Civil and Human Rights

Home/Issues/Civil and Human Rights

Schools and the New Jim Crow – An Interview with Michelle Alexander

Alexander poses a thought-provoking and insightful thesis: Mass incarceration, justified and organized around the war on drugs, has become the new face of racial discrimination in the United States. Since 1970, the number of people behind bars in this country has increased 600 percent. What [...]

Schools and the New Jim Crow – An Interview with Michelle Alexander2016-11-29T17:39:03-05:00

Brown Eyes-Blue Eyes Experiment – “The Angry Eye”

How does it feel to be one of the beautiful people? Now that you know who you are, what do you want to be? And have you traveled very far, far as the eye can see? ~The BeatlesBaby, you might not be a rich man or woman [...]

Brown Eyes-Blue Eyes Experiment – “The Angry Eye”2016-11-29T17:39:03-05:00

Recy Taylor: A Symbol of Jim Crow’s Forgotten Horror

History offers lessons. It inspires. And it lives. — Recy Taylor (1944), Gertrude Perkins (1949), 15 year old Flossie Hardman (1951), Betty Jean Owens (1959), Joan Little (1974) #SayHerName People keep saying, 'We need to have a conversation about race'…I want to see a white man convicted [...]

Recy Taylor: A Symbol of Jim Crow’s Forgotten Horror2016-11-29T17:39:03-05:00

Stunning Revelations

TASER International Inc. maintains that its stun-guns are “changing the world and saving lives everyday.” There is no question that they changed Jack Wilson’s life. On Aug. 4, in Lafayette, Colo., policemen on a stakeout approached Jack’s son Ryan as he entered a field of [...]

Stunning Revelations2016-11-29T17:39:05-05:00

The Drug War’s Littlest Victims

Measures to put drug abusers in rehab instead of jail could rescue their kids from the cycle of addiction, foster care and crime. By Nell Bernstein | Originally Published at Salon. October 30, 2002 The last time Tracy Carter, a longtime drug user, was sent [...]

The Drug War’s Littlest Victims2016-11-29T17:39:05-05:00
Go to Top