Muslims in the Islamic world...

Author: By Meredith S. Steuer | Title: Middle Ground | 10/30/2009 | See Source »

...panel of experts came together yesterday at the Harvard Law School to discuss concerns of racial profiling by America’s police force that were prompted by this summer’s arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and the controversy it sparked...

Author: By MARIETTA M COBURN, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Panel Discusses Gates Controversy and Racism | 10/30/2009 | See Source »

...Professor Ronald S. Sullivan, Jr.—director of the Law School’s Criminal Justice Institute—said he saw an important yet disconcerting lesson in civics brought forward by the Gates incident. He said that he wanted to raise the question of whether African Americans could fully exercise their rights in the same way as whites without fearing arrest...

Author: By MARIETTA M COBURN, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Panel Discusses Gates Controversy and Racism | 10/30/2009 | See Source »

...Professor Christopher E. Stone of the Kennedy School advised that the country move beyond the “catch-all term” of racial profiling, which he said is an overused notion, and look deeper at the Gates controversy to learn from...

Author: By MARIETTA M COBURN, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Panel Discusses Gates Controversy and Racism | 10/30/2009 | See Source »

Rather than looking at a situation in terms of racial profiling, Yale law professor Tracey L. Meares said we should see two areas of police action: lawfulness and legitimacy. “When we think only in terms of lawfulness and unlawfulness, then there is no vocabulary and no capacity to deal with an African American man or anyone else who is reacting to a situation and calls it racial profiling,” said Meares...

Author: By MARIETTA M COBURN, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Panel Discusses Gates Controversy and Racism | 10/30/2009 | See Source »

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