What's New - Current Events

 What's New

6.29.01 --
Pro-Democracy Convention

From June 29 to July 1st, 2001, the Center for Constitutional Rights and a coalition of more than fifty organizations are sponsoring a
National Pro-Democracy Convention in Philadelphia. The Convention is being convened in response to the disenfranchisement of thousands, if not millions of voters in the recent Presidential election.

 

Coming Events Bulletin Board:

SAVE THE DATE: SATURDAY, OCT. 27, 2001

A Citizen’s Call to Action: Democracy: Mend It, Don’t End It

Harvard Professor of Law Peter Edelman will share his views on "Broadening the Base: Mobilizing a New Majority for Justice."

The over-arching goal of this conference is to:

Connect progressive groups and develop strategies for working together on broad issues affecting the health of democracy and civil rights.

Watch your mailbox for a postcard with additional conference details or check out our Web site at www.umn.edu/irp to register online.



5.24.01 -- Report on Traffic Stop Data (IRP Analysis) Collected by the St. Paul Police Department
April 15 through December 15, 2000

 

To read and print pdf files: Download Adobe Acrobat reader.  (free)

3.3.01 -- Ruminator Books (1648 Grand Avenue, Saint Paul, MN) BILL SUTHERLAND will discuss Guns and Gandhi in Africa: Pan African Insights on Nonviolence, Armed Struggle and Liberation in Africa.   The book weaves insights based on 50 years of Sutherland's life-long relationships with African leaders...
See Coming Events for time and more information.

2.13.01 -- Racial Profiling - most commonly associated with "driving while black/brown" (DWB). This new piece complete with footnotes and and sources can be found in our Research section.

11.27.00 --Twin Cities Housing presentation identifying our housing problem and highlighting real and reachable solutions. Click here to access john powell's presentation.

11.27.00 --Two articles regarding the presidential election posted in the News & Articles section. 

11.15.00 --What Is The Problem?  Social and racial inequities are geographically inscribed.  There is a polarization between the rich and the poor that is directly related to the areas in which they live.  Fragmentation in housing and education undermine equity and regionalism goals.  There is strong evidence to support the position that this spatial arrangement has been the single most effective tool for maintaining black subordination and white supremacy since the repeal of Jim Crow laws. Click here to access john powell's presentation. 

10.25.00 -- Racial Segregation and Gentrification.  SPRAWL + FRAGMENTATION = CONCENTRATED POVERTY. Population has boomed in the Minneapolis-Saint Paul suburbs, while it is continuing to drop in the central cities. Land has developed at a 3:1 ratio to population in the region from 1950-1990. Two thirds of new jobs will open in the suburbs in the upcoming years. Click here to access john powell's presentation. 

8.28.00 --A new journal article entitled, "Whites Will Be Whites: The Failure to Interrogate Racial Privilege" has been added to the News & Articles section. Click here to read the article.

8.10.00 -- john powell will appear on National Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation" on Thursday, August 31 at 1 p.m. He will contribute to a panel discussion on sprawl and the return of African Americans to the "New South."

7.20.00 --The Institute on Race & Poverty is currently working on a civil rights project aimed at reducing racial disparities and racial bias in the criminal justice system by documenting and evaluating current strategies and by improving their coordination and implementation, both locally and nationally. A portion of this project focuses on racial profiling by police. We are still conducting research in this area. When our research is finished you will be able to access the Racial Profiling Data Collection Status Report here on our site. [Update: 2.13.01 -- Racial Profiling]

If you or your organization have initiated or participated in any anti-racial bias projects of a similar nature, we would like to hear about them. Please e-mail IRP senior researcher Marguerite Spencer at Mlcspencer@juno.com.

6.9.00 -- Student Voices across the Spectrum: 
The Educational Integration Initiatives Project - Joyce Executive Summary

In September 1997, the Institute on Race & Poverty received a grant from the Joyce Foundation to research and conduct analysis of the underlying causes of persistent racial segregation in America's public schools. This interdisciplinary qualitative project represents the culmination of the Institute's study and includes discussion and analysis of ten high schools falling on various points of the segregation/desegregation/integration spectrum.

The full report is 120 pages long and goes into specific detail about all aspects of the Educational Integration Initiatives Project. It also includes extensive citations. If you are interested in receiving the full report, please contact Lisa Jabaily at (612) 624-2904. You may also E-mail your request to jabai001@tc.umn.edu. The cost of each report is five dollars.


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University of Minnesota Law School
Twin Cities Campus.

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Last update: August 20, 2001.