Joy Zarembka is the Associate Director for the Institute for Policy Studies and oversees the financial and administrative aspects of the organization. During 2010-2011, she served as the Interim Director of the organization while Director John Cavanagh took a sabbatical. Prior to her position as Associate Director, Joy served as Operations Director for the Institute. She was formerly involved in programmatic work at IPS, serving as the Director of the Break the Chain Campaign project, a coalition of legal and social service agencies, ethnically based organizations, social action groups and individuals devoted to protecting the rights of the migrant domestic working community. She has testified as an expert witness in over a dozen civil and criminal cases involving worker exploitation and modern-day slavery.

Joy M. Zarembka was “born, bred and buttered” in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She received her undergraduate degree from Haverford College and Master’s degree from Yale University in International Relations. In February 2002, Joy was named one of the Women’s Information Networks’s Young Women of Achievement for the year. Her book, “The Pigment of Your Imagination: Mixed Race in a Global Society” remains number #1,201,456 on the Amazon bestseller list with little chance of budging from that coveted spot.

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A Moment for Contemplation

The nation is now debating whether there is a connection between this vitriolic rhetoric and the attempted assassination of Giffords, in which 20 were murdered or wounded in Tucson.

Unconventional Wisdom: No Secrets at IPS

News from the Institute for Policy Studies: Ideas into Action for Peace, Justice, and the Environment

Glenn Beck Attacks IPS

Fox commentator Glenn Beck cites the IPS “Inside-Outside” strategy for social change we describe in our annual report as sinister, bizarrely reminiscent of 1940s Czechoslovakia.

Remembering Ronni

In 1976, Ronni Karpen Moffitt was killed on her way to work as the car she was riding in succumbed to a car bomb planted by agents of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.

Progressives in the Age of Obama

How the Institute takes advantage of new opportunities while remaining true to its social justice values.

Still Waiting for a ‘Post-Racial’ America

Mulitcultural celebrations of Obama’s victory show the U.S. is hungry for hope and change. But we are far from healing our racial wounds.

Calming the Racial Storm

Obama’s response to the Wright crisis is characteristically clever.

Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

Being comfortably biracial means that Obama moves in even more varied racial settings, observing and hearing what many others do not.

The Pigment of Your Imagination: Mixed Race in a Global Society

By combining vivid anecdotes of her travels, historical context, and oral histories from mixed-race families, Joy Zarembka examines race and racial identity.

Vice President of Planning and Innovation

    Burundi, Immigration Policy

    Remembering Ronni

    The Asheville (NC) Citizen-Times | September 17, 2010

    Still Waiting for a ‘Post-Racial’ America

    Evening Times (Little Falls NY) | December 12, 2009

    Still Waiting for a ‘Post-Racial’ America

    The (Stroudsburg PA) Pocono Record | December 2, 2009

    Still Waiting for a ‘Post-Racial’ America

    The Asheville (NC) Citizen-Times | December 4, 2008

    Calming the Racial Storm

    The Seattle Post-Intelligencer | April 2, 2008

    Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

    The La Crosse (WI) Tribune | March 31, 2008

    Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

    Philadelphia Inquirer | March 31, 2008

    Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

    The Times Herald Record | March 29, 2008

    Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

    The (Bluffton SC) Island Packet | March 27, 2008

    Racial Confessions in a Biracial World

    The Belleville News-Democrat | March 27, 2008

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