The Ronald H. Brown Center of St. John’s University School of Law Awarded Ford Foundation Grant for Conference on Racial Diversity in the Media

November 10, 2005

The Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development of St. John’s University School of Law (“The Ronald H. Brown Center”) has been awarded a $50,000 grant by The Ford Foundation’s Knowledge, Creativity, and Freedom Program to organize an interdisciplinary conference entitled, “Rethinking the Discourse on Race: A Symposium on How the Lack of Racial Diversity in the Electronic Media Affects Social Justice.”

Professor Leonard M. Baynes, Director of the Ronald H. Brown Center, explains that the goal of the conference is to bring together scholars from several different academic disciplines, legal experts, journalists, and journalism critics to discuss strategies to combat negative racial representations.  “The operating premise of this discussion,” he adds, “is that negative perceptions of racial minorities are tightly woven into the fabric of U.S. society and that popular support for policies such as affirmative action, rehabilitation of felons, or economic assistance to the poor, has declined in part because of these negative perceptions.  Nonetheless these negative perceptions are continuously reinforced by media absences and misrepresentations in news and entertainment programming.” Conference participants will explore this assumption as an empirical research question.

The Conference, which will be held at St. John’s Queens, New York campus on April 28 and 29, 2006, is designed to explore the individual strands of these perceptions, their impact on social policies, higher education curriculum/programs and media policies, and methods to unravel these strands to effectuate more support for racial justice will also be explored.  

Post-conference activities include the following: (1) writing a final report based upon the work presented and discussed; (2) disseminating the report widely among academics, public interest groups, advocates, activists, industry groups, and policymakers; (3) creating a listserv of scholars and activists specializing in the area of racial media depictions so that scholars can share syllabi, course descriptions, final exams, and other important curricular tools and information; and (4) creating a website containing research, syllabi, course descriptions, final exams, and other information dealing with the issue of racial media depictions.

For more information about the Conference, please visit our website at http://www.stjohns.edu/racemedia.