Transgender Law Makes North Carolina Pioneer in Bigotry

By | March 25th, 2016|LGBTQ+|

Officials in Charlotte, N.C., spent more than a year carefully considering and debating an antidiscrimination ordinance that was passed in February to promote the city’s culture of inclusiveness. State lawmakers quashed it on Wednesday by passing an appalling, unconstitutional bill that bars transgender people from using public restrooms that match their gender

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What penal reform advocate Baz Dreisinger learned in two years visiting prisons around the world

By | March 23rd, 2016|Police & Community|

Some people travel the world to surf, to hike, to visit art museums or dine at Michelin-starred restaurants. Baz Dreisinger goes to prisons.

Dreisinger, an associate professor of English at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, spent two years on a pilgrimage to prisons in nine countries investigating a range of approaches

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Charter Schools Suspend Black and Disabled Students More, Study Says

By | March 17th, 2016|Disability, Education, Intergroup Relations|

Black students are four times as likely to be suspended from charter schoolsas white students, according to a new analysis of federal education data. And students with disabilities, the study found, are suspended two to three times the rate of nondisabled students in charter schools.

 

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Police Commission approves changes emphasizing de-escalation before deadly force by LAPD

By | March 16th, 2016|Police & Community|

In a significant new reform plan, Los Angeles police officials are launching an effort to reduce officers’ use of deadly force by reviewing whether they could have done more to avoid the violent encounters.

Read more in the Los Angeles Times.

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Lawsuit says L.A. endangered homeless people by seizing their tents and shopping carts

By | March 15th, 2016|Employment & Housing, Police & Community|

A federal civil rights lawsuit filed Monday accused the city of Los Angeles of endangering homeless people by seizing and destroying their tents and bedding and then releasing them from jail into the cold without protection.

 

Read more in the Los Angeles Times.

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Advocacy Groups Demand NCAA Part Ways with Title IX Exempt Schools

By | March 14th, 2016|Education, Intergroup Relations|

A coalition of more than 80 advocacy groups, including Campus Pride and SoulForce, are demanding that the NCAA divest from all religious institutions who have requested a Title IX exemption pertaining to religious rights. The exemption allows schools to waive portions of Title IX that might apply to students, faculty and staff who are transgender

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The next battleground for LGBT rights

By | March 7th, 2016|Intergroup Relations, LGBTQ+|

The last great LGBT rights battle was fought over marriage. The next one might be over bathrooms, whether activists like it or not.

Across the country, LGBT advocates and conservatives are battling over transgender nondiscrimination laws that have again and again turned into single-issue showdowns over access to bathrooms and locker rooms.

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