Diversity and Division
For this series on race and ethnic relations, San Diego Magazine held a series of roundtable discussions among community leaders and citizens with widely differing views on race. Our reporting team spent countless hours on research and in one-on-one interviews to bring readers the three main features and more than a dozen sidebar stories in the series. The magazine also commissioned one of the most comprehensive surveys of its kind here, conducted by Viewpoint America. The result is a free-ranging look at race and ethnicity in this dynamic region—an eye-opening view of our history, current challenges and the possibilities for tomorrow. “Diversity & Division” is made possible through the generosity of lead underwriter Bank of America; The San Diego Foundation, San Diego Magazine’s community sponsor; and The Workforce Partnership, a contributing underwriter.
| Next Month, Part II The Greatest Hope: Our schools can hold the key to improving race relations. The generation of young people in classrooms today is more likely to get along with one another, more likely to be “color-blind” and, perhaps, less likely to face discrimination in adulthood. From the forced integration of the past to continuing efforts at melding color and cultures in one system, educators, students and parents struggle to balance academics and human relations. In March, a reporting team led by Margie Craig Farnsworth, Neil Kendricks and Pulitzer Prize–winner Jonathan Freedman looks at race and ethnic relations in San Diego’s schools. April, Part III It’s About the Money: The chance to make a living as they choose—with equal opportunity—is foremost in the minds of people of color. Indeed, some regard the future as more a matter of economics than race. Yet they continue to find roadblocks to jobs, to home ownership, to entrepreneurial opportunities—despite decades of enabling legislation and political promises. San Diego’s economy grows increasingly dependent on a population that grows ever more diverse. Will the region’s business and industry open its doors to all San Diegans? Or will it close the door on its own future? |
| Lynne Carrier Lynne Carrier is an award-winning journalist with three decades of experience in writing for magazines and newspapers. From 1977 to 1992, she wrote for the San Diego Tribune, covering beats from San Diego City Hall to Mexico and border news. She was part of the Tribune team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 1979 for coverage of the crash of a PSA jetliner. As a Tribune editorial writer, she was part of a three-person team nominated for a Pulitzer in 1984. She is now a freelance writer living in Coronado. Carrier’s articles have appeared in publications across the country, including Forbes, the Washington Post, Newsweek and the Christian Science Monitor. Fernando Romero Manuel Pastor Jr. |
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