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Saturday, October 23, 2021

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Monday, November 15, 2021

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Monday, October 31, 2022

The Morning: More equitable justice

Racial disparities in incarceration have fallen.

Good morning. The midterm election debates on crime have overlooked a success of criminal justice reform efforts.

Larry Krasner, the Philadelphia district attorney.Michelle Gustafson for The New York Times

Seeking balance

Republican lawmakers up for re-election in Pennsylvania filed articles of impeachment last week against Philadelphia's progressive district attorney, saying that he was responsible for an increase in crime. In the state's Senate race, the Republican nominee, Mehmet Oz, has attacked his opponent, John Fetterman, for encouraging state officials to release more prisoners.

The Republicans' approach in Pennsylvania reflects their party's embrace of crime as a top issue in many midterm elections. Republicans have demanded solutions to crime increases, and they have criticized Democrats for supporting major changes to criminal justice policy in recent years, claiming that they fueled swelling crime rates.

As is typical in political campaigns, nuance is getting lost. Critics of the reform efforts have distorted the picture; no statistical link exists between, for example, progressive prosecutors and crime. Yet many Democrats, wary of being labeled weak on the issue, have remained quiet or criticized even successful changes to the legal system.

And there have been achievements. Understanding them can give you a fuller grasp of crime in the U.S. right now than you might hear in debates or television ads in the run-up to next week's elections.

I want to explain one such shift that has gotten little attention: Slowly, the American criminal justice system has become more equitable. The racial gap among inmates in state prisons has fallen 40 percent since 2000, fueled by a large decrease in Black imprisonment rates, according to a new report by the Council on Criminal Justice, a think tank.

Finding the right balance between public safety and human dignity animated many of the criminal justice policies enacted in the U.S. over the past couple of decades. The decline in racial disparities is a remarkable reversal of policies now widely seen as unfairly punishing Black people. "It's a tremendous drop," said Thaddeus Johnson, one of the report's authors.

Source: Council on Criminal Justice, National Prisoner Statistics

A closing gap

Why did inequities in prison rates shrink? The decrease was the result of a decades-long effort to reduce what critics call mass incarceration.

That is their term for the harsher sentencing laws passed in response to a crime increase that began in the 1960s, which made the U.S. one of the world's biggest incarcerators. Black communities were disproportionately affected and in some cases targeted by law enforcement, as the Justice Department has found in Ferguson, Mo., in Baltimore and elsewhere. By 2000, Black adults were locked up in state prisons at 8.2 times the rate of white Americans, after accounting for population.

Eventually, the high costs of incarceration and the racial disparities prompted activists from across the political spectrum to push for a rollback of the toughest punishments. Bit by bit, lawmakers obliged, reducing penalties mainly for nonviolent crimes.

As those changes took effect, incarceration rates dropped. Since Black Americans were more likely to be imprisoned, they benefited the most. Rates of arrest and imprisonment for Black Americans fell sharply, the Council on Criminal Justice analysis found. White arrests also fell, but by less. And the rate of white offenders being sent to prison actually increased.

Limits to reform

Racial gaps remain in the justice system. Black adults are imprisoned at 4.9 times the rate of white adults. Black people, on average, spend more time in prison — an imbalance that is growing.

The trends expose the limits of sentencing policy changes so far. State facilities hold around 90 percent of U.S. prisoners, and most of those inmates are in for violent offenses. So a majority of American prisoners see little, if any, benefit from leniency focused on nonviolent crime.

The remaining racial gaps in imprisonment are not solely driven by racial bias in enforcement, but also by higher crime rates in Black communities, the Council on Criminal Justice concluded. "It's not that Black communities are broken or that Black people are more inherently violent," Johnson said. But long-term neglect of Black communities has led to social and economic imbalances. And violent offending, Johnson argued, "is the nexus where all the other disparities, all the other gaps" meet.

Those problems go beyond the scope of the changes to the criminal justice system so far. But the midterm campaigns suggest there may not be an appetite for doing more, despite the strides toward equity.

THE LATEST NEWS

Brazil Election
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva celebrated his win in São Paulo, Brazil.Victor Moriyama for The New York Times
  • Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil's divisive far-right leader, lost his re-election bid. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a leftist former president, will replace him, capping a stunning political revival.
  • Da Silva, known as Lula, promised to stabilize the economy and protect the Amazon rainforest, but congressional opposition will probably limit his agenda.
  • After years of undermining Brazil's democracy, will Bolsonaro accept the results?
Politics
War in Ukraine
Other Big Stories
Opinions

Brazilians may have voted to oust Jair Bolsonaro, but Bolsonarismo is far from over, Vanessa Barbara argues.

The "dark academia" cultural aesthetic has become all too real, Pamela Paul says.

The people in Baldwin Lee's photographs insisted on their profound dignity, even amid brutal Southern poverty, Margaret Renkl writes.

Gail Collins and Bret Stephens discuss the costs of holding elected office in an era of political violence.

Enjoy all of The New York Times in one subscription — the original reporting and analysis, plus recipes from Cooking, puzzles from Games, product reviews from Wirecutter and sports journalism from The Athletic. Experience it all with a New York Times All Access subscription at this special rate.

MORNING READS

"Boris Mikhailov: Ukrainian Diary," is on display in Paris.Boris Mikhailov; via Galerie Suzanne Tarasieve

Photography: Boris Mikhailov is Ukraine's greatest artist, our critic writes.

King Tut: Is there a hidden chamber inside his tomb?

A Times classic: The secret to marriage is never getting married.

Metropolitan Diary: A friendly museum guard clears a path.

Quiz time: Take our latest news quiz and share your score (the average was 8.5).

Advice from Wirecutter: Try this peel-and-stick removable wallpaper.

Lives Lived: Gerald Stern was a wistful poet who won a National Book Award. He died at 97.

SPORTS NEWS FROM THE ATHLETIC

Packers lose four straight: The Bills are 6-1 after an imposing 27-17 win over the Packers last night, extending Green Bay's losing streak to the team's longest since 2016.

Bronny James: He is a four-star prospect with a five-star name: LeBron James's son has the attention of top colleges, but some coaches question whether recruiting him is worth the inevitable hoopla.

World Series travels east: The third game is set for tonight in Philadelphia, which hasn't hosted a World Series matchup since 2009. The Phillies have a chance to clinch at home if they win the next three games, but need better pitching if they want to claim the title.

ARTS AND IDEAS

The popularity of Skelly

Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

If you go trick-or-treating tonight for Halloween, odds are you'll come across a 12-foot skeleton. Don't be afraid: It's probably just Skelly. The towering Halloween decoration became a hit in 2020 — on TikTok, videos tagged #12ftskeleton have more than 70 million views — and two years later, shoppers are still racing from store to store trying to find one.

Starri Taddeo, a New Jersey resident, spent two years looking for a Skelly before she bought one that she put up in her front yard. But looking through the decorations has become a seasonal activity for her family: "It's free entertainment."

Related: The Saudi Arabian authorities once banned Halloween. This year, the government sponsored a "horror weekend."

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Mark Weinberg for The New York Times
What to Watch

Ina Garten made risotto with one of her famous fans, the fashion designer Daniel Roseberry.

Theater

In an A.I. opera at the Lincoln Center, audience brain waves were part of the show.

What to Do

This dad has ideas for scaring kids on Halloween.

Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was blithely. Here is today's puzzle.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Halloween symbol (three letters).

And here's today's Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — German

P.S. An 1892 Times article called Halloween "the high carnival season for witches, fairies and the immaterial principle in humanity."

"The Daily" is about Xi Jinping.

Matthew Cullen, Lauren Hard, Lauren Jackson, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Thursday, December 3, 2020

In Her Words: ‘A radical act’

Fifty years of feminist writing
Anna Parini

By Glynnis MacNicol

“It’s a radical act to publish women’s writing, and an equally radical act to keep it in print.”

— Gloria Steinem

It’s 1969. Across America, the culture wars are raging.

At Goucher College, a private liberal arts school outside Baltimore, students enrolled in an 18th-century literature class take one glance at the syllabus and promptly ask their professor: “Where are the women authors?” The professor, herself a woman, is stumped. “There are none, because I’ve not read any,” she tells them.

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The stumped professor was Florence Howe, who died in September at 91, and this story, as she often explained, is how her lifelong project, the Feminist Press — now in its 50th year — was born.

Initially, Ms. Howe proposed a series of short books to be written by famous contemporary women about women of the past. She approached three separate academic presses. But when they turned her down, she went wider, even taking her idea to Bob Silvers, the founding editor of The New York Review of Books. While the people she spoke with were excited by the idea, the financial managers were decidedly not; there was, she was told, “no money in it.”

According to her lengthy 2011 autobiography, “A Life in Motion,” Ms. Howe wasted no time on disappointment, instead pivoting to publish the series herself with her husband’s help. She credits her husband with the concept as well as the name, the Feminist Press. “I could call it the Feminist Press, since he would be a part of it, and feminist was a non-gendered word that included men,” she wrote.

Florence Howe, center, with staff members of the Feminist Press in 1972. Robert M. Klein

News of the Press spread quickly. “Word traveled very fast even though we had no fax, no email, no computers,” Ms. Howe recounted in an interview to mark her 90th birthday. I said, “If at least 25 people show up” to my house in Maryland, “and they agree to meet at least twice a month, we’ll have a feminist press.”

Fifty people showed up.

The Press’s original mandate was to unearth forgotten female writers for the purpose of academic study. “What I wanted were books that could be used in the classroom,” Ms. Howe said in an interview last summer for this story, conducted with the help of Jisu Kim, a senior staffer at the Feminist Press. “Always, that was my goal.”

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Many “really important books” had gone out of print simply because they were written by women, says Jennifer Baumgardner, executive director and publisher of the press from 2013 to 2017.

First up was Rebecca Harding Davis’s novella “Life in the Iron Mills,” originally published anonymously in The Atlantic Monthly in 1861. Next, “The Yellow Wallpaper,” by Charlotte Perkins Stetson (also: Charolotte Perkins Gilman), a title that languished in obscurity after its publication in The New England Magazine in 1892, but is now recognizable to nearly everyone who’s taken a women’s studies course.

“Without the Feminist Press, we might not have known that women have always been writing our hearts out,” Gloria Steinem says. “We would have gone on thinking we were inventing the wheel instead of understanding that our mothers and grandmothers had been speeding along on their own. And we definitely wouldn’t have been able to read our counterparts in Africa or Asia.”

“The Yellow Wallpaper” and “Witches, Midwives, and Nurses” were early, important books for the Feminist Press.

Soon, then-present-day writers were added to the mix. In 1972, Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English brought their wildly successful self-published pamphlet, “Witches, Midwives & Nurses” to Ms. Howe.

“We didn’t even think of going to a commercial publisher,” says Ms. Ehrenreich, the writer and political activist, who later penned the international best seller “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America.” “We wanted to feel very free in what we said.” The Press “was part of our movement as feminists.” More than four decades on, “Witches, Midwives & Nurses” remains the publisher’s strongest seller, a must-read in the midwife community.

The press also helped sweep along the rising Second Wave feminist movement. Writers for Ms. Magazine were sent to the Press to publish their long-form work, according to Ms. Steinem.

In the subsequent decades, the relevance of the Press followed a similar trajectory to the women’s movement: vibrant and essential at times, then slowly receding from view as the culture turned its attention elsewhere, until the next generation of women emerged with a fresh and urgent mandate to point it in a new direction.

Ms. Baumgardner, for instance, describes thinking of the Press as a “very emotionally significant relic” when she first encountered it in the early ’90s, “as opposed to something that I set my watch by.”

Beyoncé performed onstage at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards.Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic, via Getty Images

But it changed once again in 2014 when Beyoncé flashed the word FEMINIST behind her at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards. Then followed the election of Donald J. Trump and the global resurgence of the #MeToo movement, which thrust feminism back into the mainstream, along with the Press.

“Everybody who had been, ‘Well, at least we don’t use the word “feminist,”’ had to scramble to catch up,” notes Ms. Baumgardner, who emphasized the Feminist Press had long been intersectional in its approach. “It already had all this authority in that space.”

Jamia Wilson, who at 37 was named executive director and publisher in 2017 — both the youngest person to ever hold the position and the first Black woman — sees similarities between the era when the Press was founded and the current one, where, she says, “It’s extremely important for us to be an unapologetic feminist voice, no matter what happens.”

“When ‘feminist’ was hashtag trending,” stresses Ms. Wilson, “we thought, ‘Great, but we were feminists before this happened.’ And we will continue to carry this mantle. We want everyone to be able to recognize themselves in a book.”

Today, the Press employs five full-time staff members, three of whom are editors, and publishes between 15 and 20 titles a year. The offices (when people are able to get back to them) are at the CUNY building on Fifth Avenue in New York City, across the street from the Empire State Building, and above the former location of B. Altman, best known to current generations as the workplace of Mrs. Maisel. In normal years, it also hosts the annual Feminist Power Awards to honor female visionaries in a variety of fields.

Unlike many larger publishers, the Press is entirely mission driven, Ms. Wilson says, and this informs everything it does. “Your advance might not have as many zeros as other places,” she says, “but your author care will be unmatched.” She compares the editing process to “going to the gynecologist and they put warm mitts on before they examine you — someone thought about your dignity.”

Ms. Wilson also notes that, thanks largely to the political climate, she increasingly “gets the sense that authors like to be associated with the Feminist Press as part of the positioning of their book.”

Dr. Brittney Cooper, who co-edited the The Crunk Feminist Collection, comprising essays on intersectionality, feminism, politics and culture based on the popular blog, says she is thankful the Feminist Press chose to publish the collection “without a lot of rigmarole.” It “represented an investment, and making sure that much of the thinking happening in the digital feminist era would be sustained for generations to come.”

While the combination of the coronavirus pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests rocked much of the publishing world — independent bookstores, especially, are struggling and the largely white publishing industry has been undergoing a monthslong reckoning — the Press has remained steady. Ms. Wilson credits its long history in “gender justice” spaces, as well as 50 years of dealing with the financial challenges of the nonprofit space.

“It’s not the first time we’ve seen adversity and had to work together to transform,” Ms. Wilson says.

At the end of September it was announced that Ms. Wilson would be leaving the Press to take over as executive editor at Random House. She says since the announcement the board has been inundated with applications for the role. “I’m excited to see people’s excitement about this opportunity,” Ms. Wilson says. “The minute that we announced, people were like, ‘So how can I apply for that?’”

“Feminist institutions are the things left standing after protest goes away,” Dr. Cooper says, “and that longevity gives us an anchor point for each new generation of activists that arises.”

Indeed, “It’s a radical act to publish women’s writing,” Ms. Steinem says, “and an equally radical act to keep it in print.”

Write to us at inherwords@nytimes.com. Tell us about a favorite feminist book or publication.

What else is happening

Here are five articles from The Times you may have missed.

Photograph by Hank Willis Thomas and Deb Willis. Styled by Alex Harrington
  • “Transcended generations and still remained relevant to each generation of music makers.” At 76, Patti LaBelle, the doyenne of Philadelphia Soul who changed the landscape of American music, has only gotten better. [Read the story]
  • “I feel lucky to be writing this. To be here. To have arrived at this place in my life.” Elliot Page, the Oscar-nominated star of “Juno,” announced on Tuesday that he is transgender. [Read the story]
  • “It really shows you what stigma has done to women here.” A study suggests that some women would be inclined to use “missed-period pills” without first confirming that they were pregnant. [Read the story]
  • “An economy that works for everyone.” Cecilia Rouse, Biden’s new top economist, has studied education and discrimination, with a particular focus on the struggles of the long-term unemployed. [Read the story]
  • “It’s a minimum level of diversity that we think every board should have.” Nasdaq will ask the S.E.C. to approve a new rule requiring more diverse corporate directors. [Read the story]

In Her Words is edited by Francesca Donner. Our art director is Catherine Gilmore-Barnes, and our photo editor is Sandra Stevenson.

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