Tag Archives: Neoliberalism

Race, Class, and Disaster Gentrification

By Zoltán Glück

First published at Tidal (http://tidalmag.org/race-class-and-disaster-gentrification/)

In the days and weeks following Hurricane Sandy the inequalities at the heart of New York City could scarcely be missed.  While hundreds of thousands of public housing residents went without heat, hot water or electricity, Mayor Michael Bloomberg rushed to get the stock exchange up and running within 48 hours—a stark reminder of whose lives and well-being are valued by current administration. In the immediate aftermath of disasters such contrasts lay bare the violence of race and class.  Who is able to leave and who is able to return are questions about access to resources, vulnerability, and the existing geographies of economic and social inequality. But it is through the process of reconstruction that existing racial and class iniquities are truly reproduced and deepened. In New York City, as the power has finally come back on for residents and as reconstruction efforts plod along, it is perhaps time for a look at how these dynamics are playing out.

Red Hook Houses Without Power After Hurricane Sandy
Red Hook Houses Without Power After Hurricane Sandy Continue reading

Coverage of the NYU Vote of No Confidence

On Friday, March 15th, NYU faculty will be registering their Vote of No Confidence in president John Sexton. Here are some excellent background readings on the issue.

-Nick Pinto’s excellent article in the Village voice about politics and economic of the NYU growth machine model of higher education: http://www.villagevoice.com/2013-02-20/news/nyu-expansion/

-NY Times article about the Vote of No Confidence: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/nyregion/john-sexton-is-tested-by-nyu-faculty.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

-An article at NYU Local about the upcoming vote: http://nyulocal.com/city/2013/02/27/no-confidence-history/

-A fascinating article on the email exchanges between Administration and Faculty in the wake of the scandal over top-administrators’ severance packages: http://nyulocal.com/on-campus/2013/03/11/exclusive-nyu-emails-faculty-amid-fallout-over-jack-lews-shady-bonus/

CUNY’s Pathways Initiative and the Future of Higher Education Reform

By James Dennis

Originally Published in Dissent Magazine, February 12th, 2013

[Photo of Brooklyn College, CUNY, by Salim Virji, 2009, Flickr creative commons]

What began as a fight between English faculty and the administration at a small urban community college is quickly becoming the front line in a national struggle over the future of higher education. As of this writing, two of the largest faculty organizations in the country, the Modern Language Association and the American Association of University Professors, have taken strong public stands against the City University of New York’s controversial Pathways to Degree Completion initiative, which supporters claim will streamline transfers between branches of the university system and increase graduation rates. These denouncements follow the creation of a national petition against Pathways and a spirited and growing campaign by the Professional Staff Congress, CUNY’s faculty union, to resist the proposed changes. Continue reading