Book Review: To Fight Segregation We Must First Build Community, Richard And Leah Rothstein Argue
A divided society can never be a harmonious one — so what can we do to fight segregation in our communities?
A divided society can never be a harmonious one — so what can we do to fight segregation in our communities?
Kelsey Lyles, Health Equity Policy Lead, The Greenlining Institute Kelsey Lyles Program Manager, Health Equity, The Greenlining Institute As Health Equity Program Manager, Kelsey Lyles leads the Health Equity team’s workforce equity and inclusion advocacy efforts. Growing up in Chicago, she felt a strong commitment to social justice at a young age. Kelsey has extensive
Marceline White, Executive Director, Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition Marceline White Executive Director, Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition Marceline serves as the Executive Director of the Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition where she leads the coalition of 8,500 supporters in promoting economic justice and financial inclusion throughout Maryland. Marceline currently co-chairs the Consumer Protection Committee of Attorney General
Baltimore: The Black Butterfly Read More »
T Barbara Van Kerkhove, Ph.D. Researcher/Policy Analyst, Empire Justice Center Barbara Van Kerkhove is a researcher/policy analyst in Empire Justice Center’s Rochester, New York, office where she does research and advocacy on a variety of consumer finance and economic justice issues. She is the principal author of “Too Big to Fail…Too Poor to
It’s not too simple to say that governmental housing policies that endorsed and promoted segregation and racism had a profound and lasting legacy that we can still see in the landscape of American cities today.
Mapping Inequality: There were no dog whistles, the racism was loud and clear. Read More »
Richard Rothstein outlines what’s necessary to reproach residential segregation in NCRC’s Just Economy Series.
A Just Economy requires a new Civil Rights movement Read More »
The United States is on track to be a majority-minority nation by 2044. But census data show most of our neighbors are the same race.
The Washington Post: America is more diverse than ever — but still segregated Read More »
Racism is America’s great sin, and if there isn’t continual progress to combat it, the nation becomes ugly to itself.
New York Times: Integration now, integration forever Read More »