#RaceClass Podcast Covers the Fight to Save America’s Peacemakers
Julius Nam Julius Nam

#RaceClass Podcast Covers the Fight to Save America’s Peacemakers

On January 17, 2026, Jonathan Feingold, professor of law at the Boston University School of Law, published an interview of Julius Nam, former component head of CRS, on Feingold’s podcast, #RaceClass. The interview ranged from recent efforts to restore CRS, the history and statutory mission of CRS, and Nam’s his firsthand perspectives on the Trump Administration’s approach to civil rights and efforts to eliminate CRS.

Read More
Former CRS Director Grande Lum Speaks to ABC7 Bay Area about the Dismantling of CRS
Julius Nam Julius Nam

Former CRS Director Grande Lum Speaks to ABC7 Bay Area about the Dismantling of CRS

Grande Lum, director of CRS in 2012-2017 and the current director of the Gould Center for Conflict Resolution at Stanford Law School, spoke with ABC7 Bay Area’s Kristen Sze about the elimination of CRS on January 14, 2026. Lum talked about how CRS’s mediation and conciliation work would have helped with de-escalation of conflicts as protests and civil unrest in response to the federal government’s aggressive immigration enforcement work throughout the United States. The video of the interview is 6 minutes and 20 seconds long.

Read More
CBS News Highlights DOJ’s “Missed Opportunity” in Closing CRS as Protests Widen Across the Nation
Julius Nam Julius Nam

CBS News Highlights DOJ’s “Missed Opportunity” in Closing CRS as Protests Widen Across the Nation

"Talk about some terrible timing," said Scott McFarlane of CBS News on WCCO, a CBS station in Minnesota, as he reported on the shuttering of CRS on January 12, 2026, as protests against ICE’s aggressive enforcement actions escalated across the U.S. "Any number of former Justice Department officials will say this is a missed opportunity," MacFarlane continued in the 3 minute, 14 second segment. "This is a problem that could bear itself out not just in our area, but in cities nationwide in the years to come."

Read More
“Breakthrough” FY 2026 Justice Department Funding Bill Includes $20 Million for CRS
Julius Nam Julius Nam

“Breakthrough” FY 2026 Justice Department Funding Bill Includes $20 Million for CRS

Congressional appropriators released today a FY 2026 funding bill for the U.S. Department of Justice that includes $20 million for CRS. This bill is expected to be voted by the House of Representatives this week.

It remains critically important that CRS be fully funded and staffed as a separate, stand-alone agency within the Justice Department, so that CRS can fulfill all of its statutory functions.

Read More
Senator Blumenthal Calls for Restoration of CRS
Julius Nam Julius Nam

Senator Blumenthal Calls for Restoration of CRS

In a December 18, 2025 letter to Senate appropriators, Senator Richard Blumenthal called for CRS’s restoration, urging his colleagues to show the Senate’s commitment to protecting our religious institutions and minority communities by reestablishing and fully funding CRS.

Read More
Coalition of 102 Civil Rights and Community Groups Urges Federal Court to Halt Justice Department’s Unlawful Elimination of the Community Relations Service
Julius Nam Julius Nam

Coalition of 102 Civil Rights and Community Groups Urges Federal Court to Halt Justice Department’s Unlawful Elimination of the Community Relations Service


The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and 101 additional civil rights, faith, education, disability rights, and community organizations today filed an amicus brief in a Boston federal court—urging the court to grant a preliminary injunction blocking the unlawful shuttering of CRS

Read More
“CRS Did the Impossible. Now It Is Gone. Can Anyone Else Fill Its Shoes?”
Julius Nam Julius Nam

“CRS Did the Impossible. Now It Is Gone. Can Anyone Else Fill Its Shoes?”

In a powerful substack post, Heidi and Guy Burgess offer a compelling narrative of CRS’s historical contributions to America, why its closing matters, and what the Burgesses, the Civil Rights Mediation Oral History Project, and the Divided Community Project are doing to keep alive CRS’s institutional and experiential memory.

Read More