ABSTRACT

Under increasingly intense newsroom demands, reporters often find it difficult to cover the complexity of topics that deal with racial and social inequality. This path-breaking book lays out simple, effective reporting strategies that equip journalists to investigate disparity’s root causes.

Chapters discuss how racially disparate outcomes in health, education, wealth/income, housing, and the criminal justice system are often the result of inequity in opportunity and also provide theoretical frameworks for understanding the roots of racial inequity. Examples of model reporting from ProPublica, the Center for Public Integrity, and the San Jose Mercury News showcase best practice in writing while emphasizing community-based reporting. Throughout the book, tools and practical techniques such as the Fault Lines framework, the Listening Post and the authors' Opportunity Index and Upstream-Downstream Framework all help journalists improve their awareness and coverage of structural inequity at a practical level.

For students and journalists alike, Reporting Inequality is an ideal resource for understanding how to cover structures of injustice with balance and precision.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part II|2 pages

How Opportunity Works

chapter 7|27 pages

The Opportunity Index

part III|2 pages

Best Practices

part IV|2 pages

Case Studies

chapter 12|47 pages

Case Studies

Introduction to Case Studies

chapter |10 pages

Case Study A

Reporting Opportunity in Health

chapter |8 pages

Case Study B

Sometimes School Segregation Comes from Race Neutral Policies

chapter |6 pages

Case Study C

Exploring the Wealth/Income Gap

chapter |7 pages

Case Study D

When Housing Separates Us

chapter |7 pages

Case Study E

Gaps in the Social Safety Net

chapter |8 pages

Case Study F

The Path to Legal Status Isn’t so Clear Cut

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion