Robert Muggah, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)
Latin America’s murder rate is the highest in the world, accounting for one in every four homicides on the planet.
Children living in the most disadvantaged areas will average half the NAPLAN scores in reading, writing and numeracy tests than those living in the least disadvantaged areas.
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Elite exam schools are some of the least diverse public schools in the US. Here’s how colleges like Harvard could teach high schools like Stuyvesant to improve their admissions process.
SNAP helps millions of Americans get food on their tables.
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Cutting the program formerly known as food stamps would hurt low-income Americans and the whole economy. As research indicates that it’s working well, this drive to defund is baffling experts.
White men gain more health benefits from employment than do black men and women.
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Employment is good for health, but it is even better for white men than for others. And unemployment is worse for white men than others. Could these findings shine light on our political situation?
Grenfell Tower: a “preventable accident”.
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The data show wealth inequality has grown but is lower now than before the GFC. And overall household income inequality has barely shifted since the start of this century.
Some minorities are less likely to think that their college dreams could become a reality.
AP Photo/Tim Boyd
While most Americans do aspire to higher education, college is not a reality for many. But why is the gap between hopes and reality larger for some? And how can we strive for equity?
Do people use the internet in ways that disadvantage nonwhites?
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The Trump administration’s proposed budget suggests it will continue to spend federal dollars on expanding broadband internet access. But the rules governing internet traffic matter too.
Cuts to the 2018 federal education budget jeopardize access for students from low-income families.
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Komla Dzigbede, Binghamton University, State University of New York and Laura Bronstein, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Many of the programs being cut in the Trump-DeVos education budget serve low-income families – families that aren’t likely to benefit from the budget’s reallocation of funds toward school choice.
Skid Row in Los Angeles, a city where rich and poor live in very close proximity – for better and for worse.
Lucy Nicholson/Reuters
Justifying Sydney’s ranking as a liveable city requires greater recognition of the inequality of Sydneysiders’ access to jobs, wealth, transport and housing.
Schools can offer their pupils valuable support systems even if they’re short on resources.
Reuters/Akintunde Akinleye
Schools that have supportive strategies in place can offer buffers. They can promote positive outcomes – for pupils and teachers.
Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and President Donald Trump participate in a round-table discussion during a visit to Saint Andrew Catholic School in Miami.
AP Photo/Alex Brandon
The Trump administration’s new education budget cuts money from traditional schools and funnels it toward school choice. Is it a nail in the coffin for public education?
Protests in South Africa are about more than just service delivery of basic services such as water and electricity. They reflect a wider crisis about the failure to build a more equitable society.
Oxfam’s efforts to find solutions to the world’s inequalities are welcome but its wrongful use of “human economy” and repackaging it as a concept from high up might do more harm than good.