Major G. Coleman is a law professor and a political economist at St. Thomas University School of Law in Florida. He received his BA and JD from the University of Maryland, AM and PhD from the University of Chicago, and LLM and SJD from the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University School of Law. He is the 2024 recipient of the Gertie and John Witte Prize in Law and Christianity.
""Let's do the math. What has been the cost of historical discrimination against black Americans, and what would be the cost of atonement? What are the odds of enacting policies whose economic scope is commensurate with the size of the problem, given the stark opposition by whites to economically minor policies that have been enacted in the past? The math is sobering, but the analysis is trenchant."" --Frank R. Baumgartner, Richard J. Richardson Distinguished Professor of Political Science, UNC-Chapel Hill ""Major Coleman offers a passionate, perceptive, and persuasive case that America is paying massive and unnecessary financial, cultural, moral, spiritual, and emotional costs for failing to end racism for good and to grant racial equality to all. Using his impressive skills as a legal scholar, social scientist, and man of faith, Coleman documents in detail how blatantly unjust, hopelessly inefficient, and spiritually bankrupt it is for us not live up to our founding ideas of liberty, justice, equality for all."" --John Witte Jr., director, Center for the Study of Law and Religion, Emory University