Chapter One: Malcolm X and Black Radical ThoughtChapter Two: The Displacements of Malcolm XChapter Three: Contesting Geographic KnowledgesChapter Four: Space and the Geographies of SeparationChapter Five: Social Justice and the Revolutions of Malcolm XChapter Six: Geographical Imaginations and the Place of AfricaChapter Seven: The Scalar Politics of Malcolm X and BeyondChapter Eight: The Social Justice of Malcolm X
James A. Tyner is currently an associate professor in Geography at Kent State University. He received his PhD in Geography from the University of Southern California. His specialties include population, political, and social geography. Recent publications include Made in thePhilippines: Gendered Discourses and the Making ofMigrants (2004) and Iraq, Terror, and the Philippines'Will to War (2005).