Press Room
Have a question? Need a quote? Contact ARC to get in touch with experts on education, health disparities, immigration, civil rights and a range of other issues. CONTACT: Rebekah Spicuglia Communications Manager media@arc.org (646) 490-2772 About ARC The Applied Research Center (ARC) is a racial justice think tank using media, research, and activism to promote solutions. ARC's mission is to popularize racial justice and prepare people to fight for it, with a goal to change the way society talks about and understands racial inequity. ARC is the publisher of Colorlines.com, a daily news site offering award-winning reporting, analysis, and solutions to today’s racial justice issues. Colorlines.com is produced by a multiracial team of writers whose daily reporting and analysis serves as a leading voice on a broad range of issues including politics, immigration reform, the economy and jobs. Colorlines.com offers readers the opportunity to take action on these issues through its Action channel. ARC is led by President and Executive Director Rinku Sen. A leading figure in the racial justice movement for the last twenty years, Rinku has positioned ARC as the national home for media, research and activism. She has extensive practical experience on the ground, with expertise in race, feminism, immigration, economic justice, philanthropy and community organizing. Over the course of her career, Rinku has woven together journalism and organizing to further social change. Click here for latest press releases, advisories and statements from ARC.
Click here for our latest in-depth analysis of public policy issues from our research and policy programs.
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Press Releases
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April 28th at 1:00 pm PST/4:00 pm EST briefing and Q&A for journalists See ARC's full coverage of Barack Obama's first 100 Days at www.arc.org/100days. April 27, 2009: The Applied Research Center (ARC) is releasing their report on President Barack Obama’s first 100 days in office, examining both highs and lows of policy decisions on the economy, health care, immigration, and civil rights, all through the lens of racial justice. |
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Press Releases
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Low Income and Minority Children Disproportionately Affected Download the report and learn more at www.arc.org/childcare. 04.22.2009 – New York: A national study released today by the Applied Research Center (ARC) shows the effects of unlicensed care on the quality and safety of childcare for low-income families. |
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In the News
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Rinku Sen Named Prime Movement Leader in 2009 by the Hunt Alternatives Fund |
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Op-Eds
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Last week, the New York Times reported that President Obama intends to push immigration reform, welcome news to the millions of undocumented people who need legalization in that package. Cecilia Muñoz, the Adminstration's Director of Inter Governmental Affairs, is managing this project for the White House. Muñoz was known as a dogged advocate while she was VP of Policy at the National Council of La Raza, and her experience of the five-year immigration debate that ended with no change in 2007 is some of the most moving stuff in my book, The Accidental American.
Read the rest of this article at the Huffington Post. |
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In the News
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Racism Stinks Up New York Restaurants. |
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Op-Eds
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 On Tuesday, I spoke at the release of The Great Service Divide, a revealing new study of racial discrimination segregation in New York City's restaurant industry. The Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York (ROC-NY), which I wrote about in The Accidental American, sent matched pairs of applicants -- one white, one of color and virtually the same in every other way -- to apply for front of the house jobs in 327 high-end restaurants.
The predictable results are still shocking. The people of color were half as likely to get offers, and less likely to get interviewed in the first place. The interviews of white applicants were more work focused and less skeptical about the truth of their resumés. The vast majority of managers were white males. Hence, we see the path to the racial hierarchy of restaurants, obvious to all who choose to look.
Read the rest of the article at the Huffington Post. |
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In the News
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ARC Executive Director, Rinku Sen, is quoted in both the Washington Post and on NPR. |
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Op-Eds
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 Attorney General Eric Holder's speech to Justice Department employees urging the country to suck it up and have those hard conversations about race generated the predictable accusations from the pundit crowd, both conservative and liberal. Why is he still trying to make white people feel guilty?! We just elected his boss! The media reaction largely proves Holder's point. Rather than actually talking about the causes and consequences of our racial divide, the story has been that this speech has created the latest "controversy" for the Obama administration, starting with the AP article highlighting the "nation of cowards" quote. Apparently, there's only room for one black man at the highest levels of government taking the nation to task on race, and that man can do it once a year at most. Read the rest of the article at the Huffington Post. |
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Op-Eds
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 Earlier this week the New York Times reported that even as many states have skyrocketing unemployment, their welfare rolls are shrinking. As a researcher for a racial justice think tank, I've been traveling the country collecting accounts of how this recession is playing out in the lives of every day people. Millions who are out of work, losing homes and struggling to stay afloat are nevertheless denied access to Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). The punitive rules established after twenty years of racially coded frenzy to "end welfare as we know it" have left Americans with no safety net during this deepening economic crisis. Read the full article at the Huffington Post. |
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Op-Eds
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Sometimes you just know when you gotta be present somewhere. Celebrating in Chicago’s Grant Park on the night of President Barack Obama’s election was definitely one of those times.
That afternoon, I met with a group of community organizers fighting to preserve low-income housing for African Americans in a neighborhood adjacent to Obama’s. Driving home, I tried imagining an African American with community organizing experience—an occupation we had in common—as president. I felt a sense of connection and hope.
Read the rest of this article at the Chicago Reporter. |
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Op-Eds
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 Two weeks ago, like many of you, I celebrated the election of the first person of color as President of the United States. Today, the possibilities seem endless.
People are questioning the wisdom of the free market. Americans are demanding a government that is transparent and accountable. They're responding to the message that real change starts and ends with all of us. We have the opportunity now to put forward our biggest ideas and move all of our institutions.
But there are huge challenges as well. Read the rest of the article at the International Business Times. |
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