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Not white enough : the long, shameful road to Japanese American internment - Lawrence Goldstone
Not white enough : the long, shameful road to Japanese American internment - Lawrence Goldstone
"Not White Enough is a legal and political history of anti-Asian bigotry, beginning with the California Gold Rush and ending with the infamous Supreme Court decision that upheld the imprisonment without trial of more than 100,000 innocent Americans on the spurious grounds of national security. The book demonstrates how law and politics bled into each other for decades to enable two-tiered justice, brushing aside Constitutional guarantees of equality under law. Not White Enough examines each of the key Supreme Court decisions-Wong Kim Ark, Ozawa, and Thind, for example-as expressions of political will and not simply jurisprudence. The author chronicles the political history of racism that made Japanese internment almost inevitable, including the key role San Francisco mayors James D. Phelan and Eugene Schmitz, political boss Abe Ruef, and California attorney general Ulysses Webb played in instigating, for political convenience, some of the most egregious anti-Asian legislation"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Not white enough : the long, shameful road to Japanese American internment - Lawrence Goldstone
Punished for dreaming : how school reform harms Black children and how we heal - Bettina L. Love
Punished for dreaming : how school reform harms Black children and how we heal - Bettina L. Love
""I am an eighties baby who grew to hate school. I never fully understood why. Until now. Until Bettina Love unapologetically and painstakingly chronicled the last forty years of education 'reform' in this landmark book. I hated school because it warred on me. I hated school because I loved to dream." -Ibram X. Kendi, New York Times bestselling author of How to be an Antiracist. In the tradition of Michelle Alexander, an unflinching reckoning with the impact of 40 years of racist public school policy on generations of Black lives. In Punished for Dreaming Dr. Bettina Love argues forcefully that Reagan's presidency ushered in a War on Black Children, pathologizing and penalizing them in concert with the War on Drugs. New policies punished schools with policing, closure, and loss of funding in the name of reform, as white savior, egalitarian efforts increasingly allowed private interests to infiltrate the system. These changes implicated children of color, and Black children in particular, as low performing, making it all too easy to turn a blind eye to their disproportionate conviction and incarceration. Today, there is little national conversation about a structural overhaul of American schools; cosmetic changes, rooted in anti-Blackness, are now passed off as justice. It is time to put a price tag on the miseducation of Black children. In this prequel to The New Jim Crow, Dr. Love serves up a blistering account of four decades of educational reform through the lens of the people who lived it. Punished for Dreaming lays bare the devastating effect on 25 Black Americans caught in the intersection of economic gain and racist ideology. Then, with input from leading U.S. economists, Dr. Love offers a road map for repair, arguing for reparations with transformation for all children at its core"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Punished for dreaming : how school reform harms Black children and how we heal - Bettina L. Love
Lies about Black people : how to combat racist stereotypes and why it matters - Omekomgo Dibiga
Lies about Black people : how to combat racist stereotypes and why it matters - Omekomgo Dibiga
"In this honest and welcoming book, diversity and inclusion expert, professor, and award-winning speaker Dr. Omekongo Dibinga argues that we must embark on a massive undertaking to re-educate ourselves on the stereotypes that have proven harmful, and too often deadly, to the Black community"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Lies about Black people : how to combat racist stereotypes and why it matters - Omekomgo Dibiga
Gary Younge on Jacksonville Shooting & Why America’s Gun Problem “Makes Its Racism More Lethal”
Gary Younge on Jacksonville Shooting & Why America’s Gun Problem “Makes Its Racism More Lethal”
On Saturday, a white supremacist gunman killed three Black people at a store in Jacksonville, Florida, in a racially motivated attack. Authorities say the 21-year-old white gunman initially tried to enter the historically Black college Edward Waters University, but he was turned away by a security guard before driving to a nearby Dollar General and opening fire with a legally purchased attack-style rifle. America’s gun problem “makes its racism more lethal,” says Gary Younge, author of Dispatches from the Diaspora: From Nelson Mandela to Black Lives Matter. “There’s been a significant increase in the number of hate crimes, particularly in anti-Black hate crimes, and one has to be able to connect that to the political situation that surrounds us,” says Younge, who says the shooter’s actions are reflective of the current attacks on Black history and represent a backlash to increased racial consciousness following the murder of George Floyd.
·democracynow.org·
Gary Younge on Jacksonville Shooting & Why America’s Gun Problem “Makes Its Racism More Lethal”
Unsettling : the El Paso massacre, resurgent White nationalism, and the US-Mexico border - Gilberto Rosas
Unsettling : the El Paso massacre, resurgent White nationalism, and the US-Mexico border - Gilberto Rosas
"Unsettling is a sharp, uncompromising interrogation of the transformation of the southern edge of the United States into a zone of migrant sacrifice and suffering, which culminates in a racist mass execution of twenty-two people in August 2019 in El Paso, Texas"--;"Documents the cruel immigration policies and treatment toward border crossers on the US-Mexico border.On August 3, 2019, a far-right extremist committed a deadly mass shooting at a major shopping center in El Paso, Texas, a city on the border of the United States and Mexico. In Unsettling, Gilberto Rosas situates this devastating shooting as the latest unsettling consequence of our border crisis and currents of deeply rooted white nationalism embedded in the United States. Tracing strict immigration policies and inhumane border treatment from the Clinton era through Democratic and Republican administrations alike, Rosas shows how the rhetoric around these policies helped lead to the Trump administration's brutal crackdown on migration-and the massacre in El Paso. Rosas draws on poignant stories and compelling testimonies from workers in immigrant justice organizations, federal public defenders, immigration attorneys, and human rights activists in order to document the cruelties and indignities inflicted on border crossers. Borders, as sites of crossings and spaces long inhabited by marginalized populations, generate deep anxiety across much of the contemporary world. Rosas demonstrates how the Trump administration amplified and weaponized immigration and border policy, including family separation, torture, and murder. None of this dehumanization and violence was inevitable, however. The border zone in El Paso (which translates to "the Pass") was once a very different place, one marked by frequent and inconsequential crossings to and from both sides-and with more humane immigration policies, it could become that once again"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Unsettling : the El Paso massacre, resurgent White nationalism, and the US-Mexico border - Gilberto Rosas
“Horrendous”: Black Men Tortured by White Mississippi Police “Goon Squad” React to Guilty Pleas
“Horrendous”: Black Men Tortured by White Mississippi Police “Goon Squad” React to Guilty Pleas
Six white former police officers in Mississippi who called themselves the “Goon Squad” have pleaded guilty to raiding a home on false drug charges and torturing two Black men while yelling racist slurs at them, and then trying to cover it up. We speak with Michael Corey Jenkins and Eddie Terrell Parker about how, on January 24, six deputies in Braxton, Mississippi, raided the home they were staying in and attacked them, and how they are speaking out to demand justice. Meanwhile, the deputies have been linked to at least four violent attacks on Black men since 2019, in which two of the men died. We also speak with civil rights attorney Malik Shabazz, who is representing Jenkins and Parker in a federal lawsuit against the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department. Shabazz asserts that the majority-white Rankin County, which is 20 miles away from majority-Black Jackson, Mississippi, is “infested with white supremacists” who “have decided 'Rankin County is for whites'” and seek to enforce it through state-sanctioned violence and torture, overseen and covered up by Rankin County Sheriff Bryan Bailey. “We demand that Bryan Bailey step down,” says Shabazz. Parker adds, “We want justice for everyone that has gone through this with Rankin County.”
·democracynow.org·
“Horrendous”: Black Men Tortured by White Mississippi Police “Goon Squad” React to Guilty Pleas
Indivisible : Daniel Webster and the birth of American nationalism - Joel Richard Paul
Indivisible : Daniel Webster and the birth of American nationalism - Joel Richard Paul
"In Indivisible, historian and law professor Joel Richard Paul tells how Daniel Webster, a young New Hampshire attorney turned politician, rose to national prominence through his powerful oratory and popularized the ideals of American nationalism that helped forge our nation's identity. In his speeches, Webster argued that the Constitution was not a compact made by states but an expression of the will of all Americans. As these ideas took root, they influenced future leaders, among them Abraham Lincoln, who drew on them to hold the nation together during the Civil War"--
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Indivisible : Daniel Webster and the birth of American nationalism - Joel Richard Paul
When Xenophobia Spreads Like A Virus : Code Switch
When Xenophobia Spreads Like A Virus : Code Switch
As international health agencies warn that COVID-19 could become a pandemic, fears over the new coronavirus' spread have activated old, racist suspicions toward Asians and Asian Americans. It's part of a longer history in the United States, in which xenophobia has often been camouflaged as a concern for public health and hygiene.
·npr.org·
When Xenophobia Spreads Like A Virus : Code Switch
Coronavirus (Covid-19), Race and Racism: U.S.A. Legal Documents (Searchable Database)
Coronavirus (Covid-19), Race and Racism: U.S.A. Legal Documents (Searchable Database)
Become a Patron! This searchable database includes 900+ law-related documents on the Coronavirus, Racism, and the law. It does not include news articles. It was updated with 57 additional documents on January 31, 2023. Documents were gathered through an electronic database search using the following search terms: (COVID-19 or coronavirus)...
·racism.org·
Coronavirus (Covid-19), Race and Racism: U.S.A. Legal Documents (Searchable Database)
Blunt instruments : recognizing racist cultural infrastructure in memorials, museums, and patriotic practices - Kristin Ann Hass
Blunt instruments : recognizing racist cultural infrastructure in memorials, museums, and patriotic practices - Kristin Ann Hass
"A field guide to the memorials, museums, and practices that commemorate white supremacy in the United States nd how to reimagine a more deeply shared cultural infrastructure for the future"--;Monuments, museums, and everyday patriotic practices have made headlines for most of the twenty-first century, yet they are seldom look at together or understood explicitly as tools used by particular people in particular times and places to shape the culture in particular ways. Hass explore the complicated histories of sites of cultural infrastructure: memorials in parks, museums visited by school kids, and routine practices of patriotism. She unearths legacies of white supremacy and traces movements to reevaluate and resist countless sites that have been doing this work, and asks that we look for sites that actually work to tell us who we are, how we came to be, and who belongs in the country. -- adapted from jacket
·arizona-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com·
Blunt instruments : recognizing racist cultural infrastructure in memorials, museums, and patriotic practices - Kristin Ann Hass
Rep. Bush Calls Trump a 'White Supremacist President' on House Floor - Aris Folley
Rep. Bush Calls Trump a 'White Supremacist President' on House Floor - Aris Folley
"Newly sworn-in Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) referred to President Trump as the 'white supremacist in chief' in her remarks on the House floor on Wednesday as the lower chamber prepares to impeach the president for a second time."
·thehill.com·
Rep. Bush Calls Trump a 'White Supremacist President' on House Floor - Aris Folley
New York State Bar Forms Task Force to Address Racism and Social Inequality - Eduardo Munoz
New York State Bar Forms Task Force to Address Racism and Social Inequality - Eduardo Munoz
"The New York State Bar Association is launching a task force focused on examining and addressing structural racism and other types of prejudice as part of its latest effort to resolve broader national social problems."
·tittlepress.com·
New York State Bar Forms Task Force to Address Racism and Social Inequality - Eduardo Munoz
Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Involving Racial Slur in Workplace - Melissa Quinn
Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Involving Racial Slur in Workplace - Melissa Quinn
"The Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a legal battle involving one of the most offensive words in the English language spurning a case raising whether its utterance in the workplace even one time creates a hostile work environment."
·cbsnews.com·
Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Involving Racial Slur in Workplace - Melissa Quinn
The House Votes To Remove Confederate Statues In The U.S. Capitol - Barbara Sprunt
The House Votes To Remove Confederate Statues In The U.S. Capitol - Barbara Sprunt
"The House of Representatives on Tuesday voted to remove all Confederate statues from public display in the U.S. Capitol along with replacing the bust of former Chief Justice of the United States Roger Taney author of the 1857 Dred Scott decision that declared that people of African descent were not U.S. citizens."
·npr.org·
The House Votes To Remove Confederate Statues In The U.S. Capitol - Barbara Sprunt
Suspect in Manhattan Attack on Asian Woman Charged With Assault as a Hate crime - Peter Szekely Gabriella Borter
Suspect in Manhattan Attack on Asian Woman Charged With Assault as a Hate crime - Peter Szekely Gabriella Borter
"A New York man previously convicted of murdering his mother has been arrested and charged with assaulting a 65-year-old Asian woman in a hate crime an attack captured on a video that went viral amid a rise in anti-Asian incidents in the United States."
·reuters.com·
Suspect in Manhattan Attack on Asian Woman Charged With Assault as a Hate crime - Peter Szekely Gabriella Borter
Henrietta Lacks' Family Hires Ben Crump for Legal Battle - Free Press/NPR
Henrietta Lacks' Family Hires Ben Crump for Legal Battle - Free Press/NPR
"The family of the late Henrietta Lacks who unwittingly spurred a research bonanza when her cancer cells were taken without her knowledge in 1951 has hired a prominent civil rights lawyer to seek compensation from pharmaceutical companies."
·richmondfreepress.com·
Henrietta Lacks' Family Hires Ben Crump for Legal Battle - Free Press/NPR
Major Law Firms and Advocacy Groups Unite to Combat Anti-Asian Violence - Lisa Boylan
Major Law Firms and Advocacy Groups Unite to Combat Anti-Asian Violence - Lisa Boylan
"A new alliance will connect victims of anti-Asian hate with pro bono legal services and work to prevent further acts of violence. The effort shows the importance of clear goals and strong networking in addressing social problems."
·associationsnow.com·
Major Law Firms and Advocacy Groups Unite to Combat Anti-Asian Violence - Lisa Boylan
Biden Proclaims Day of Remembrance on 100th Anniversary of Tulsa Race Massacre - Kate Sullivan
Biden Proclaims Day of Remembrance on 100th Anniversary of Tulsa Race Massacre - Kate Sullivan
"President Joe Biden on Monday issued a proclamation to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre when hundreds of Black Americans were killed by a White mob that attacked a prosperous Black neighborhood and burned dozens of city blocks to the ground."
·cnn.com·
Biden Proclaims Day of Remembrance on 100th Anniversary of Tulsa Race Massacre - Kate Sullivan
Exclusionary and classist: Why the legal profession is getting whiter - Hassan Kanu
Exclusionary and classist: Why the legal profession is getting whiter - Hassan Kanu
"A recent American Bar Association study found that the legal profession in America has remained overwhelmingly white and male over the last decade and that racial diversity among lawyers has actually regressed in some respects"
·reuters.com·
Exclusionary and classist: Why the legal profession is getting whiter - Hassan Kanu
Americans are Divided by Age and Race on the Fairness of the Justice System ABA Civics Survey Finds - Amanda Robert
Americans are Divided by Age and Race on the Fairness of the Justice System ABA Civics Survey Finds - Amanda Robert
"A new survey released by the ABA on Thursday found stark divisions based on age and race when it comes to believing that there are racial biases built into the rules procedures and practices of the justice system."
·abajournal.com·
Americans are Divided by Age and Race on the Fairness of the Justice System ABA Civics Survey Finds - Amanda Robert
ACLU-MN Appeals Case To MN Supreme Court To Let People Vote
ACLU-MN Appeals Case To MN Supreme Court To Let People Vote
"The city of Minneapolis and its police department are willfully subverting our state's Government Data Practices Act by withholding public data about disciplinary action taken against police for serious misconduct according to a new lawsuit filed by the ACLU of Minnesota in state court Thursday."
·aclu-mn.org·
ACLU-MN Appeals Case To MN Supreme Court To Let People Vote
Lawyer Forward: Owning History
Lawyer Forward: Owning History
In this episode, Mike talks about race, both in America generally and the legal system specifically. He uses the story of Italian internment in World War II to explore the idea of "otherness." Out of preferences and perceptions, as well as a history of identifying white culture with professionalism, the legal industry has created a context that's hostile to African Americans. Resolving that distance will only come after first owning our ugly history.   Episode Resources Connect with Mike Whelan    White Lawyering by Russell G Pearce:   Why the US Needs Black Lawyers:   Police killings can be captured in data. The terror police create cannot.   Thomas Schelling, Micromotives and Macrobehavior:  
·lawyerforwardatl.libsyn.com·
Lawyer Forward: Owning History
Lawyer Forward: The Cost of Representation
Lawyer Forward: The Cost of Representation
Why would Clarence Darrow—a lawyer famous for representing the little guy—take a case that meant defending a wealthy, racist murderer? What did he risk? In this episode, Mike talks about racism, power, and moral flexibility in lawyering. There is a cost to losing the values that drove us to law, and Clarence Darrow paid it. Episode Resources Connect with Mike Whelan:    The Lawyer Forward Facebook group:   The Island Murder (a PBS documentary about the Thalia Massie Affair):   Honor Killing: Race, Rape, and Clarence Darrow's Spectacular Last Case:  
·lawyerforwardatl.libsyn.com·
Lawyer Forward: The Cost of Representation