The Injustice of Undrinkable Water
What the Eyes Don't See is a deeply-readable tale of science, public health sleuthing, and a fight for social justice for some of America’s most disfranchised citizens.
The late Margaret Garb was a professor of history at Washington University in St. Louis and author of the books Freedom’s Ballot: African American Political Struggles in Chicago from Abolition to the Great Migration (University of Chicago Press, 2014) and City of American Dreams: A History of Home Ownership and Housing Reform, Chicago 1871-1919 (University of Chicago Press, 2005). Garb also co-directed Washington University in St. Louis’s Prison Education Program.
What the Eyes Don't See is a deeply-readable tale of science, public health sleuthing, and a fight for social justice for some of America’s most disfranchised citizens.
The New Deal gave Americans a weak welfare state. Prohibition, Lisa McGirr argues, produced a strong and enduring police state.
Renegade Dreams aims to uncover the new dreams of a post-industrial, 21st-century urban black community, and in the author's words, to “reframe” the dreamers apart from the rioters, gangsters or savage youth so often portrayed in the media.