 Videos A picture is worth a thousand words...
Our multimedia team is busy translating ARC's research and policy work into a growing library of interactive video projects. Watch, learn and contact us if you'd like to know more about ARC multimedia or to collaborate with us on a project.
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Racial Profiling: It's Time to Face the Truth |
February 23, 2010
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www.nightof1000conversations.org Racial profiling is unjust, humiliating and degrading. Racial profiling in law enforcement is unconstitutional and it doesnt work. In July 2009, Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. was arrested for breaking into his own home. That August, Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Khan was questioned and detained for nearly two hours at Newark Airport because of his Muslim name. If racial profiling can happen to professors and superstars, it can happen to anyone. Racial profiling, even in the name of national security, has never been shown to make us safer. In 1995, the nation was shaken by the horrorific Oklahoma City bombing. Timothy mcveigh evaded law enforcement officers while they searched for Arabs. After 9-11, while airport security focused on people of Middle Eastern descent after 9-11, a white college student smuggled knives, box cutters, bleach and more onto at least six planes. It took the TSA more than a month to find the hidden items. And today, as immigration enforcement is left more and more to state and local police, theres every sign that the use of racial profiling is a growing problem. Racial profiling not violates our constitutional and human rights, it distracts law enforcement from real suspects, which puts all of us at risk. Its time to face the facts and have an open dialog in the community. |
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ColorLines' Seth Wessler talks foodstamps on Democracy Now!, 02/19/2010 |
February 19, 2010
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Read Seth's article, "Selling Foodstamps to Buy Kids' Shoes," and more, at colorlines.com full video and transcript at www.democracynow.org Seth Wessler, staff writer at colorlines Magazine and researcher at the Applied Research Center, appears on Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez. Wessler discusses his article "Selling Foodstamps to Buy Kids' Shoes," and talks about the compounding effects of the great recession on our racially stigmatized welfare system. Seth is joined on the phone by Luz Santana, director of the Hartford welfare advocacy group Vecinos Unidos. |
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"ColorLines: Race and Economic Recovery" Full Episode ARC + LINKTV Special |
February 11, 2010
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More information at colorlines.com President Obama says the stimulus saved or created 2 million jobs in 2009. But is the recovery really working? The American dream of good jobs and strong communities is still just a dream for too many. The unfair economy hurts certain groups more, and that ends up hurting everyone. From the bottom line to the unemployment line to the color line, watch a new in-depth program from Link TV and Applied Research Center for a closer look. colorlines: Race and Economic Recovery follows communities making ends meet in The Great Recession. The program narrates the moving story of Tisha, mother of three in Connecticut, facing a social safety net shredded further by the crisis. Then the program goes to Los Angeles where community-based organization SCOPE has mobilized to win green jobs for communities of color. This half-hour magazine-style show is hosted by Chris Rabb, founder of Afro-Netizen and author of forthcoming book Invisible Capital: How Unseen Forces Shape Entrepreneurial Opportunity. The in-studio guest is Tram Nguyen, journalist who has written extensively on racial justice issues and author of We Are All Suspects Now: Untold Stories from Immigrant America After 9/11. Tram is former editor of colorlines magazine and now works at the California Reinvestment Coalition. A co-production of the Applied Research Center and linktv. Originally aired on linktv on February 12, 2010; posted with rights. |
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Watch "ColorLines: Race and Economic Recovery," Only on LinkTV |
February 03, 2010
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President Obama says the stimulus saved or created 2 million jobs in 2009. But is the recovery really working? The American dream of good jobs and strong communities is still just a dream for too many. The unfair economy hurts certain groups more, and that ends up hurting everyone. From the bottom line to the unemployment line to the color line, watch a new in-depth program from Link TV and Applied Research Center for a closer look: colorlines: Race and Economic Recovery. Tune in to Link TV Friday, February 12, for colorlines: Race and Economic Recovery on DIRECTV Channel 375 or DISH Network Channel 9410 at 6:30 Pacific, 7:30pm Central and 8:30 pm Eastern. Then join us on Twitter @racialjustice, as we host a roundtable discussion on what weve seen. colorlines: Race and Economic Recovery follows communities making ends meet in The Great Recession. The program narrates the moving story of Tisha, mother of three in Connecticut, facing a social safety net shredded further by the crisis. Then the program goes to Los Angeles where community-based organization SCOPE has mobilized to win green jobs for communities of color. |
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State of Whose Union?: Obama and Race at One Year |
January 28, 2010
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"I never suggested that change would be easy, or that I can do it alone. " President Barack Obama almost gave us a call to action tonight. Commentators Chris Rabb and Lola Adesioye sat down with arcs Tammy Johnson following the presidents State of the Union. Chris is founder of Afro-Netizen and author of the forthcoming Invisible Capital: How Unseen Forces Shape Entrepreneurial Opportunity. Lola is a writer-activist and formerly an editor at The Grio. as posted to racewire.org |
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Will Race Matter in the New Decade? Bank On It, with ARC and ColorLines. |
December 15, 2009
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arc.org One of arcs most entertaining and popular programs this year was our series of WORD videos. Many of you forwarded, posted, and played them often, unveiling racially coded language to thousands of viewers. Now, Tammy Johnson, our resident vlogger, asks for your support so that we can continue to produce creative and fun tools to educate others. We hope you'll watch the video and be moved to give as generously as you can. Ideological battles in this country used to be fought in town ... |
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Green Equity Toolkit: Advancing Race, Gender and Economic Equity in the Green Economy |
November 10, 2009
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The green economy is here. There are green jobs to be done and stimulus money to pay for them. Let's make sure these jobs employ people and benefit communities fairly. Women and people of color need access to quality jobs and pathways to real careers. Your organizations and coalitions can use the Green Equity Toolkit to make local government put fairness and equity into their green project spending. Don't let the green wave pass over your community. Download and start using the toolkit today.... |
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Rinku Sen: Help Us Fight for Fairness with the Green Equity Toolkit |
November 10, 2009
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The green economy is here. There are green jobs to be done and stimulus money to pay for them. You can help the Applied Research Center make sure these jobs employ people and benefit communities fairly, by enabling us to get the Green Equity Toolkit into the hands of the community leaders who'll shape the green economy over the next fifty years. arc.org |
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Register Today for the 2009 Opportunity to Learn Education Summit |
October 26, 2009
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Join the movement to close the opportunity gap. Check out bit.ly to register for the 2009 Opportunity to Learn Education Summit, November 5-7, 2009, in Washington DC. |
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October 22, 2009
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From New York to Jamaica, families struggle to stay together. Harsh immigration policy, compounded by systemic inequities built into the criminal justice system, might not be thwarting terrorists or making our country a whole lot safer. But the laws are doing a great job of breaking up another entity: families of color. This story is part of "Torn Apart by Deportation," a series investigating the impacts of deportation on families of color. colorlines.com/tornapart |
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Facing the Kool-Aid Recovery with Columbia U. Prof. Dorian Warren |
October 15, 2009
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The AP reports that "more than 80 percent of economists believe the recession is over." But they don't face up to the much higher unemployment and poverty in communities of color across the US. "The last full employment program was slavery and sharecropping," says Dorian Warren, Columbia University professor of Political Science. You can believe recovery has come to people of color, he goes on, "only if you drink the same Kool-aid of the same economists that brought us the recession in the ... |
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