Kerner @ 50: Communication and the Politics of Race in the United States

Kerner @ 50: Communication and the Politics of Race in the United States

Publication No. 4 Special Issue of Journal and Overview Article Byerly, C., and Lamb, Y.R., eds. 2019. Kerner @ 50: Communication and the Politics of Race in the United States. Special issue of the Howard Journal of Communications. United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis Group. Role: Serving as co-editor in conceiving, developing and editing journal, and a first author on the overview article. Overview article by first author, Lamb, Y.R., and Byerly, C. 2018. Kerner @ 50: Communication and the Politics of Race in the United States. Preliminary online content: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10646175.2018.1442265 Synopsis and Impact: In 1968, following a series of violent urban rebellions, the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders released its “Kerner Report” concluding that the United States was “moving toward two societies, one black, one white – separate and unequal.” The “Kerner Commission,” nicknamed for its chairman Governor Otto Kerner of Illinois, laid part of the blame for these rebellions at the feet of the news media for their imbalanced coverage and hiring practices. As a result, the report said, an almost entirely white core of reporters and editors in the nation’s media had failed to report adequately on race relations, particularly omitting the difficulties experienced by those in inner cities. Successive generations of news leaders have tried and failed to reach goals of parity in making mainstream newsrooms reflect the country’s demographics. Some studies show that neither have those media yet been able to adequately cover race matters in a nation experiencing an ongoing “browning of America” and the emergence of a new era of race-related civil unrest and violence. Scholars and media practitioners have submitted both commentaries and scholarly manuscripts...