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News from 2014

Rage Against the Common Core

Starting in the mid­1990s, education advocates began making a simple argument: National education standards will level the playing field, assuring that all high school graduates are prepared for first-­year college classes or rigorous career training. While there are reasons to doubt that claim — it’s hard to see how Utah, which spends less than one-­third as much per student as New York, can offer a comparable education — the movement took off…

Protest is Democracy at Work

Recent media depictions of the protests in Ferguson, New York City, and around the country have given in to old-fashioned fear mongering. On Fox News and CNN, protesters are depicted as irrational, and the protests as disordered and dysfunctional, a challenge to both our democratic functioning and our better natures. Thomas Sowell, writing for the National Review, lamented “The Steep Cost of the Ferguson Riots” and described the protests as an “orgy of anarchy.”…

Banning, yet institutionalizing, racial profiling

Whenever I tell people that I study racial profiling, they exclaim how timely the work is.  It is in fact not so much timely as timeless. It seems like there is always a story involving Black suspects and excessive policing.  When the specifics are shocking, as in the Garner case, and they gain media attention, the public awakens.  But young, Black men are subjected to extra policing on a daily basis.  The cases we hear about…

Senate Confirms Nani Coloretti (MPP ‘94) as HUD’s Deputy Secretary

WASHINGTON - The United States Senate today confirmed President Obama's nomination of Nani Coloretti [MPP '94] to serve as Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). As the second most senior official at HUD, Coloretti will manage the Department's day-to-day operations, including a $45 billion annual budget and approximately 8,500 employees. "Nani is a proven executive who has excelled at making government more efficient at the municipal and federal levels," said HUD Secretary Juliá…

Hilary W. Hoynes Recipient of the 2014 Carolyn Shaw Bell Award

HILARY W. HOYNES, Professor of Economics and Public Policy and Haas Distinguished Chair in Economic Disparities in the Richard & Rhoda Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, is the recipient of the 2014 Carolyn Shaw Bell Award. Given annually since 1998 by the American Economic Association’s (AEA) Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession (CSWEP), the Bell Award recognizes and honors an individual who has furthered the status…

Biased policing is real - and fixable

It is a time of protests: Occupy, student fees, police killings. Are they all connected? Yes and no. They share the theme that disenfranchisement of frustrated populations with little political power has reached a tipping point. The protest movements may inspire each other but, if we lump them together, we may fail to learn the lesson of this moment and move forward. The continued protests in cities around the country, including Oakland and Berkeley, over police killings of unarmed black…

President Napolitano Joins GSPP Faculty

I am very pleased to announce that University of California President Janet Napolitano has been appointed a faculty member at UC Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy.   One of the hallmarks of top-ranked public policy schools is that they not only have world-class academic scholars who develop the scientific basis for new public policies, but they also have faculty members who have made major impacts on public policy through their innovative work.  These leaders …

Suspect Race: Causes and Consequences of Racial Profiling

Jack Glaser Profile Picture

Suspect Race: Causes and Consequences of Racial Profiling (Oxford University Press, 2014) is the culmination of Professor Jack Glaser’s research on racial profiling, stereotyping and implicit bias, particularly as it pertains to law enforcement. What is implicit bias and what does it have to do with racial profiling? Implicit biases are the stereotypes and prejudices that reside and operate in our minds outside of conscious awareness. One commonly held stereotype associates minorities, particularly Blacks, with crime. Many people explicitly…

100 Women in Congress - And Still No Adequate Voice

“It’s the year of women!” “Women’s votes will decide this election.” Such declarations are fairly common in the lead-up to election day, but say little about the actual representation of women in the House and the Senate. The female voting bloc might be becoming more powerful, but that doesn’t mean women get more of a say in our country’s decision-making processes. The Nov. 4 midterm election marked the first…

Who Pays More? Who Pays Less?

On Wednesday and Thursday of this week  the Regents [of the University of California] are scheduled to have a critical vote on President Janet Napolitano's proposed five year budget plan which includes, in the absence of significant increases in state funding, 5% annual increases in tuition. Not surprisingly, this proposal has already received extraordinarily strong responses from the media, Sacramento, students and the general public. Much of the response has, in my view, been…