Nabeel Abraham | |
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Alma mater | University of Michigan |
Nabeel Abraham (born 1950 [1] ) is an American anthropologist and activist. His research focuses around Arab-Americans and how Arabs and Palestinians are represented in mainstream American media.
Abraham was born in 1950 in North Carolina. His family moved to Detroit, Michigan, in 1955, where his father started a retail shop on Michigan Avenue. [1] His family is originally from Palestine. Abraham attended Cass Technical High School. He earned degrees in anthropology and sociology from Wayne State University. He earned his master's degree from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. [2]
Abraham served as director of the Honors Program at Henry Ford Community College. [3] He operated the program for 18 years, before an early retirement due to financial issues at the college. He worked at the college for 28 years. [2]
He served as a columnist for Lies of Our Times until it ceased publishing in 1994 and also contributed to Middle East Report . [4] [5] He is the co-editor of Arab Detroit . He edited and contributed to Arab Detroit 9/11: Life in the Terror Decade. Released in 2011, the book won three awards: the Midwest Book Award, the Independent Publishers Book Award and the Choice Outstanding Academic Book Award. [2]
His papers are held in the collection of the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan. [3] In 2016, Abraham was interviewed by the Detroit Historical Society regarding living as a teenage Arab-American in the 1960s in Detroit. [1]
Ralph Johnson Bunche was an American political scientist, diplomat, and leading actor in the mid-20th-century decolonization process and US civil rights movement, who received the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize for his late 1940s mediation in Israel. He is the first black Nobel laureate and the first person of African descent to be awarded a Nobel Prize. He was involved in the formation and early administration of the United Nations (UN), and played a major role in both the decolonization process and numerous UN peacekeeping operations.
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Frederick Clever Bald was a teacher and authority on early Michigan history and served as director of the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan. Following service in France with an ambulance unit during World War I, Bald completed his college education and embarked on a teaching career in Detroit, Michigan before returning to graduate school to study the history of the Northwest Territory. The subject of his dissertation was Detroit during its first decade under American occupation, subsequently published as Detroit's First American Decade 1796 to 1805. Bald also authored the book Michigan in Four Centuries as well as numerous articles. During World War II, Bald was appointed University War Historian at the University of Michigan, beginning his affiliation with the Michigan Historical Collections, forerunner of the Bentley Historical Library. He served as director of the Michigan Historical Collections from 1960 to 1966.
Henry Frieze Vaughan was an American epidemiologist with a strong discipline in environmental health, an academic professor, and an administrator. Among the positions he held, he was the Health Commissioner for the City of Detroit (1919–1941), editor for “American Journal of Public Health” (1922–1924), President of American Public Health in 1925, trustee of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation (1933–1978), President of Council at the Michigan Department of Council (1939–1960), founder and Dean of the University of Michigan School of Public Health (1941–1960), and the co-founder and first president of the National Sanitation Foundation (1944–1966). Vaughan was born in Michigan and stayed in Michigan for most of his life contributing to the development and innovation of medical and health services in Michigan.
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Arab Detroit: From Margin to Mainstream is a book published by Wayne State University Press in 2000, edited by Nabeel Abraham and Andrew Shryock. It discusses the Arab population in Metro Detroit.
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