Creating Justice in a Multiracial Democracy -

Creating Justice in a Multiracial Democracy

New Will for Evidence-Based Policies That Work

Alan Curtis (Herausgeber)

Buch | Softcover
528 Seiten
2024
Teachers' College Press (Verlag)
978-0-8077-6994-2 (ISBN)
38,65 inkl. MwSt
American democracy is at an inflection point. Will we stride toward the 22nd century with evidence and will? Or will we lurch fearfully backwards, reinscribing the white supremist domination of the 19th century?


After hundreds of urban protests in the 1960s, the presidential Kerner Commission, composed mainly of privileged white men, concluded, “It is time to make good the promise of American democracy to all citizens—urban and rural, white and Black, Spanish surname, American Indian and every minority group.” Today it still is time—to reduce racial injustice, economic inequality, and poverty.


Since the Kerner Commission, there has been little or no progress in some areas, and in other ways things have gotten worse. Yet the visionaries on these pages are passionate about how the problem is not lack of resources, nor a dearth of knowledge on the economic, education, youth investment, criminal justice, public health, and housing policies that work. Rather, the problem is that America still does not have the “new will” the Kerner Commission concluded was needed to scale up what works.


How to create “new will”? We need to identify those who are thwarting majoritarian preferences. Use strengthened voter rights and new messaging techniques to advance Dr. King’s economic justice movement based on both class and race. Weave the middle class into the coalition. Know that perfect unity is not necessary for effective collaboration. Better expose the exploitation of Americans by the privileged and the rigged system with its big myth of market fundamentalism. Make clear how that exploitation is smoke-screened by cultural deniers. Build moral language and moral fusion coalitions to revive the heart of democracy and advance a Third Reconstruction. Recover a moral commitment to long-term struggle. Balance outraged intensity with bridge-building persuasion. Don’t just preach to the choir—but recognize that the choir is where, to use John Lewis’ phrase, good trouble starts. Strengthen the role of nonprofit organizations. Base action on evidence and science, not on ideology, supposition, disinformation, and misinformation. Advocate for how universities can better engage their communities. And create a Harry Belafonte-like infrastructure of hope and empathy through the visual arts, monuments, and the performing arts. Through this book, and through its companion volume—the republication of the original Kerner Report of 1968—we commit to enhancing the movement and healing our divided society.


Book Features:




Brings together public and private sector decision-makers, seminal thinkers, activists, advocates, students, and commonsense change-oriented scholars to address a broad range of economic, education, youth investment, criminal justice, public health, and housing issues requiring urgent action.
Cuts through campaign rhetoric to focus on evidence and science, not on ideology, supposition, disinformation, and misinformation.
Examines what we have learned since the Kerner Commission and updates trends in economic, education, police reform, youth development, public health, and housing policies.
Identifies what works and what doesn’t work.
Offers core lessons and takeaways for creating new political will to reduce racial and economic injustice, inequality, and poverty.

Contributors:


William Barber, Director , Center for Public Theology and Public Policy , Yale University , Co-Chair , The Poor People’s Campaign , MacArthur Fellow


Branville Bard, Jr., Vice President Public Safety & Chief of Police, Johns Hopkins University


Sindy M. Benavides, President and CEO, Latino Victory


Jared Bernstein, Chair , White House Council of Economic Advisors


Cornell William Brooks, Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice , Kennedy School of Government , Harvard University


LaTosha Brown, Co-Founder , Black Voters Matter Fund


Elliott Currie, Professor of Criminology, Law and Society , University of California, Irvine


Linda Darling-Hammond, President and CEO , Learning Policy Institute , Professor of Education Emeritus , Stanford University


Robert Faris, Senior Researcher , Berkman Center for Internet and Society , Harvard University Law School


Michael Feuer, Dean , School of Education and Human Development , George Washington University


Nazgol Ghandnoosh, Co-Director of Research, The Sentencing Project


Neil Gross, Professor of Sociology, Colby College


George Huynh, Executive Director, Vietnamese American Initiative for Development (VietAid)


John Jackson, President and CEO , Schott Foundation for Public Education


Judith LeBlanc, Executive Director, Native Organizers Alliance


Carlton Mackey, Co-Creator/Co-Director, Arts and Social Justice Fellows Program, Emory University


Justin Milner, Executive Vice President of Evidence and Evaluation. Arnold Ventures


Margaret Morton, Director , Program on Creativity and Free Expression , Ford Foundation


Janet Murguia, President and CEO , UnidosUS


Naomi Oreskes, Professor of the History of Science , Harvard University


Claudia Pena, Executive Director , For Freedoms


Lisa Rice, President and CEO , National Fair Housing Alliance


Loretta Ross, Professor for the Study of Women and Gender , Smith College , MacArthur Fellow


Richard Rothstein, Senior Fellow , Economic Policy Institute , Author , The Color of Law


Anat Shenker-Osorio, Founder , ASO Communications


Brooke Smiley, Lecturer, Department of Theater and Dance, University of California, Santa Barbara


Herbert C. Smitherman, Professor of Medicine, Wayne State University


Dorothy Stoneman, Founder , YouthBuild , MacArthur Fellow


Ray Suarez, Former Anchor, PBS News Hour, Host, World Affairs KQED-FM


Kim Taylor-Thompson, Professor of Clinical Law, New York University Law School


Lisa Richards Toney, President and CEO, Association of Performing Arts Professionals


Randi Weingarten, President and CEO, American Federation of Teachers


Michelle Williams, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health , Harvard University


Valerie Wilson, Director , Program on Race, Ethnicity and the Economy , Economic Policy Institute


Felicia Wong, President and CEO , Roosevelt Institute


Julian Zelizer, Professor of History and Public Affairs , Princeton University , CNN Analyst

President of the Eisenhower Foundation in Washington DC, Alan Curtis was an appointee in the administrations of Lyndon Johnson and Jimmy Carter. Dr. Curtis is an author or editor of many books and holds degrees from Harvard, the University of London, and the University of Pennsylvania.

Contents


Foreword

Wes Moore

Governor of Maryland


Acknowledgments


Introduction

Alan Curtis

President and CEO

Eisenhower Foundation


PART I: WHAT EVIDENCE-BASED

POLICY WORKS?


Economic and Employment Policy


1. Should the Federal Government Play a Role in Racial Equity?

Of Course

Jared Bernstein


2. The New Economics and the Rebalancing of Power

Felicia Wong and Matt Hughes


3. Guidez-Faire:

Why Capitalism Needs Effective Governance

Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway


4. Worker-Centered and Race-Conscious Policy Are

Essential for Equity and Economic Justice

Valerie Wilson and Adewale Maye


Education and Youth Development Policy


5. The Long Quest for Equitable Educational Opportunity

Linda Darling-Hammond


6. Building Loving Systems to Create One America

for All Children

John H. Jackson and Zakiyah Ansari


7. A New Great Society

Randi Weingarten


8. Action to Reaffirm: Equity, Racial Justice, and the Future

of College Admissions

Dwayne Kwaysee Wright and Michael Feuer


9. Act Now! Invest in America’s Youth

Dorothy Stoneman and Mary Ellen Sprenkel


Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Policy


10. Police Reform: Where Do We Go From Here?

Neil Gross


11. Race, Transparency and Policing: Practical Advice From One

Pracademic’s Point of View

Branville Bard Jr.


12. Two Justice Systems—Separate and Unequal

Kim Taylor-Thompson


13. One in Five: Progress and Pushback in Lowering the

Lifetime Likelihood of Imprisonment for Young Black Men

Nazgol Ghandnoosh


14. Violence in Post-pandemic America: Hard Truths and Enduring Lessons

Elliott Currie


Housing and Neighborhood Investment Policy


15. Scaling Economic and Housing Justice

Lisa Rice, Michael Akinwumi, and Nikitra Bailey


16. What the Kerner Commission Got Wrong and How

We Can Get It Right: Remedying Segregation

Requires Recognizing Its True Origins

Leah Rothstein and Richard Rothstein


Public Health Policy


17. An Accidental Public Health Manifesto

Michelle A. Williams


18. U.S. Health Care Policy, the Evidence, and the Will

for Change: What Will It Take to Transform Decades

of Evidence Regarding U.S. Race-and Income-Based

Health Disparities to a “Will for Change”?

Herbert C. Smitherman Jr., and Anil N. F. Aranha


Latino, Native American, and Asian American Policy Perspectives


19. The Power of Stories

Janet Murguía


20. E Pluribus Unum: Out of Many, (We Are) One

Sindy M. Benavides


21. Kerner Commission Report: 21st-Century

Native American Perspective

Judith LeBlanc


22. United Against Hate: How Asian America

Is Standing Up

George Huynh


PART II: HOW TO CREATE NEW WILL?


Dr. King, Economic Justice and Moral Fusion


23. Reviving the Heart of Democracy

Rev. William Barber II


24. An Email and an Epistle for American Democracy

Cornell William Brooks


Persuasion, Democracy, and Voter Rights


25. Values, Villain, Vision: Messaging to Mobilize Our

Base and Persuade the Conflicted

Anat Shenker-Osorio


26. A New North Star to Lead Us to a Representative

Democracy That Is Just and Equitable for All

LaTosha R. Brown


27. Calling In as Compassionate Activism

Loretta J. Ross


Media, Evidence, and Misinformation


28. When Our “Truth-Tellers” Won’t Tell Us the Truth:

Looking Back at the Kerner Commission Report and

Ahead to a Transformed Media Landscape

Ray Suarez


29. “Little Brother Is Watching Big Brother”:

The Flawed Media Lens on Policing and Racism

Julian E. Zelizer


30. Race and Media in a Polarized Society

Robert Faris


31. A More Evidence Based Policy Agenda

Justin Milner


The Visual Arts, Monuments, and the Performing Arts


32. Carry History, Hold Truth: Art in the Public Realm

Rocío Aranda-Alvarado, Margaret S. Morton, and Lena Sze


33. Healing Toward New Will

Claudia Pena


34. Art as Translation

Carlton Mackey


35. Regenerating the Body of Culture

brooke smiley


36. The Art Will. . . A Musing on Life in the Performing Arts:

A Case Study for NEW WILL

Lisa Richards Toney


Index

About the Editors and Contributors

Erscheinungsdatum
Vorwort Wes Moore
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 229 mm
Gewicht 748 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Allgemeines / Lexika
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Bildungstheorie
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Staat / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-8077-6994-0 / 0807769940
ISBN-13 978-0-8077-6994-2 / 9780807769942
Zustand Neuware
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