Name Dropping
Among the media outlets covering the financial crisis, I鈥檝e been partial to the work of The American Prospect and Mother Jones. We often point out relevant () articles by , who is a staff writer at the American Prospect and a fellow with us . , who we featured in an event earlier this year, was recently awarded the Harry Chapin Media Award for an on how housing speculators are undermining revitalization efforts.
has also produced some , especially focused on the politics at play in the financial reform debates. Noam is a senior editor at the New Republic and recently was named a Schwartz fellow at the 麻豆果冻传媒 Foundation. We are happy to have him in-house. And then there is , author of the and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, who has a background in financial services and has been helpful in explaining for his readers the mechanics of how the financial sector actually operates. Mike will be joining us for an on revisiting policy assumptions in the wake of the Great Recession.
At Mother Jones, I wanted to highlight the work of , who has been on the beat for a while now and has been monitoring what is at stake in both the legislative battle to pass financial reform and now implementation. Here is a link to , which explains some of the recent controversy around foreclosures. At issue is role that servicers play in creating an assembly line-like foreclosure process. That鈥檚 good if you want to process as many foreclosures through the system as possible, but not so good if you want to make sure proper steps are taken to determine who exactly owns title to the home. As Andy says, it is kind of a big mess right now and just the type of situation that the new consumer financial protection bureau should be called on to address.
Keep up the good work, guys.