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Until We Win: Black Labor and Liberation in the Disposable Era

Since the rebellion in Ferguson, Missouri in August 2014, Black people throughout the United States have been grappling with a number of critical questions such as why are Black people being hunted and killed every 28 hours or more by various operatives of the law? [...]

Until We Win: Black Labor and Liberation in the Disposable Era2016-11-29T17:37:05-05:00

Where’s #BlackLivesMatter In the Struggle Against School Privatization?

#BlackLivesMatter's national board promptly reacted to a fulsome DNC endorsement with an apparent repudiation. While rhetorical opposition to Democrats is fine, on-the-ground work against their concrete polices is a step further. Apart from the prison and police state itself, no Democratic policy affects our communities more adversely [...]

Where’s #BlackLivesMatter In the Struggle Against School Privatization?2016-11-29T17:37:05-05:00

The Subtle Linguistics of Polite White Supremacy

What is Polite White Supremacy? Polite White Supremacy is the notion that whites should remain the ruling class while denying that they are the ruling class, politely. Affectionately, it’s called #PWS for short. It has been referred to as the Casual American Caste System, Delicate Apartheid, [...]

The Subtle Linguistics of Polite White Supremacy2016-11-29T17:37:05-05:00

Gentrification’s Ground Zero

In the ten years since Katrina, New Orleans has been remade into a neoliberal playground for young entrepreneurs. By Megan French-Marcelin | Originally Published at Jacobin.| Photographic Credit; Real-estate developer Sean Cummings above the Mississippi River in New Orleans. Spencer Weiner This week marks a decade [...]

Gentrification’s Ground Zero2016-11-29T17:37:05-05:00

10 Years After Katrina, New Orleans’ All-Charter School System Has Proven a Failure

Test scores tell one story, and residents tell another. A three-month investigation by In These Times reveals the cracks in the education reform narrative. By Colleen Kimmett | Originally Published at In These Times. August 28, 2015 | School buses sit swamped by the floodwaters following hurricane [...]

10 Years After Katrina, New Orleans’ All-Charter School System Has Proven a Failure2016-11-29T17:37:05-05:00

When it Comes to New Orleans Schools, Who is Making the Choices?

By J Celeste Lay | Originally Published at The Conversation August 25, 2015 5.55AM EDT | Photographic Credit; The New Orleans Recovery School District got rid of its last traditional public schools in May 2014. In this photo taken, April 7, 2010, Trenise Duvernay talks with Corey [...]

When it Comes to New Orleans Schools, Who is Making the Choices?2016-11-29T17:37:06-05:00

Beginning The Journey Toward Social Justice

To help answer this question, we recently spoke with Renée Watson, former associate director of professional development for DreamYard Project in the Bronx, who now works with organizations that are hoping to align their internal structures and practices with a [...]

Beginning The Journey Toward Social Justice2016-11-29T17:37:06-05:00

State School Takeovers Steal Democracy, Ignore Poverty

By Jan Resseger | Originally Published at janresseger. August 19, 2015< | Photographic Credit; It's time to attend to Concentrated Poverty, Democracy, and Education. The takeover of the public schools in New Orleans followed a natural catastrophe, the destruction of the city by Hurricane Katrina and the [...]

State School Takeovers Steal Democracy, Ignore Poverty2016-11-29T17:37:06-05:00

When Heroin Hits the White Suburbs

Heroin use and abuse in America has dramatically increased over the past decade. Between 2006 and 2013, federal records reveal, the number of first-time heroin users doubled, from 90,000 to 169,000. Some of those users, no doubt, already are gone. The Center for Disease Control announced [...]

When Heroin Hits the White Suburbs2016-11-29T17:37:06-05:00
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