Posts by Guest User
Less Than Human: Do Some Police Take A Step Beyond Simple Prejudice?

When I tried to engage a friend in a conversation about the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old who was shot and killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, my friend wearily waved his hand for me to stop. “Can’t do it,” he said politely. “It happens so often I’m inured to the pain.  If I think too long about it I might just …” His voice trailed off. My friend is a black man. He is raising a black man. His response is one of three that tended to follow Saturday’s tragic news. You can either protect yourself by neutralizing your rage, as he did.  You can defend your community and …

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CommentaryGuest UserRace
CLiME Annual Scholarship Conference 2014

Nationally recognized metropolitan scholar and former Albuquerque Mayor David Rusk will present his article, Measuring Regional Equity, followed by a moderated discussion with the distinguished audience of elected officials, scholars, activists, representatives of non-profits and the public. CLiME Director and Rutgers Law Professor David D. Troutt will also give a talk on the structure of place-based inequality, including a reading from his new book, The Price of Paradise: The Costs of Inequality and a Vision for a More Equitable America.

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Prof. Troutt At The Regional Fair Housing & Equity Assessment Workshop

CLiME Director Daivd Troutt will provide an overview account of government data trends at the Regional Fair Housing and Equity Assessment Workshop Friday, November 22, 2013 at the Bloustein School at Rutgers University. The workshop will bring together stakeholders and subject matter experts in the region to learn about the analysis to date and help guide the project.

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Structure, Place And Opportunity

People don’t tend to think of their lives within structures, but rather as days, relationships and places.  Families seek supportive schools, reasonable commutes, quality local stores or, when they have time, nice parks to relax in.  Working people worry about commutes, neighbors they can trust rather than fear and affordable tax rates.  Matters of racial disparity or class differences are not common features of our everyday thoughts.  We have enough to worry about meeting needs in the time available, with the people we encounter and in the places where our needs are likely to be met.  

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Voting Rights: Scalia V. Minority Protection

It’s rare to reach a point in our national sense of humor that a sitting Supreme Court justice emerges as the butt of popular jokes for comments he made during an oral argument. That’s what happened last week, however, after Justice Antonin Scalia asked lawyers defending Congress’s extension of Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act whether maintaining the pre-clearance formula for nine “covered” states, which are subject to federal oversight, was really just a “racial entitlement” program and not a constitutional necessity.

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Geography As Destiny

If Occupy Wall Street protesters and tea partiers agree on anything, it’s the loss of a stable middle class. Yet while the public debate has focused on overarching federal policies, neither group has pointed to the threat right here on the ground: the inequity of place. Real estate agents and home buyers have long known that location — where we live, learn, shop and join in community — determines most of the opportunities available to Americans. Opportunity is the touchstone to becoming a member of the middle class. As much as brains, pluck or work ethic, geography is destiny …

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