Earl Ofari Hutchinson
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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is a journalist, author and broadcaster. Hutchinson is also the author of nine books about the African American experience. He serves as the President of the National Alliance for Positive Action, and is a contributor to The Huffington Post.
He regularly contributed to the weekly leftist Guardian (United States) in the decade before it folded (1992).
His 1996 Betrayed: The Presidential Failure to Protect Black Lives contributed to publicizing the 1964 murders of two African American teenagers by Ku Klux Klansman James Ford Seale[1]; Seale was eventually tried and convicted, and in August 2007 he was sentenced to three consecutive life terms.[2]
Hutchinson has a doctorate in sociology from the unaccredited Pacific Western University.[3]
His father, Earl Hutchinson Sr., is the lead author of A Colored Man's Journey Through 20th Century Segregated America.
[edit] Books by Earl Ofari Hutchinson
- The Mugging of Black America (1991)
- Black Fatherhood: The Guide to Male Parenting (1994)
- Black Fatherhood II: Black Women Talk About Their Men (1994)
- Blacks and Reds: Race and Class in Conflict, 1919-1990 (1994)
- Beyond O.J.: Race, Sex and Class Lessons For America (1996)
- Betrayed: A History of Presidential Failure to Protect Black Lives (1996)
- The Assassination of the Black Male Image (1997) ISBN 0-684-83657-2
- The Crisis in Black and Black (1998)
- A Colored Man's Journey Through 20th Century Segregated America (2000)
- The Disappearance of Black Leadership (2000)
- The Emerging Black GOP Majority (2006) ISBN 1881032191
- Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation Between African Americans and Hispanics by (2007)
- The Ethnic Presidency: How Race Decides the Race to the White House (2008)
[edit] References
- ^ Earl Ofari Hutchinson: The Indictment of James Ford Seale Doesn't Close the Book on Old Racial Murders - The Huffington Post
- ^ Ex-Klansman Is Sentenced to Life for Killings in 1964 - New York Times
- ^ Buffalo News (March 1, 1995) Author covering O.J. Trial to Speak. Local section, page B6.