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Posts in articles
Tina Sacks & Dawn Marie Dow

Tina Sacks & Dawn Marie Dow
"Cultural Capital, Systemic Exclusion and Bias in the Lives of Black Middle-Class Women"
Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society and Center for Research on Social Change
April 2, 2019

“At this April 2 event at UC Berkeley, Dawn Dow and Tina Sacks discuss their new books on African American women. Dow’s book, Mothering While Black: Boundaries and Burdens of Middle-Class Parenthood (UC Press 2019), examines the complex lives of the African American middle class—in particular, black mothers and the strategies they use to raise their children to maintain class status while simultaneously defining and protecting their children’s “authentically black” identities.”

Racism in American Medicine

The Ongoing Significance of Racism in American Medicine
Oxford University Press’s Academic Insights for the Thinking World
Tina K. Saks
February 24th, 2019


“You can’t get a shot. I’ve never gotten a shot by a white person ever . . . they had me terrified [of being treated by a white doctor].” Her family’s concerns stemmed from their understanding that their great-grandfather died as a result of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. The US Public Health Service began the “Study of Syphilis in the Untreated Negro Male” in 1932.”

Maintaining social welfare programs in the Trump era

Maintaining social welfare programs in the Trump era
by Tina K. Saks

What are some of the current challenges to maintaining social welfare programs for the nation’s most vulnerable people in the Trump era?

Tina Sacks, an assistant professor at UC Berkeley’s School of Social Welfare, gave a lecture on this topic on Jan. 30, 2019, as part of a series of talks sponsored by UC Berkeley’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI).

Serena Redux: Waiting to Exhale

Serena Redux: Waiting to Exhale
Oxford University Press’s Academic Insights for the Thinking World
Tina K. Saks
October 9th, 2018

“By now, much has been written about the Serena Williams-Naomi Osaka-Carlos Ramos fiasco at the 2018 US Open. During the women’s final, the umpire, Carlos Ramos, issued Williams a warning for suspected coaching from her player’s box. When Williams strongly denied she was being coached, which is strictly prohibited in tennis, Ramos levied another penalty against her, stripping her of a single point. “

Death by a Thousand Budget Cuts

Death by a Thousand Budget Cuts: The Need for a New Fight for Poor People’s Rights
Social Justice: A Journal of Crime, Conflict & World Order
Tina K. Saks
January 17, 2017

”As of January 2017 it appears that, we, indeed, have everything to lose. Donald J. Trump’s rhetorical exhortation to urban—i.e., Black—voters during the 2016 presidential campaign seems all too real now that he has ascended to the US presidency.”

“A Thousand Midnights”

“A Thousand Midnights”: Chicago and the Legacy of the Great Migration, The New Yorker
Tina K. Saks
January 8th, 2016

“When I was growing up, my mother, Bette Parks Sacks, often told me stories about her youth in Mississippi. She spoke in a slow, sweet drawl, despite the fact that she’d spent her entire adult life in Chicago. I knew of the hardships and beauty of the South, transmitted to me through vivid recollections of her childhood and adolescence.”