As the 2024 election cycle nears the end, the Democratic Party finds itself at a crucial crossroads in reaching Black men who often feel overlooked. With Kamala Harris as the first Black woman presidential nominee, the campaign has emphasized key issues like inflation, abortion rights, diversity, and the middle class. However, in recent weeks, Kamala Harris has ramped up efforts to reach out to Black men who feel marginalized and excluded from the political conversation. While the 2024 election is still up for grabs, Harris and the Democratic Party will have to look beyond this election to ensure consistency engagement with Black men that feel left out.
Read MoreThanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last June in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, the country’s 12th graders now applying to selective colleges face unprecedented angst—especially if they’re black.
You face an admissions process where your understanding of race and racism has been rejected, forbidden as a factor in considering you, on no less than constitutional grounds. Forget “affirmative action” that might deliberately correct for the persistent effects of longstanding racial exclusion from majority-white institutions. Forget societal discrimination—the Court already decided there is none that matters. Now, educational “diversity” is a barely lawful interest for schools to consider. Your race and all that comes with it is in unconstitutional territory.
Except on your personal essay.
Read MoreWhat's the feeling behind the structures that promote gentrification? This essay explores the background and personal impact of gentrification dynamics in New York, Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles to show how place-based inequality affects personhood.
Read MoreA new type of person has emerged across the nation: “diverse” humans. If you haven’t seen many of us — I am one — in your institution, workplace or school, that’s because the effort to include “diverse” students, engineers, actors, executives or other candidates is still trying to gain traction.
Read More"Economic growth for a lot of cities is not that difficult to do... Equitable growth is very difficult to do." David D. Troutt, founding director of the Rutgers Law School Center on Law in Metropolitan Equity, on Newark, NJ's Commission to Fight Gentrification. Listen to the podcast here.
Read MoreDon't miss CLiME Director David Troutt's keynote address during tomorrow's Equity Leadership Symposium: Aligning Restorative Practices and Restorative Justice!
Read MoreMayor Ras J. Baraka, Manager of the Office of Affordable Housing Al-Tariq Shabazz, President & CEO of the Newark Alliance Aisha Glover, and Founding Director of the Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) David D. Troutt, will hold a press conference to announce the creation of the Equitable Growth Advisory Commission on Thursday, December 6, at 11:15 a.m., in the City Hall Press Room, located on 920 Broad Street. The Municipal Council approved this initiative at its regular meeting today.
Read More"Displacement through gentrification comes about because cities make deliberate tax policy decisions that favor certain elements over others," said David Troutt, one of the authors of the report and director of Rutger's Center for Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity. "A city like Newark has to exercise that same authority to protect (residents)," he added. "This is an obligation to make sure as it plans for growth, it also plans for affordability. Otherwise people disappear.”
Read MoreWhen it comes to misogyny and white supremacy, we’ve held the wrong audience accountable. For years, Harvey Weinstein’s and Donald Trump’s private audiences could be divided into two types of (often) men: his vocal supporters and his silent endorsers. The outspoken supporters — whether casual misogynists or white supremacists — are henchmen who helped take down women’s careers or allies in Congress who are themselves proponents of a white nationalist agenda. Most critics of both Weinstein and Trump consider this “base” group the real problem.
Read MoreA new report by the Economic Policy Institute confirms that there has been a structural change in low wage employment toward part-time work. This is apart from cyclical changes brought about by normal business cycles or even the Great Recession. The number of involuntary part-time workers shot up from 4.5 to 9 million during the Great Recession. Although the current levels are 6 million–an improvement from the 9 million during the Great Recession–we have not returned to pre-recession levels. The report states that employers are using part-time work as a cost …
Read MoreThis year was one of decisive forward momentum for CLiME. We advanced our interdisciplinary framework for public scholarship on issues of metropolitan equity through the following programmatic highlights: The Trauma, Schools and Poverty Project (TSP); Equitable Growth—Newark; Fellowship; Scholarship; Staffing; and Communications.
Read MoreOn May 5th, CLiME hosted a national conference on Trauma, Schools and Poverty. The Rutgers Center on Law, Inequality and Metropolitan Equity (CLiME) is committed to studying the role of law and policy in encouraging or inhibiting opportunity based on place. This conference is an outgrowth of the Trauma, Schools and Poverty Project.
Read MoreWelcome to the Place, Race, and Equity Legislative Watch, which tracks proposed federal legislation by Congress that impact the fight to eliminate place-based inequality. Between January 3 and May 26th, members of Congress have proposed 5,149 bills and resolutions. Of these, 40 are on the topic of Housing and Community Development. In that time, 16 bills have become law. Note: Senator Lindsey Graham has stated, “For all practical purposes the political process will be ground to a halt by these allegations,” in reference to the ongoing allegations against President …
Read MoreCities may sue banks for injuries to their tax base caused by unlawful conduct against homeowners, according to the Supreme Court in a May 1st decision that was closely watched by fair housing advocates. An unusual split among the justices produced the 5-4 opinion in Bank of America v. City of Miami. The federal Fair Housing Act (FHA) ruling demonstrates that the aggregation of direct harms can produce broader consequences that may be actionable by indirect victims.
Read MoreJeena Shah is a Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Law in Rutgers Law School’s Constitutional Rights and International Human Rights Clinics. She recently spoke with CLiME staff member Tara Marlowe to discuss her approach to community lawyering.
Read MoreOn May 5, 2017 CLiME hosted an interdisciplinary conference around systemic response to psychological trauma in youth. Dr. Alexandra Margevich has written an outstanding summary of the conference, which can be downloaded here. Recent CLIME publications on the topic of trauma and law include two new legal memos, one on emotional disturbance classification and the other on international perspectives on child trauma, a critical literature review and an article by CLiME Director Professor David Dante Troutt.
Read MoreAt the invitation of the Rose Center for Public Leadership in Land Use, a joint partnership between the Urban Land Institute and the National League of Cities, CLiME Senior Fellow Cristina Garmendia served as a member of a panel of experts to the City of Grand Rapids, Michigan. The Mayor of Grand Rapids, The Honorable Rosalynn Bliss, along with three members of her staff, challenged the panel to help the City of Grand Rapids find ways to align its community and economic development policies, practices, and incentives to achieve a more equitable city.
Read MoreNew Jersey Policy Perspective released a new report March 10th, outlining their recommendations to improve the economic prospects for all New Jersey residents. The report includes policies to address poverty, tax reform, health care, and improvements to safety net programs. The report was released at a conference last Friday, which featured speeches and breakout sessions by some of the leading policy experts in the state. There was a tremendous keynote speech by Heather McGhee of Demos and talks from several gubernatorial candidates.
Read MoreOn Feb 9, the Urban Institute hosted a panel highlighting the interdependence of household financial security and city budgets. Researchers have found that even a small amount of savings dramatically reduces the likelihood of costly remedial support services and can improve income for local governments. The panelists point out that cities and mayors, with their convening power, are “uniquely positioned” to interrupt the cycle of poverty.
Read MoreA new article by Salon makes an outstanding counterpoint to the growing narrative of 'the forgotten Americans' as the white working class voters from the US Midwest. Most poignantly, writer Leonard Steinhorn points out that "in the four presidential elections since 2004, candidates held 46 percent of their general-election visits in just five Rust Belt states — Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa — whereas they held none in Alabama and a grand total of one in Mississippi, and that was a predominantly white rally Trump held in Jackson, miles away from the largely black Delta."
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