CPI’s archives are now hosted by @POGOwatchdog, a group that investigates, exposes, and champions reforms on systemic corruption, abuse of power, and waste.
You may have heard that CPI had to shut its doors, but we want to let you know that POGO Investigates at @POGOwatchdog is going to be the new home of our archive.
This will ensure our reporting stays available to the public.
Stay tuned into this account for more in the future.
For more than two years, @publicintegrity pored over thousands of documents to identify the largest collection of formerly enslaved people who were given land after the Civil War—only to have it seized back.
🎧 Listen to Part 1 of 40 Acres and a Lie: https://t.co/35H79q3r2B
On this week's episode, @publicintegrity reporters go to Skidaway Island, home to a lavish community that was once promised to formerly enslaved people.
“You could feel chills to know that they had it and then they just pulled the rug from under them." https://t.co/xARWA5Bmfh
There’s a famous line from W.E.B DuBois: “The slave went free, stood a brief moment in the sun, then moved back again towards slavery.”
This week on Reveal, w/ @publicintegrity: the story of that brief moment in the sun.
🎧 40 Acres and a Lie. https://t.co/35H79q3r2B
A new investigative report reveals that while the federal government did grant land to the formerly enslaved after the Civil War, it also took that land back and returned it to white southerners.
@IAmAmnaNawaz speaks to @AlexiaCampbell to learn more.
smart look at a demographic disparity that skews our public policy: Of Americans living at or below the $50k “low income” threshold, half reported voting one of the past 5 elections. By comparison, 86% of Americans making $150K or higher cast a ballot https://t.co/FbULJRr5ZE
💫 NEW! In an extraordinary 50-year career, US muckraker Chuck Lewis founded 2 Pulitzer Prize-winning news orgs – @ICIJorg & @publicintegrity, authored several books, and much more.
GIJN will honor Lewis with a special lifetime recognition at #IRE24: https://t.co/Tdenlazgpz
This Juneteenth, listen to the first of our three-part series with @publicintegrity uncovering the hidden history of 40 Acres and a Mule, the reparation that wasn't, and the wealth gap that remains https://t.co/35H79q3r2B
Despite being a crucial voting bloc, many low-income residents in D.C. feel ignored and disenchanted with elections. CPI's Katherine Hapgood explores why some believe voting won't improve their lives for
@wcp https://t.co/mG7fP6Mrjq
In D.C.’s Democratic primary, only 26% of registered Democrats voted. Income disparity is a key factor, with low-income areas like Ward 8 showing the lowest turnout. https://t.co/jvI5ZgiGD7
On this #juneteenth, meet two legendary families in Edisto Island, SC.
One side Black, the other white, both still reckoning with “40 acres and a mule” and its aftermath.
What their disagreement says about renewed calls for reparations.
https://t.co/XJorJg2kJq
Starting tomorrow, we are launching a new three-part series exploring the lesser-known legacy of America's biggest effort at reparations so far: 40 acres and a mule
🎧 to the preview below��and check out the full project here: https://t.co/X52lGjZyQ5
"40 Acres and a Mule" remains the nation's most famous attempt to provide reparations.
Finally, there's been a specific accounting of the 1,250 formerly enslaved Black Americans who were actually given land—only to have it returned to their enslavers.
https://t.co/30ilodrV0N
Listen to @AlexiaCampbell on @nprfreshair with host @TonyaMosley at 1 pm EST for a conversation about this groundbreaking series. https://t.co/7LFsOOsWep
NEW: 40 acres and a mule is largely known as a broken promise. What’s less known is that hundreds, perhaps even thousands, of former slaves did receive land grants—only to have them seized back.
https://t.co/7LFsOOsWep
24,000 acres on 34 plantations. 100 family trees. 41 living descendants. Here's how we tracked down the true story of 40 acres—America’s biggest attempt at reparations and infamous broken promise.
https://t.co/2lYXHreASl