The Ronald H. Brown Center Issues Comprehensive Report on "Rethinking the Discourse on Race"

October 19, 2006

Queens, New York -

The Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development at St. John's University School of Law  ("The Ronald H. Brown Center”) issued a comprehensive report entitled: Rethinking the Discourse on Race: A Symposium on How the Lack of Media Affects Social Justice and Policy.  The Report examines the lack of diversity in print and broadcast media in front –of –the –camera, behind-the-camera, and in actual media content. The Report gives examples of how the coverage of racial minorities that does exist reinforces stereotypes and distorts images of these groups. Some of these stereotypes and distortions arise from structural, economic and cultural issues in media reporting. These media absences, distortions and stereotypes shape the discourse at the nexus of race and public policy. This Report will be published in an upcoming issue of the St. John’s Journal of Legal Commentary.

Professor Leonard M. Baynes, the Director of The Ronald H. Brown Center, plans to testify and submit the Rethinking the Discourse on Race Report at a Town Hall Meeting at Hunter College on Thursday, October 19, 2006 during which Federal Communications Commissioners Jonathan Adelstein and Michael Copps plan to take testimony to be used in the upcoming Media Ownership Proceedings.  In addition, Professor Baynes is working with several other media scholars on a joint letter that they also plan to submit to the FCC advising them on what future studies the FCC should conduct before they loosen the current FCC cross ownership and national ownership rules.

> FCC Hearing Testimony
> FCC Studies Letter

For more information, please contact Leonard M. Baynes, Professor of Law and Director of The Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development at (718) 990-6600 or baynesl@stjohns.edu.