Robert E. Pierre
Robert E. Pierre (born 1968 in Franklin, Louisiana) is a longtime reporter and editor at The Washington Post. Pierre has written articles on adult incarceration, juvenile justice and social justice, and he was one of 18 writer-contributors to an award-winning series of articles[1] for The Washington Post, later republished in an anthology as Being a Black Man: At the Corner of Progress and Peril.[2] He and fellow Post writer are co-authors of A Day Late and a Dollar Short: High Hopes and Deferred Dreams in Obama's "Post-Racial" America.[3]
Notes[]
- ^ "Being a Black Man", The Washington Post. Accessed 9-1-2012.
- ^ Kevin Merida, ed., Being a Black Man: At the Corner of Progress and Peril, 2007: Public Affairs, 384 pp., ISBN 1-58648-522-9.
- ^ Robert Pierre and Jon Jeter, A Day Late and a Dollar Short: High Hopes and Deferred Dreams in Obama's "Post-Racial" America, 2009: Wiley and Sons, Hoboken, N.J., 246 pp., ISBN 0-470-52066-3.
Categories:
- 1968 births
- Living people
- Journalists from Louisiana
- Writers from Louisiana
- People from Franklin, Louisiana
- African-American journalists
- 20th-century American journalists
- American male journalists
- 20th-century African-American people
- 21st-century African-American people
- American journalist, 1960s birth stubs
- American non-fiction writer stubs