by lindaoppenheim | Mar 30, 2015 | Broadcast
On All Things Considered, “NPR’s Michel Martin speaks with professors Phillip Atiba Goff of UCLA and Harry Holzer of Georgetown University about how fears of African-American men are manifested in the criminal justice system and the labor market, and what...
by lindaoppenheim | Mar 30, 2015 | Events
Dr. Victor Rios, Associate Professor of Sociology at University of California Santa Barbara and author of Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys, will speak about his work in Oakland, Watts, and Ferguson on Wednesday, April 1, 2015 at 5:30 pm in the...
by lindaoppenheim | Mar 26, 2015 | Events
The Princeton University Program in Visual Arts will present an exhibition of large-format photography by visual arts major Amber Stewart in the Lucas Gallery at 185 Nassau Street from March 30 – April 3. Her photography explores themes and questions central to...
by lindaoppenheim | Mar 24, 2015 | Article, Documents
“Two Media Matters reports analyzing nightly news coverage show New York City outlets have named African-Americans as suspects in murder, theft, and assault stories at a rate at least 14 percent higher than reflected in actual NYPD arrest rates averaged over the...
by lindaoppenheim | Mar 18, 2015 | Opinion
In her op ed in the Daily Princetonian (March 2, 2015), Princeton University sophomore Zeena Mubarak argues that African American history should not be confined to a single month, but be incorporated into “the larger category of American history.”