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- Anti-poverty crusader Gene Nichol takes on North Carolina's 'Indecent Assembly'
Rebekah Barber, Facing South, April 16, 2020
In his latest book, "Indecent Assembly," UNC law professor and anti-poverty scholar Gene Nichol offers lessons from North Carolina politics for these turbulent times.
- Faculty profile, UNC School of Law
Boyd Tinsley Distinguished Professor of Law
- GENE NICHOL: Trump's about loving to hate your enemies
Gene R. Nichol, WRAL Opinion, February 13, 2020
As Mark deWolfe Howe wrote in The Garden and the Wilderness, “when the imagination of Roger Williams built the wall of separation” it was not because he feared the church would impermissibly extend its reach. It was, rather, “dread of the worldly corruptions which might consume the churches if sturdy fences against the wilderness were not maintained.” Williams would have been horrified by last week’s National Prayer Breakfast.
- Gene Nichol Archives at the Civitas Institute
- Gene R. Nichol Twenty-Sixth President, William & Mary
Gene R. Nichol became the 26th president of William & Mary on July 1, 2005.
- NC Bookwatch Bonus: Q&A with John Grisham & Gene Nichol (12:35)
UNC-TV, August 27, 2019
Filmed on location in Chapel Hill as part of a special event with Orange Literacy, authors John Grisham & Gene Nichol took questions from the audience after their conversation about Mr. Nichol's book, "The Faces of Poverty in North Carolina."
- NC People: Gene Nichol, Director of the Center on Poverty Work and Opportunity (26 min)
Host William Friday interviews Gene Nichhol for North Carolina People, April 27, 2012
Gene Nichol is Boyd Tinsley Distinguished professor of law and Director of the Center on Poverty Work and Opportunity at the University of North Carolina. He teaches courses in constitutional law, federal courts and civil rights.
- The Faces of Poverty in North Carolina: Stories from Our Invisible Citizens
Gene R. Nichol, UNC Press, November 2018
Since 2012, Gene R. Nichol has traveled the length of North Carolina, conducting hundreds of interviews with poor people and those working to alleviate the worst of their circumstances. Here their voices challenge all of us to see what is too often invisible, to look past partisan divides and preconceived notions, and to seek change. Only with a full commitment as a society, Nichol argues, will we succeed in truly ending poverty, which he calls our greatest challenge.
- Wikipedia entry