GBH Forum Network | 50 Years After Busing: Race, Housing, and Education Equity in Boston @GBHForumNetwork | Uploaded February 2024 | Updated October 2024, 8 hours ago.
Suffolk University’s Ford Hall Forum, the Moakley Archive & Institute, and GBH Forum Network present a program exploring the relationship between access to affordable housing and educational opportunity in Boston’s public schools nearly fifty years after the school busing crisis. This program, moderated by Stephanie Leydon, Executive Producer of digital video at GBH News, is the second in a series examining the lasting impacts of the landmark decision to desegregate Boston’s Public Schools in 1974. This discussion will take a look back at the impact of race-based discriminatory housing policies and education funding formulas while addressing the more recent problems of gentrification and housing affordability. How does Boston position itself to compete with its suburban neighbors when it comes to educational outcomes?
Explore the history of Boston’s busing crisis via the digital archives of The Boston Public Schools Desegregation Project, the GBH Archives, and Suffolk University’s Moakley Archive & Institute.
Ira A. Jackson is the Henry Y. Hwang Dean of the Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management at Claremont Graduate University, where he is also a professor of management. Jackson has served as Executive Vice President of BankBoston for a dozen years. During his tenure at BankBoston, the company consistently received Outstanding Community Reinvestment Act ratings from federal regulators for leadership in strengthening inner-city communities.
Dr. Adrienne Dixson is the Executive Director of the Education and Civil Rights Initiative, and a Professor of Educational Leadership Studies. Her research primarily focuses on how race, class and gender intersect and impact educational equity in urban schooling contexts. She locates her research within two theoretical frameworks: Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Black feminist theories.
Whitney Demetrius is the Director of Fair Housing and Municipal Engagement at Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association (CHAPA) where she has worked for over five years. She previously worked as the Deputy Director of the Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston.
bio pic 2018.png
Stephanie Leydon is the executive producer of digital video at GBH News. Feedback? Questions? Story ideas? Reach out to Stephanie at stephanie_leydon@wgbh.org.
0:00:00 - Introduction
0:00:33 - Welcome Remarks from Susan Spurlock
0:02:54 - Panel Introduction and Discussion and Q&A
0:56:37 - Q&A
1:08:27 - Closing Remarks
Discover more from our Partner Here: https://www.suffolk.edu/
GBH Forum Network ~ Free online lectures: Explore a world of ideas
Like us:facebook.com/gbhforumnetwork
Tweet with us: twitter.com/GBHForumNetwork
See our complete archive here: forum-network.org
Suffolk University’s Ford Hall Forum, the Moakley Archive & Institute, and GBH Forum Network present a program exploring the relationship between access to affordable housing and educational opportunity in Boston’s public schools nearly fifty years after the school busing crisis. This program, moderated by Stephanie Leydon, Executive Producer of digital video at GBH News, is the second in a series examining the lasting impacts of the landmark decision to desegregate Boston’s Public Schools in 1974. This discussion will take a look back at the impact of race-based discriminatory housing policies and education funding formulas while addressing the more recent problems of gentrification and housing affordability. How does Boston position itself to compete with its suburban neighbors when it comes to educational outcomes?
Explore the history of Boston’s busing crisis via the digital archives of The Boston Public Schools Desegregation Project, the GBH Archives, and Suffolk University’s Moakley Archive & Institute.
Ira A. Jackson is the Henry Y. Hwang Dean of the Peter F. Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management at Claremont Graduate University, where he is also a professor of management. Jackson has served as Executive Vice President of BankBoston for a dozen years. During his tenure at BankBoston, the company consistently received Outstanding Community Reinvestment Act ratings from federal regulators for leadership in strengthening inner-city communities.
Dr. Adrienne Dixson is the Executive Director of the Education and Civil Rights Initiative, and a Professor of Educational Leadership Studies. Her research primarily focuses on how race, class and gender intersect and impact educational equity in urban schooling contexts. She locates her research within two theoretical frameworks: Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Black feminist theories.
Whitney Demetrius is the Director of Fair Housing and Municipal Engagement at Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association (CHAPA) where she has worked for over five years. She previously worked as the Deputy Director of the Fair Housing Center of Greater Boston.
bio pic 2018.png
Stephanie Leydon is the executive producer of digital video at GBH News. Feedback? Questions? Story ideas? Reach out to Stephanie at stephanie_leydon@wgbh.org.
0:00:00 - Introduction
0:00:33 - Welcome Remarks from Susan Spurlock
0:02:54 - Panel Introduction and Discussion and Q&A
0:56:37 - Q&A
1:08:27 - Closing Remarks
Discover more from our Partner Here: https://www.suffolk.edu/
GBH Forum Network ~ Free online lectures: Explore a world of ideas
Like us:facebook.com/gbhforumnetwork
Tweet with us: twitter.com/GBHForumNetwork
See our complete archive here: forum-network.org