Feature Stories: Articles on Racial Profiling, Immigration Today

Current news, events, research, and reporting, covering the full range of racial issues, racism, discrimination, race relations in the contemporary society.
June 29th, 2013
Written by Julie Pace - AP White House Correspondent in Feature Stories with 0 Comments
Barack and Michelle Obama waving from the door of Air Force One
JOHANNESBURG (AP) - Inspired by Nelson Mandela's struggles in South Africa, a young Barack Obama joined campus protests in the U.S. against the racist rule that kept Mandela locked away in prison for nearly three decades. Now a historic, barrier-breaking figure himself, President Obama arrived in South Africa Friday to find a country drastically transformed by Mandela's influence - and grappling...
June 28th, 2013
Written by Suzanne Gamboa - Associated Press in Feature Stories with 0 Comments
Civl Rights 1
WASHINGTON (AP) - Take a glance at the anniversary calendar this year and it's clear that in America, racial progress comes in fits and starts. The Emancipation Proclamation declared the freedom of slaves 150 years ago. Within a decade, a trio of amendments to the Constitution made them citizens. Over the next century, the Supreme Court and Jim Crow segregation in the South snatched those rights...
June 26th, 2013
Written by D. A. Barber in Feature Stories with 0 Comments
Obama
President Obama left Wednesday, June 26, on a three-country tour of Africa, first stopping in Senegal before traveling to South Africa where there is a chance that the first black American President will meet South Africa’s first black president, Nelson Mandela. Today marks two-weeks in the hospital for the 94-year-old Mandela for a recurrent lung infection. On June 25, Mandela’s family held a...
June 25th, 2013
Written by D. A. Barber in Feature Stories with 0 Comments
dome of the US Capitol building
"The fight against hunger must have no color, no religion, no political affiliation,” said Director-General José Graziano da Silva of the UN's Food and Agricultural Organization onthe same daythe House rejected a farm bill that would cut $2 billion annually from food stamps because the cuts weren't large enough for many Republicans. Graziano da Silva, speaking on June 20, during the of FAO's 38th...
June 25th, 2013
Written by Carolyn Thompson - Associated Press in Feature Stories with 0 Comments
African-American students
Racism in education is a long-standing issue in America, but many believe that charter schools benefit black and Hispanic English language learners as well as students from poor families and other ethnic groups, more so than their peers from traditional public schools, a new study shows. Overall, charter school students are faring better than they were four years ago, surpassing those in...

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