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- "The Black Man in Brazil - A Challenge to the Honest Historian," Mazungumzo,
I, 1, Fall 1970.
- "Rescuing Fanon from the Critics," African Studies Review, XIII, 3,
December 1970
- "Some Reflections on Evangelical Pan-Africanism, or, Black Missionaries, White Missionaries,
and the Struggle for African Souls, 1890-1930," Ufahamu, I, 3, Winter 1971.
4).
- "œGeorge Padmore as a Prototype of the Black Historian in the Age of Militancy," Pan-African
Journal, IV, 2, Spring 1971.
- "Race as a Continuing Function of Slavery, Colonialism and Capitalism in the West
Indies - an Overview," Journal of Human Relations, XIX, 3, Third Quarter
1971.
- "C.L.R. James and the Race/Class Question," Race, XIV, 2, October 1972
.
- "Revolutionary Upheaval in Trinidad, 1919: Viewed from American and British Sources," Journal
of Negro History, LVIII, 3, July 1973.
- "Some Aspects of the Political Ideas of Marcus Garvey," in John Henrik Clarke, Ed., Marcus
Garvey and the Vision of Africa (New York: Random House, 1974).
- "Attempts to Bring Garvey Back to the United States," Negro History Bulletin, XXXVIII,
1, December 1974-January 1975.
- "Repression and Resistance in West Indian History," Pan-African Journal, VIII,
2, Summer 1975.
- "Benito Sylvain of Haiti on the Pan-African Conference of 1900," Pan-African
Journal, VIII,
2, Summer 1975.
- "Communication," Reviews in American History, September, 1977.
- "Carter G. Woodson and Marcus Garvey," Negro History Bulletin, XL, 6,
November-December 1977.
- "The Writing and Reception of Race First," Afro-Americans in New York Life
and History, II, 1, January 1978.
- "Marcus Garvey and the West Indies," Caribbean Contact, April 1978;
reprinted in Downtown (Trinidad), I, 8, April-May 1980.
- "The Economic Programs of Marcus Garvey," Black Collegian, IX, I, September/October
1978.
- "The March on Washington Movement," Journal of African-Afro-American Affairs, III,
1, Spring 1979.
- "Some Pan-African Aspects of the Trinidad Uprising of 1919," in Vivian Gordon, Ed., Lectures: Black
Scholars on Black Issues (Washington, D.C.: University Press of America, 1979).
- "Marcus Garvey and Southern Africa," occasional paper, “United Nations Special
Committee Against Apartheid, May 1979.
- "Garvey and Scattered Africa," in Joseph E. Harris, Ed., Global Dimensions
of the African Diaspora (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1983).
- "Did W.E.B. DuBois Plagiarize?" Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, VI,
1, January 1982.
.
- "Pan-Africanism and Black Power," in Kenneth J. Grieb, Ed., Research Guide
to Central America and the Caribbean (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985).
- "Marcus Garvey," in Book of Days 1987 (Ann Arbor: The Pierian Press,
1987).
- Preface to Centennial Edition of Amy J. Garvey, Ed., The Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey (Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1986).
- "Amy Ashwood Garvey: Wife No. 1." Jamaica Journal, Marcus Garvey Centenary
Issue,
XX, 3, August-October 1987.
- "A Pan-Africanist in Dominica: J.R. Ralph Casimir and the Garvey Movement, 1919-1923," Journal
of Caribbean History, XXI, 2, 1988.
- "International Aspects of the Garvey Movement," Jamaica Journal, Marcus
Garvey Centenary Issue, XX, 3, August-October 1987.
- "The Origins and Growth of Pan-Africanism," in Max B. Ifill, Ed., Proceedings
of a Sesquicentennial Conference on Human Development (Port of Spain: Economic and
Business Research, 1989.
- "Women in the Garvey Movement," in Rupert Lewis and Patrick Bryan, Eds., Garvey: His
Life and Work (Kingston, Jamaica: Institute of Social and Economic Research, University
of the West Indies, 1988).
- "Bibliophiles, Activists and Race Men," in Elinor Des Verney Sinnette, W. Paul Coates
and Thomas C. Battle, Eds., Black Bibliophiles and Collectors: Preservers of Black History (Washington,
D.C.: Howard University Press, 1990).
- "The Caribbean and Pan-Africanism," in Alan G. Cobley and Alvin Thompson, Eds., The
African-Caribbean Connection: Historical and Cultural Perspectives (Bridgetown, Barbados:
University of the West Indies and the Barbados National Cultural Foundation, 1990).
- "From Slavery to Rodney King: Continuity and Change," in Haki Madhubiti, Ed., Why
LA Happened: Implications of the '92 Los Angeles Rebellion (Chicago: Third World
Press, 1992).
- "C.L.R. James, Race and Pan-African Revolt," introduction to C.L.R. James, A
History of Negro Revolt (Chicago, IL: Research Associates School Times Publications,
1994, new edition of 1938 work).
- "Jews to Trinidad," Journal of Caribbean History, XXVIII, 2, 1994.
- "Vignette 16: Child Abuse or Acceptable Cultural Norms?" Ethics and Behavior, V,
3, 1995.
- "Replies. . .on Black Nationalism," Boston Review, XX, 4 Oct./Nov.
1995.
- "Vote for a Woman! Audrey Jeffers and the 1936 Entry of Women into Trinidad Politics,"
in Brian Moore and Swithin Wilmot, Eds., Before and After 1865: Education, Politics and
Regionalism in the Caribbean (Kingston: Ian Randle Publishers, 1998).
- "Discovering African Roots: Amy Ashwood Garvey's Pan-Africanist Journey," Comparative
Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, XVII, 1, 1997.
- "African and Indian Consciousness in the 20th Century," UNESCO General History
of the Caribbean, Vol. 5, Chapter 9 (London: Macmillan and Paris: UNESCO,
2004).
- "The Banneker Literary Institute of Philadelphia: African American Intellectual Activism
Before the War of the Slaveholders' Rebellion," Journal of African American History, Vol.
87, Summer 2002.
- Foreword to A.M. Clarke, Ed., Best Poems of Trinidad (Port of Spain: Fraser's
Printerie, 1944; reprint, Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1999).
- "Eric Williams: His Radical Side in the Early 1940s," Journal of Caribbean
Studies,
XVII, 1 and 2, Summer 2002.
- "Introduction" to Eric Williams and E. Franklin Frazier, Eds, The Economic
Future of the Caribbean (Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 2004, first pub. 1944).
- "Pan-Africanism, 1441 to the 21st Century: Building on the Vision of Our Ancestors." (Also
in a French translation, "Le Panafricanisme, au 1441 au XXIe Siècle:
Tirer parti de la Vision de nos Ancêtres"), www.au-ciad.org. Also
forthcoming in Proceedings of the First Conference of Intellectuals of Africa and the
Diaspora (Addis Ababa: African Union, 2006).
- "Eric Williams and the Anglo-American Caribbean Commission: Trinidad's Future Nationalist
Leader as Aspiring Imperial Bureaucrat," Journal of African American History,
88, 3, Summer 2003.
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