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Black males

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Black Males in College Not Jail

by 03/07/2014
written by

Black Males in the education system have continually been a topic of interest and study. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, reports such as From Classrooms to Cell Blocks: A National Perspective by Tara-Jen Ambrosio and Vincent Schiraldi, show that there were more Black males in prison than in college. The media and the world of academia have birthed the notion that the commonplace for Black males is jail. However, progress has been made in the last 14 years.

Recently, scholars have sought more research and found that now there are more Black males in higher education than in prison. According to Diverse Issues in Higher Education, “The number of Black men in college is more than 1.4 million versus the 824,340 who were incarcerated.”

Many scholars of academia have put time into the research and retention of Black males to help them as they go through educational institutions. At UCLA, the Black Male Institute (BMI) conducts research, addresses the concerns of Black males in higher education, and creates a comfortable environment where they can both seen and heard. Donte Miller, third year Sociology major and BMI student, expressed what BMI means to him, “Home, a place to vent, laugh, and put in work all in one. BMI is a microcosm of being back at home, and we are just one big family.”

Blacklimated

“Blacklimated” class held by the Black Male Institute at UCLA

There are 1.4 million Black males who are in college. Researchers have found that, “The raw numbers show that enrollment of Black males [in college] increased from 693,044 in 2001 to 1,445,194 in 2011.” As time progresses, the Black male student population continues to increase.

Implementing new changes has worked as there continues to be more Black males attending college every year, outnumbering the amount in jail. The state of Black males in education is not as detrimental as the media would lead people to believe. Instead, African American men are educating themselves and obtaining their degrees.

When asked what can be done to retain even more Black males in higher education Donte Miller says, “Outreach! There aren’t enough Black males going out or being sought out by people in higher education encouraging them to apply or letting them know they are capable. There also needs to be more culturally relevant education in which students are taught similar to what goes on in their lives as something they can relate to.”  In order to encourage the path to higher education, it is intrinsic to outreach to Black males.

03/07/2014 0 comments
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Archive

Poem: Untitled

by 03/07/2014
written by

A nation that deals death by drone, jails its own, kills for sport,

and sleeps asses in seats with a spectacle of courtroom reports

can offer no fair retort to innocent lives cut short.

Puppeteers will profiteer from fear the mass media exports

and bloody hands will be wiped clean at beachside resorts.

WAKE  up there’s never justice in kangaroo courts.

the nature of this beast is now impossible to distort.

 

03/07/2014 0 comments
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Archive

Mass Incarceration: Slavery By Another Name

by 02/28/2014
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The Afrikan Student Union at UCLA currently exists to promote, protect and serve the social, educational, and political interests of people of Afrikan descent. On Tuesday, February 4th, ASU Administrative Staff introduced a resolution to UCLA’s Undergraduate Student Association Council (USAC) urging it, the UCLA Foundation, and the UC Regents to divest from corporations that have investments in the two major private prison companies, CCA and GEO Group.

As Black intellectuals and activists, it is important to recognize the context in which we are functioning. The UC has the largest endowment in the world. If we know, through public information on the UC Regents, that the UC is investing in corporations such as Wells Fargo, Vanguard Group, Blackrock Fund Advisors, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Invesco Finance LTD, and JP Morgan Chase, which contribute to the privatization of prisons and in turn, the enslavement of black, brown and other oppressed communities, it is our collective responsibility to challenge this reality.

Louisiana is the prison capital of the world, meaning it incarcerates more prisoners than any other state in America and any other country. The Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola is one of the largest and most notorious maximum security prisons in the country, which works as an agricultural complex that utilizes cheap prisoner labor (wages range between four cents and 20 cents per hour) for traditional agriculture production and light industry. The penitentiary occupies 18,000 acres of land that was once a 19th century plantation–the Angola Plantation–named after the area in Africa that supplied most of the plantation’s slave labor. Thus, how can anyone say that the current imprisonment of our people is not eerily and disturbingly similar to the chattel slavery our ancestors endured?

More Black men are under correctional control today than were enslaved in 1850. Moreover, Black women are the fastest growing segment of the juvenile justice population and the criminal justice system. The question, we should be asking ourselves is: are Black people inherently criminal? For the aforementioned statistics to be justified that is what society would intend for us to believe.

However, as former Chair of the Black Panther Party, Elaine Brown asserts, it is important to be “ruthless in your analysis.” CCA and GEO have massive political lobbying power, which has set the stage for black and brown prisoners to become free laborers while incarcerated. In the 1990s, CCA and GEO Group successfully lobbied for mandatory minimums, three-strikes and drug laws, which have contributed to the incarceration of millions of black, brown, and other, oppressed communities. In fact, CCA and GEO worked with Congress to effectively lobby for the 1995 Prison Industry Act, which was promoted by ALEC, and turned prisoners into laborers. Moreover, one would realize through research that most black and brown prisoners are imprisoned due to non-violent drug offenses.

As Angela Davis, former UCLA Professor of Philosophy said, “Prisons do not disappear human beings. Homelessness, unemployment, drug addiction, mental illness, and illiteracy are only a few of the problems that disappear from public view when the human beings contending with them are relegated to cages.”

We are facing an endemic problem in this country, and that is the perpetual marginalization and criminalization of Black people. And, instead of addressing the root causes of these problems, the United States is allowing for generations of Black Americans to remain broken and disillusioned. Fortunately, the UCLA Undergraduate Student Association Council (USAC) voted unanimously in support of the resolution; however, work still needs to and will be done to achieve our goal, which is liberation of all Afrikan people.

02/28/2014 0 comments
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Archive

USAC Votes for a resolution to “Divest from Corporations Supporting the Private Prison Industry”

by 02/05/2014
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Last night, the Afrikan Student Union at UCLA addressed the Undergraduate Student Association Council with “A Resolution to Divest Undergraduate Students Association Council and UC Los Angeles Finances from Corporations Profiting from the Industrial Complex.”

Students and USAC Council members wait as the "A Resolution" presentation is soon to begin./Amber Tidmore- Nommo Staff

Students and USAC Council members wait as the “A Resolution” presentation is soon to begin./Amber Tidmore- Nommo Staff

The endorsers of the resolution include:

 Student/Campus Organizations: Harambee Council at UCLA, USAC Office of the President, USAC External Vice President’s Office, USAC Cultural Affairs Commissioner, USAC General Representative 3, Incarcerated Youth Tutorial Project, Student Coalition Against Labor Exploitation.

Individuals in Support: Avinoam Boral Internal Vice president of the Jewish Student Union, Liz Friedman Women in the Physical Sciences President, Devin Murphy President of the Black Pre-Law Association, and Janay Williams member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.

Community Organizations: Alliance for Equal Opportunity in Education and Community Coalition of South Los Angeles.

The endorsers were not the only individuals in attendance, but also many students of color and non-students of color who came to express their opinion, and to show support for the resolution and the Afrikan Student Union (ASU).

USAC meeting opens the floor for public comment./ Amber Tidmore-Nommo Staff

USAC meeting opens the floor for public comment./ Amber Tidmore-Nommo Staff

Kateisha Menefield, Vice-Chair of ASU made the first public comment introducing the resolution to the meeting, followed by other public comments, then a presentation given by both Kamilah Moore, Chair of ASU and Maryssa Hall, External Vice President of USAC; and lastly, council members asked questions.  Ten of the council members voted in approval of the resolution and the rest of the members neither abstained nor denied it.  In favor of USAC, the resolution passed, which to many, is significant step to ignite further divestment from the prison industrial complex.

The link to the resolution can be found at the end of the article.  Yet, to read more about what the resolution stands for, what it sets out to change, and the personal comments and experiences of both students and USAC council members during the meeting, check back with NOMMO Magazine this Friday.

http://usac.ucla.edu/documents/resolutions/USACPrivatePrisonDivestmentResolution.pdf

02/05/2014 4 comments
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