PRRAC:THE SEVENTH YEAR
Note: Please contact us if you would like a print copy or a copy of the
audited financial statements.
BACKGROUND
The Poverty & Race Research Action Council (PRRAC) is a national nonprofit
organization founded by major civil rights, civil liberties and anti-poverty
groups to address problems at the intersection of race and poverty. It effectively
began operation in 1991.
The impetus to establish PRRAC was the need for advocates and social science
researchers to work together more closely in order to combat the continuing
twin scourges of poverty and racism in the United States. The overlapping crises
of homelessness, poor educational performance, persistent unemployment and underemployment,
declines in real wages and income supports, rising infant mortality and drug-related
crime in poor communities have prompted national as well as local civil rights
and civil liberties groups to reassess their own priorities. Traditional anti-poverty
and legal services advocates have likewise begun to search for new allies, to
update their strategies and to fashion new organizing strategies and legal theories
that might meet the increasingly complex problems confronting the poor and racial
minorities.
Most advocates have concluded that, to be effective, they must, more than ever
before, pursue joint or cooperative strategies. Equally important, they have
recognized that they must develop a deeper understanding of labor market
economics, social psychology and rapid demographic changes in minority and poverty
communities. Advocates need an infusion of the best information and social theory
from social scientists. They also need a means to direct the research energies
of social scientists towards questions of importance to their own clients.
PRRAC has two objectives. The first is to function as a forum for community-based
activists, policy advocates, civil rights and anti-poverty attorneys and social
science researchers who are working on behalf of the poor and racial minorities.
The second is to commission and fund social science research that may advance
community-based activism, policy initiatives and litigation on behalf of these
same persons. Through a range of networking functions and research funding,
PRRAC hopes to fashion, disseminate and replicate new strategies to address
the problem of persistent poverty and racism in the United States.
NETWORKING ACTIVITIES
PRRAC seeks to organize and create useful communication and coordination among
and between social science researchers and activists working at the intersection
of race and poverty.
The long-range goal is to increase the quantity, quality and relevance of such
research, and to improve the effectiveness of advocacy work via reliance on
such research. We do thisin a variety of ways:
- We organize local meetings of the research and advocacy communities.
Ten such gatherings have been held to date: Detroit, Seattle/Portland, San Francisco,
Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, Chapel Hill, Washington DC, Atlanta and Philadelphia.
Some 40 to 60 persons attended each, and the sessions have been deemed highly
productive, in terms of the contacts made there, information exchanged, subsequent
contacts reported and research proposals submitted as a result of the session.
With funding from The Kellogg Foundation, projects were undertaken in the first
four cities where these meetings were organized (Boston, Chicago, San Francisco,
Los Angeles) to create systems for linking community groups to academic resources.
A technologically sophisticated but user-friendly model system was created for
Los Angeles, which is easily adaptable to other locales. Additional meetings
are planned for other cities.
- A bi-monthly newsletter journal, Poverty & Race, was inaugurated
in March 1992, originally free, but in mid-1996 converted to a subscription
publication. Format for each usually 20-28 page issue includes a major article
and/or symposium, reports from grantees on research and follow-up advocacy
work, PRRAC news, and an extensive (usually 100-150 item) Resources Section,
listing publications, information requests, conferences, jobs and other information
useful to the PRRAC Network of readers, consisting of race-and-poverty activists,
researchers, funders and persons from the media.
- The leading articles and
symposia from Poverty & Race were published in paperback and hardback
form by M.E. Sharpe in 1997 as Double Exposure: Poverty & Race in America,
a 258-page collection, with Introductions by Bill Bradley and Julian Bond.
The 61 articles (plus five instructional quizzes) are grouped under seven
topics: Is Racism Permanent?; The Use and Utility of Racial & Ethnic Categories;
Immigration; The "Underclass" Debate; Multiculturalism; Affirmative
Action & Reparations for Slavery; Democracy/Equality. Contributors include
john powell, Howard Winant, S.M. Miller, Paul Ong, Bernardine Dohrn, Benjamin
DeMott, Juanita Tamayo Lott, Samuel Myers, Jr., Raul Yzaguirre, Nathan Glazer,
Herbert Gans, Douglas Massey, Manning Marable, Henry Hampton. Roger Wilkins,
Maxine Waters, Salim Muwakkil, David Rusk, Eric Mann, Melvin Oliver and others.
The book has sold well and been adopted as a course text in several dozen
colleges and secondary schools.
GRANTMAKING
Two Board-mandated research-advocacy efforts were
initiated: the Federal and State Data Reconnaissance Projects (looking at what
data sources exist on the impact of government housing, education, health and
income maintenance programs on poor and minority beneficiaries); and an examination
of the two-way cause-and-effect relationship between segregated school patterns
and segregated housing patterns and the government’s role in creating and maintaining
residential segregation.
The federal-level portion of the Data Reconnaissance Project produced four
commissioned studies documenting the inadequacy of data collection and dissemination
efforts on the part of HHS, HUD, Dept. of Education and other federal agencies.
A parallel effort for California, undertaken in partnership with the California
Budget Project, with funding from The Irvine Foundation, resulted in similar
findings. And four additional state-level projects in Alabama, Texas, Illinois
and North Carolina were initiated in 1996, with Mott Foundation funding,
in partnership with state groups working on fiscal and tax issues. At the completion
of these research projects, advocacy steps, at the state and national level
(using the five states as a representative sample of the 50 states) will be
undertaken in order to improve the quality, quantity, relevance and dissemination
of data on the impact of housing, health, education and income maintenance projects
on poor and minority beneficiaries so that advocates have better tools with
which to fight for program improvements and force the states to evaluate the
programs devolving to their level and become more accountable for the results.
The Housing & School Segregation Project involves major commissioned studies
by urban historians Raymond Mohl (Univ. of Alabama) and Arnold Hirsch (Univ.
of New Orleans), who worked at the National Archives during the summer of 1996,
assisted by a group of graduate students recruited by PRRAC. These reports,
completed at the very end of 1996, have been supplemented by a similar report
on the rural housing programs of the Farmers Home Administration and by a summary
of litigation establishing the federal government’s liability for racially segregated
housing patterns. Further work on this project will involve additional research
covering the post-1960 period, state and local government and court actions,
and case-studies, as well as initiation of a range of advocacy steps to inform
public opinion and policy and seek remedial actions.
A second element of the Housing & School Segregation Project focusses on
St. Louis, site of the nation’s largest voluntary -- and highly successful --
interdistrict school integration program. The state of Missouri is seeking to
end the program, despite its benefits, because of its cost. Lead attorney defending
the program is PRRAC Board member William L. Taylor. PRRAC commissioned five
expert studies in support of the program, by Samuel Stringfield and Rebecca
Herman of Johns Hopkins, Dennis Judd of the University of Missouri, William
Trent of the University of Illinois, Michael Puma of Abt Associates, and Junious
Williams of Oakland, California. Because of the high quality and broader relevance
of these studies, arrangements have been made to have them -- supplemented by
excerpts from the trial testimony and depositions of Gary Orfield of Harvard
and others -- published as a special issue of the Journal of Negro Education
(scheduled for mid-1998 publication), with a book version likely
to follow.
PRRAC’s program of small research grants (maximum amount: $10,000), under which
some 75 grants were made during the 1991-96 period (a descriptive list is available
from us with a self-addressed, stamped [55¢]
envelope), was inactive during 1997 (save for continuing contact with prior
grantees to complete the research products and report on advocacy work supported
by that research) due to lack of available funds. Looking cumulatively
at PRRAC’s small grants program, the most common substantive area of work is
housing (and homelessness); other areas include health, education, employment,
criminal justice, immigration, transportation, voting, domestic violence and
the environment. Researchers funded include staff of advocacy organizations,
academics (working independently on projects that will be of assistance to advocacy
groups or in tandem with such groups) and members of grassroots organizations.
Where organizations do not have access to appropriate research help, PRRAC draws
on its network of researchers to locate such assistance.
In deciding which applications to fund, criteria beyond the basic
threshold requirements that the request be for research support around the intersection
of race and poverty, and that the research directly support a planned, concrete
advocacy agenda include the importance of the advocacy effort, the utility
and quality of the proposed research, the potential for success of both the
research effort and advocacy work, the project’s potential for publicity and
dissemination, and its potential for replication elsewhere. PRRAC strongly encourages
involvement of minority researchers. As projects are completed, opportunities
for replicating the research and/or advocacy will be explored and, as appropriate
and needed, advanced.
While the advocacy work advanced by PRRAC-supported research usually takes
a while to implement, there are many successes to date. Some examples:
- The Clinica Legal Latina/Ayuda’s research on domestic violence among
DC-area immigrants helped in passage of federal legislation protecting the immigration
status of women victimized by such abuse.
- The ACLU’s research led to
their successful suit challenging Alabama’s racially discriminatory education
system.
- The Legal Assistance Foundation of Chicago’s research documenting
the miseducation of homeless children helped pass state legislation guaranteeing
such pupils an adequate education, and produced a litigation settlement with
a similar result.
- Ed Kissam’s research on the systematic undercount
of farmworkers led to revision of Census Bureau enumeration procedures, in turn
increasing population-based program funds.
- Yale Rabin and Joe Darden’s
documentation of the government role in creating racially segregated housing
patterns in Allegheny County, PA, was a key element in producing an extraordinarily
progressive consent decree in the Lawyers’ Comm. For Civil Rights Under Law
suit.
- The Labor/Community Strategy Center’s research into racially
discriminatory transit planning and implementation by the Los Angeles Metropolitan
Transportation Authority is being used to support their path-breaking
lawsuit; the suit raises a new area for Title VI and Constitutional concern
and enforcement, already being replicated and considered in other cities.
- Research by Yale Rabin critical of the public housing replacement plans
in New Haven and Providence and his preparation of alternative plans have assisted
Legal Service lawyers in both cities to secure improved plans for desegregated
housing.
- Occidental College professor Manuel Pastor’s computer-based
system of linking community groups with useful local academic resources in the
LA area is now available for easy replication in other cities.
A new project initiated at the end of 1997 relates to the President’s Race
Initiative (whose staff is headed by former PRRAC Board member Judith Winston).
While considerable optimism was generated by the creation of the Initiative,
and particularly by the appointment of John Hope Franklin as Chair of the Initiative’s
Advisory Board, early signs are that the effort will be somewhat shallow, eschewing
an institutional/historical approach to the nation’s racism. Especially disturbing
is the fact that the Advisory Board does not plan to issue its own public report,
but will report privately to the President, whose White House staff then will
produce a report and set of recommendations. In response, PRRAC has commissioned
a set of short "Advice to the Advisory Board" essays by critical thinkers
and activists. The first set of such essays -- by Manning Marable, Julian Bond,
Howard Zinn, Peter Edelman, the National Council of La Raza, S.M. Miller, Marcus
Raskin, Peter Dreier, Jonathan Kozol and Hugh Price -- appeared in the November/December
1997 issue of Poverty & Race. A second round of these essays will
appear in the January/February 1998 issue, and discussion is under way about
producing a parallel "telling it like it really is" PRRAC report,
with appropriate policy and program recommendations that deal with the institutionalized
elements of racism throughout the society’s economic, political and social system.
1997 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
CHAIR
John Charles Boger University of North Carolina School of Law, Chapel Hill,
NC
VICE-CHAIRS
Kati Haycock, The Education Trust, Washington, DC
José Padilla, California Rural Legal Assistance, San Francisco, CA
SECRETARY
john powell, University of Minnesota School of Law, Minneapolis, MN
TREASURER
Phyllis Holmen, Georgia Legal Services Program, Atlanta, GA
Nancy Duff Campbell, National Women's Law Center, Washington, DC
David Cohen, The Advocacy Institute, Washington, DC
James Gibson, The Urban Institute, Washington, DC
Thomas Henderson, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Washington,
DC
Alan Houseman, Center for Law and Social Policy, Washington, DC
Kenneth Kimerling, Asian American Legal Defense & Education Fund, New York,
NY
In early 1997 Kimerling moved from the Puerto Rican Legal Defense & Education
Fund to the Asian American Legal Defense & Education Fund.
S.M. Miller, The Commonwealth Institute, Cambridge, MA
Don Nakanishi, University of California, Los Angeles, CA
Jane Perkins, National Health Law Program, Chapel Hill, NC
NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, New York, NY
Esmeralda Simmons, Center for Law & Social Justice, CUNY, Brooklyn, NY
Cathi Tactaquin, National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Oakland,
CA
Bill Tamayo, San Francisco, CA
William L. Taylor, Washington, DC
[Organizations listed for identification purposes only]
1997 PRRAC STAFF
Chester W. Hartman
President/Executive Director
Steven D. White(until 4/97)
Assistant Director
Shanta Rao (from 10/97)
Assistant Director
Beth Ginsburg (until 6/97)
Office Manager
Cherryl M. Donahue (from 9/97)
Office Manager
Sara Mellinger (4/97 - 9/97)
Administrative Assistant
Shannon Brown (until 7/97)
Administrative Assistant
Lisa Young (from 11/97)
Administrative Assistant
SOCIAL SCIENCE ADVISORY BOARD
Richard Berk, UCLA Department of Sociology
Frank Bonilla, Hunter College Center for Puerto Rican Studies
Cynthia Duncan, University of New Hampshire Department of Sociology
Roberto Fernandez, Stanford University Graduate School of Business
Heidi Hartmann, Inst. for Women's Policy Research (Washington, DC)
William Kornblum, CUNY Center for Social Research
Harriette McAdoo, Michigan State University School of Human Ecology
Fernando Mendoza, Stanford University Center for Chicano Research
Paul Ong, UCLA Graduate School Architecture & Urban Planning
Gary Orfield, Harvard University Graduate School of Education
Gary Sandefur, University of Wisconsin Institute for Poverty Research
Margaret Weir, University of California-Berkeley, Departments of Sociology-Political
Science
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