Racial and Gender Justice
“We’re in This Together” An interview with Danny Glover
2008 marks the 40th anniversary of the struggle to institute Ethnic Studies at San Francisco State. What do you see as some of the similarities between your work then and your current efforts to get African American history represented in films?
Danny Glover: I was a student and an activist in the Black Student Union (BSU) at San Francisco State in the mid-60’s. We were doing a lot of outreach into the community—tutorial programs with students who were not doing well in public schools, and trying very hard to make what we were learning in college relevant to the issues and problems confronting our communities. We were also engaged in protests on campus and raising issues around race and racism and the need for greater inclusion on campus.
Resources for Race and Regionalism
Bay Area Regional Health Inequities Initiatives
180 Grand Avenue, #750
Oakland, CA 94612
(510) 302-3367
www.barhii.org
Brookings Institute
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
(202) 797-6000
www.brookings.edu
Bus Riders Union
Labor/Community Strategic Center
3780 Wilshire Boulevard, #1200
Los Angeles, CA 90010
(213) 387-2800
www.busridersunion.org
On Race and Regionalism

Bruce Katz: We’re really talking about alignment in our work. Take “Fix It First” [a strategy in the Detroit region to invest in existing transportation infrastructure in the city and inner-ring suburbs before building new roads in the suburbs]. We’re making three arguments in favor of the program: efficiency, fiscal responsibility, and equity. All of those come together in a politician’s mind. We’re not promoting just competitiveness, but inclusive growth also.
john powell: In Cleveland, African-American leadership has pushed back against regionalism, saying it has been driven by the white suburbs. They want a kind of regionalism where the interests of African-Americans are up front, and they are pushing us to better say where regionalism has actually benefited marginalized people, and where it hasn’t.
Rooted in Slavery: Prison Labor Exploitation
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