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Brief
Bio:
Professor
john a. powell
Professor john a. powell is a nationally recognized authority in the areas
of civil rights, civil liberties and issues relating to race,
poverty, and the law. He teaches civil rights law, property law
and jurisprudence and was recently appointed the Earl R. Larson
Chair of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Law at the University
of Minnesota Law School. He is founder and Executive Director
of the Institute on Race & Poverty (IRP), which is located
at the University of Minnesota Law School. The Institute was
created in 1993 to focus on dynamics created by the intersections
of race and poverty. Its focus has always been on real issues
that affect real people, including metropolitan equity issues,
such as concentrated poverty, education, economic viability and
urban sprawl.
Professor powell received his B.A. Degree
from Stanford University and his J.D. from the University of
California at Berkeley (Boalt Hall). After law school, he became
an attorney with the Seattle Public Defender's Office. In 1977,
he received an International Human Rights Fellowship from the
University of Minnesota to work in Southern Africa, where he
served as a consultant to the government of Mozambique. Professor
powell later served as a staff attorney for Evergreen Legal Service
and as director for Legal Services of Greater Miami.
From 1987 to 1993, he served as national
legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, where he
was instrumental in developing educational adequacy theory. Professor
powell has taught at Columbia University School of Law, Harvard
Law School, University of Miami School of Law, American University
and the University of San Francisco School of Law. He joined
the University of Minnesota Law School faculty in 1993.
Professor powell is the author of many
articles and books dealing with issues of race and poverty and
how to make our society more equitable. He is a member of the
National Legal Aid and Defender, the National Housing Law Center
Association, and the National Bar Association. He is also a member
of the American Bar Association's Commission on Homelessness
and Poverty and serves on the Board of Directors of the Poverty
& Race Research Action Council (PRRAC), and the Minnesota
Supreme Court's Implementation Committee on Multicultural Diversity
& Racial Fairness. He was the chair of the City of Minneapolis
Affordable Housing Task Force.
He was recently featured in an article
published in the fall issue of Colorlines Magazine entitled "What
we need to do about the 'burbs." The article is on the magazine
Web site at www.colorlines.com.
Professor powell authored an article entitled "Achieving
Racial Justice: What's Sprawl Got to Do with it?" in the
September issue of Poverty & Race published by PRRAC. Many
of his articles can be found in the News
Articles section of the IRP Web site. |