March 30, 2012
Civil Rights to Human Rights: The Legacy of Bayard Rustin
Alicia L. Young
Assistant Director, Schomburg Center for Research in Black CultrueBegin: 00:00
LaShawn Warren
Vice President for Public Policy Development & Programming, American Constitution Society for Law and PolicyBegin: 01:30
Catherine Albista
Executive Director, National Economic & Social Rights InitiativeBegin: 04:20
Burt Neuborne
Professor of Civil Liberties, New York University Law School; Legal Director, the Brennan Center for JusticeBegin: 13:17
Ida E. Jones
National Director, the Association of Black Women HistoriansBegin: 16:58
Kendall Thomas
Professor of Law and Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Culture, Columbia University Law SchoolBegin: 20:20
On Friday, March 30, 2012, the American Constitution Society for Law & Policy (ACS) and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture hosted a panel in celebration of Bayard Rustin’s hundredth birthday. Rustin was a civil rights trailblazer, a passionate advocate for equality, and an early champion for LGBT rights. Early in the Civil Rights Movement, he identified the larger issue of attaining social and economic equality, emphasizing broader “human rights” as being an essential second phase of the Civil Rights Movement. But, after a burst of stunning advances in the legal equality of all Americans, the United States never moved beyond civil rights toward the acceptance of a broader human rights framework. What kept the United States from embracing Rustin’s viewpoint and, more importantly, what can our society do to move toward greater equality in the future? A panel of civil rights scholars provided their thoughts and insight into these and other important questions.
Panel Discussion featured:
- Moderator, Catherine Albisa, Executive Director, National Economic & Social Rights Initiative
- Ida E. Jones, Ph.D., National Director of the Association of Black Women Historians
- Burt Neuborne, Professor of Civil Liberties, NYU Law, and Legal Director of the Brennan Center for Justice
- Kendall Thomas, Professor of Law at Columbia and Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Culture