Please note that this section is still being developed. If you have suggestions for resources, please send them to us at cpic@fas.harvard.edu.
Further Reading
- "21 Maps Of Highly Segregated Cities In America" by Rebecca Baird-Remba and Gus Lubin (uses Census data from 2010) (image-heavy article)
- “The Art of Survival: Why Poor People Have the Best Anti-Poverty Ideas” by Tim Lahan, Jess Hoffmann
- "Civil Disobedience" by Kimberley Brownlee
- “The Danger of a Single Story” by Chimamanda Adichie
- “The Ferguson Protests Worked” by Julia Craven, Ryan J. Reilly, and Mariah Stewart
- “A Ferguson Syllabus: Reading a Movement” by Darnell L. Moore
- "How Social Networks Drive Black Unemployment" by Nancy Ditomaso
- “How Volunteering Stops Millennials from Actually Changing the World” by Maribel Hermosillo
- “‘I am Still Called by the God I Serve to Walk This Out’: A Conversation with Lucia McBath, Mother of Jordan Davis” by Ta-Nehisi Coates
- “It Saves Millions To Simply Give Homeless People A Place To Live” by Scott Keyes
- “Mapping America: Every City, Every Block” by Matthew Bloch, Shan Carter, and Alan McLean for The New York Times (uses Census data from 2005-2009)
- "New Poll Shows More Young, Poor People of Color Identify as LGBT" as Jorge Rivas
- New Studies Examine Violence Directed at Transgender People of Color from Basic Rights Oregon
- "No Myths Here: Food Stamps, Food Deserts, and Food Scarcity" by Erika Nicole Kendall
- "Out of Reach 2015: How Much do you Need to Earn to Afford a Modest Apartment in Your State?” by the National Low Income Housing Coalition
- “Poverty is Poison” by Paul Krugman
- “Race vs. Class: The False Dichotomy” by Sherrilyn A. Ifill
- “Tools for White Guys Who Are Working For Social Change... and Other People Socialized in a Society Based on Domination” by Chris Crass
- “Trayvon Martin and the Irony of American Justice” by Ta-Nehisi Coates
- “Worsening Wealth Inequality by Race” by Tami Luhby
Multimedia
- Inequality is Real by the Economic Policy Institute
- "Idea of the Week: Inequality and New York's Subway" by The New Yorker
- “Trickle-Up Social Justice (Part 2 of 2)” by Dean Spade