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Melissa Harris-Perry | The Nation

Melissa Harris-Perry

Author Bios

Melissa Harris-Perry

Melissa Harris-Perry

Columnist

Melissa Harris-Perry is professor of political science at Tulane University, where she is founding director of the Project on Gender, Race, and Politics in the South. She is author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America. She is also a contributor to MSNBC.

Articles

News and Features

Sooner or later, marriage equality will win. What happens to marriage then?

President Obama’s symbolic recognition of minorities isn’t a substitute for policy, but it does matter.

In crafting laws after the horrifying killings in Connecticut, it’s crucial that we recognize our own collective trauma before we rush to act.

The impact of an Obama presidency is better answered by partisanship than race—but race still matters.

The stakes are high for students unlucky enough to be caught in the crossfire.

Has Hurricane Isaac taught Bobby Jindal that in the face of natural disaster, small government is no help?

It’s time to update Nina Simone's iconic song title—the GOP veep candidate is just as extreme on women’s health and rights as he is on economics.

Republicans are turning to tired, failed strategies in an effort to alienate both black and white voters from President Obama.

A diverse democracy requires us to be able to live near one another, to come together in public space and to engage across differences.

Despite the end of Jim Crow, it is once again socially, politically and legally acceptable to presume the guilt of nonwhite bodies.

Blogs

The dominant theme of the GOP debate was that it’s time to do away with the useless endeavor of thinking and to move swiftly toward...
They booed Rockefeller as the changing world evoked a heightened sense of vulnerability for those who had wielded power and privilege. 
In anticipation of the 2012 elections, Southern legislators are reducing early voting opportunities and imposing unprecedented...
Herman Cain’s candidacy is a cautionary tale against the simplistic racial reasoning that has dominated American political discourse.
Professor West says that Obama has “a certain fear of free black men.” But this is a pissing match—not prophetic witness.
During the holiest week in the Christian calendar, I am reminded again of the dangers and possibilities inherent in public God talk.
Whatever one thinks of the foreign and domestic policy outcomes of the past two years, it is clear that the Obama administration has...
Manning Marable did more than encourage us. He made a way for us.