By Chester Hartman, PRRAC Hard to believe that it happened, but it did. Around midnight on Feb. 5, 1952, a cross was burned in front of Stoughton Hall, where the 11 black members of the Harvard Class of 1955 lived. The incident was perpetrated by two freshmen, whose names the Harvard administration kept secret, and whose punishment was very light: probation, nothing further … [Read more...] about Cross Burning in Harvard Yard? (Harvard Crimson)
PRRAC in the News
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The RAD-ical Shifts to Public Housing (American Prospect)
By Rachel M. Cohen, American Prospect It could be more cost-effective to just appropriate more direct funds to the program and keep it in the public sector, but Congress is not about to do so. … [Read more...] about The RAD-ical Shifts to Public Housing (American Prospect)
Julian Castro Should Visit Baltimore on the Way to His New HUD Secretary Desk (Next City)
By Rachel M. Cohen, Next City It’s not just about housing,” said Michelle Green. “They try to help low-income people branch out and do their best.” Green, who had moved to Columbia, Maryland from one of Baltimore’s most crime-ridden public housing projects in order to enroll her four sons in better public schools, was talking about Baltimore’s Housing Mobility Program. … [Read more...] about Julian Castro Should Visit Baltimore on the Way to His New HUD Secretary Desk (Next City)
Housing Segregation is Holding Back the Promise of Brown v. Board of Education (Washington Post)
By Emily Badger, Washington Post Since the Supreme Court ordered the desegregation of American schools 60 years ago this week, the legacy of Brown v. Board of Education has yielded parallel progress and disappointment. Black student achievement has increased, but the minority achievement gap has persisted. Resources spent on black and white children have narrowed … [Read more...] about Housing Segregation is Holding Back the Promise of Brown v. Board of Education (Washington Post)
In Pursuit of a “Both/And” Housing Policy–The Case of Housing Choice Vouchers (Shelterforce)
By Philip Tegeler, PRRAC Readers of Shelterforce are accustomed to seeing commentary about the perceived tension between community development and housing mobility. Almost everyone agrees at this point that there is a place for both strategies in a balanced, “both/and” low-income housing policy. There is some disagreement about how much “balance” the various players in the … [Read more...] about In Pursuit of a “Both/And” Housing Policy–The Case of Housing Choice Vouchers (Shelterforce)