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  1. "The Black Man in Brazil - A Challenge to the Honest Historian," Mazungumzo, I, 1, Fall 1970.

  2. "Rescuing Fanon from the Critics," African Studies Review, XIII, 3, December 1970

  3. "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).

  4. "œGeorge Padmore as a Prototype of the Black Historian in the Age of Militancy," Pan-African Journal, IV, 2, Spring 1971.

  5. "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.

  6. "C.L.R. James and the Race/Class Question," Race, XIV, 2, October 1972
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  7. "Revolutionary Upheaval in Trinidad, 1919: Viewed from American and British Sources," Journal of Negro History, LVIII, 3, July 1973.

  8. "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).

  9. "Attempts to Bring Garvey Back to the United States," Negro History Bulletin, XXXVIII, 1, December 1974-January 1975.

  10. "Repression and Resistance in West Indian History," Pan-African Journal, VIII, 2, Summer 1975.

  11. "Benito Sylvain of Haiti on the Pan-African Conference of 1900," Pan-African Journal, VIII, 2, Summer 1975.

  12. "Communication," Reviews in American History, September, 1977.

  13. "Carter G. Woodson and Marcus Garvey," Negro History Bulletin, XL, 6, November-December 1977.

  14. "The Writing and Reception of Race First," Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, II, 1, January 1978.

  15. "Marcus Garvey and the West Indies," Caribbean Contact, April 1978; reprinted in Downtown (Trinidad), I, 8, April-May 1980.

  16. "The Economic Programs of Marcus Garvey," Black Collegian, IX, I, September/October 1978.

  17. "The March on Washington Movement," Journal of African-Afro-American Affairs, III, 1, Spring 1979.

  18. "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).

  19. "Marcus Garvey and Southern Africa," occasional paper, “United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid, May 1979.

  20. "Garvey and Scattered Africa," in Joseph E. Harris, Ed., Global Dimensions of the African Diaspora (Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1983).

  21. "Did W.E.B. DuBois Plagiarize?" Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, VI, 1, January 1982.
    .
  22. "Pan-Africanism and Black Power," in Kenneth J. Grieb, Ed., Research Guide to Central America and the Caribbean (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985).

  23. "Marcus Garvey," in Book of Days 1987 (Ann Arbor: The Pierian Press, 1987).

  24. Preface to Centennial Edition of Amy J. Garvey, Ed., The Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey (Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1986).

  25. "Amy Ashwood Garvey: Wife No. 1." Jamaica Journal, Marcus Garvey Centenary Issue, XX, 3, August-October 1987.

  26. "A Pan-Africanist in Dominica: J.R. Ralph Casimir and the Garvey Movement, 1919-1923," Journal of Caribbean History, XXI, 2, 1988.

  27. "International Aspects of the Garvey Movement," Jamaica Journal, Marcus Garvey Centenary Issue, XX, 3, August-October 1987.

  28. "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.

  29. "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).

  30. "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).

  31. "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).

  32. "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).

  33. "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).

  34. "Jews to Trinidad," Journal of Caribbean History, XXVIII, 2, 1994.

  35. "Vignette 16: Child Abuse or Acceptable Cultural Norms?"  Ethics and Behavior, V, 3, 1995.

  36. "Replies. . .on Black Nationalism," Boston Review, XX, 4 Oct./Nov. 1995.

  37. "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).

  38. "Discovering African Roots: Amy Ashwood Garvey's Pan-Africanist Journey," Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, XVII, 1, 1997.

  39. "African and Indian Consciousness in the 20th Century," UNESCO General History of the Caribbean, Vol. 5, Chapter 9 (London: Macmillan and Paris: UNESCO, 2004).

  40. "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.

  41. Foreword to A.M. Clarke, Ed., Best Poems of Trinidad (Port of Spain: Fraser's Printerie, 1944; reprint, Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 1999).

  42. "Eric Williams: His Radical Side in the Early 1940s," Journal of Caribbean Studies, XVII, 1 and 2, Summer 2002.

  43. "Introduction" to Eric Williams and E. Franklin Frazier, Eds, The Economic Future of the Caribbean (Dover, MA: The Majority Press, 2004, first pub. 1944).

  44. "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).

  45. "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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