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Understanding Race

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The human species is very young, but in a short time it has acquired some striking, if biologically superficial, variations across the planet. As this book shows, however, none of those biological variations can be understood in terms of discrete races, which do not actually exist as definable entities. Starting with a consideration of evolution and the mechanisms of diversification in nature, this book moves to an examination of attitudes to human variation throughout history, showing that it was only with the advent of slavery that considerations of human variation became politicized. It then embarks on a consideration of how racial classifications have been applied to genomic studies, demonstrating how individualized genomics is a much more effective approach to clinical treatments. It also shows how racial stratification does nothing to help us understand the phenomenon of human variation, at either the genomic or physical levels.

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  • Addresses common misunderstandings about race in an accessible and rational way for the general reader
  • Explains why races are purely cultural constructs and do not result from any acceptable form of taxonomic analysis of our species, helping readers to understand why race is not a useful or even justifiable way of understanding human variation
  • Clarifies why dividing our species into races is entirely unhelpful for demographic, medical, sociological or other analyses
Authors: DeSalle Rob, Tattersall Ian
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 188
ISBN: 9781009055581
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2022

1. The evolutionary background
2. Race before evolutionary theory
3. Race after Darwin
4. Race in the era of genetics and genomics
5. Variation in genomes, and how humans took over the world
6. Clustering and treeing
7. Race in medicine and complex phenotypic studies
8. Human adaptations
9. Race, science and pseudoscience.

Rob DeSalle is curator at the American Museum of Natural History, where he has curated or cocurated six highly praised exhibitions and leads a research group in the Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics. He is the author or coauthor of fifteen books, including Welcome to the Genome. He lives in New York City.

Ian Tattersall is Curator Emeritus in the Division of Anthropology of the American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA. His most recent research is on the emergence of modern human cognition. He is author of over 400 scientific papers, numerous books and is a prominent interpreter of palaeoanthropology to the public, and writes regularly for Natural History.

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