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Peter Rothberg | The Nation

Peter Rothberg

Author Bios

Peter Rothberg

Peter Rothberg

Associate Publisher, Special Projects

Peter Rothberg, the Nation's Associate Publisher for Special Projects, has been writing a blog covering the world of activism since 2003. His previous positions with The Nation  include web editor, publicity director, special projects director and intern. A former contributor to Air America radio's daily Nation Minute commentaries, Rothberg is a former speech-writer for civil rights leader Julian Bond. A member of the Brooklyn Literary Council and the board of Living Liberally, Rothberg lives in Brooklyn, where he was born and raised.

Articles

News and Features

An activist ahead of his time, Richard L. Grossman, a community organizer, galvanized work on a variety of progressive causes during his remarkable four-decade career.

The Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, a giant of the civil rights movement known for his decades of work in support of desegregation, died Wednesday in Birmingham, Alabama.

Luper’s courage at a young age helped change the course of race relations in Oklahoma City.

Best known for a photograph of her and Bob Dylan that became the cover of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, Rotolo devoted her life to the progressive causes which had engaged her since well before she met the folk singer.

Blogs

Breast cancer has become the poster child of corporate cause-related marketing campaigns.
Teacher Activist Groups are fighting back with a month of nationwide workshops based on the banned curriculum.
The grassroots environmental group Peaceful Uprising recently discovered that it was one of 200 nonprofit projects that have been...
The civil rights movement has resonated deeply with generations of musicians.
In its first direct engagement with the federal government, the Occupy movement will take its collective national might to Washington, DC...
Food Democracy Now represents a growing movement dedicated to building a sustainable food system.
An alternative Christmas playlist.
In this short clip, Lou Reed and Havel talk about music’s relationship to the politics of social change.
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