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    Doug Most is a lifelong journalist and author whose career has spanned newspapers and magazines up and down the East Coast, with stops in Washington, D.C., South Carolina, New Jersey, and Boston. He was named Journalist of the Year while at The Record in Bergen County, N.J., for his coverage of a tragic story about two teens charged with killing their newborn. After a stint at Boston Magazine, he worked for more than a decade at the Boston Globe in various roles, including magazine editor and deputy managing editor/special projects. His 2014 nonfiction book, The Race Underground, tells the story of the birth of subways in America and was made into a PBS/American Experience documentary. He has a BA in political communication from George Washington University. Profile

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There are 11 comments on Audit Finds No Issues, Concerns with Finances at Center for Antiracist Research

  1. While it’s good news that finances were not mismanaged, my heart still goes out to the 19 laid off employees. The poor oversight of how to stay funded is not different from the world of non-profits and it’s baffling that this was not under consideration at the center’s creation. Moreover, this goes further to the point of Jacobin’s coverage of the center a few years ago. Moving to a fellowship model is very academic, and I wonder what the center hopes to accomplish through this. How to be an antiracist? End capitalism, imperialism, other exploitative, extractive, and discriminatory systems; provide everyone with their basic needs as well as opportunity to grow; stop the reification of race (and therefore white supremacy) through an understanding of biology, anthropology, and ethnic studies (see Barbara and Karen Fields and Cornel West); kill off the interpersonal racism through shaming and honest conversations that lead to restorative and peaceful results. Don’t need a center to tell you that.

  2. The results of the audit are critically important and they need to be reported widely in the same media that wrongly accused the Center of malfeasance.

    1. Alumni

      I agree. It has all the characteristics of mismanagement. And notice how little the center impact is even on campus issues. The center in my opinion is a failure of leadership.

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