Van Jones Popular Books

Van Jones Biography & Facts

Anthony Kapel "Van" Jones (born September 20, 1968) is an American political analyst, media personality, lawyer, author, and civil rights advocate. He is a three-time New York Times bestselling author, a CNN host and contributor, and an Emmy Award winner. Jones served as President Barack Obama's Special Advisor for Green Jobs in 2009 and a distinguished visiting fellow at Princeton University. He founded or co-founded several non-profit organizations, including the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Color of Change, and the Dream Corps. The Dream Corps is a social justice accelerator that operates three advocacy initiatives: Dream Corps Justice, Dream Corps Tech and Green for All. Jones has hosted or co-hosted CNN shows including Crossfire, The Messy Truth, The Van Jones Show and The Redemption Project with Van Jones. He is the author of The Green Collar Economy. He is the co-founder of Magic Labs Media LLC, a producer of the WEBBY Award-winning Messy Truth digital series and Emmy Award-winning The Messy Truth VR Experience with Van Jones. He is a regular CNN political commentator. Jones was formerly CEO of the REFORM Alliance, an initiative founded by Jay-Z and Meek Mill to transform the criminal justice system. He was also a longtime colleague of, and advisor to, musician Prince. Early life Anthony Kapel Jones and his twin sister Angela were born in Jackson, Tennessee, on September 20, 1968, to high school teacher Loretta Jean (née Kirkendoll) and middle school principal Willie Anthony Jones. His sister said that as a child, he was "the stereotypical geek—he just kind of lived up in his head a lot." Jones has said as a child he was "bookish and bizarre." His grandfather was a leader in the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church, and Jones sometimes accompanied him to religious conferences. He would sit all day listening to the adults "in these hot, sweaty black churches." Jones graduated from Jackson Central-Merry High School, a public high school in his hometown, in 1986. He earned his Bachelor of Science in communication and political science from the University of Tennessee at Martin (UT Martin). During this period, Jones also worked as an intern at The Jackson Sun (Tennessee), the Shreveport Times (Louisiana), and the Associated Press (Nashville bureau). He adopted the nickname "Van" when he was 17 and working at The Jackson Sun. At UT Martin, Jones helped to launch and lead a number of independent, campus-based publications. They included the Fourteenth Circle (University of Tennessee), the Periscope (Vanderbilt University), the New Alliance Project (statewide in Tennessee), and the Third Eye (Nashville's African-American community). Jones later credited UT Martin for preparing him for a larger life. Deciding against journalism, Jones moved to Connecticut to attend Yale Law School. In 1992, in the aftermath of the Rodney King beating and trial, he was among several law students selected by the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, based in San Francisco, to serve as legal observers to the protests triggered by the verdict. King had been beaten by police officers in an incident caught on camera. Three of the officers were acquitted and the jury deadlocked on the verdict of the fourth officer. Jones and others were arrested during the protests, but the district attorney later dropped the charges against Jones. The arrested protesters, including Jones, won a small legal settlement. Jones later said that "the incident deepened my disaffection with the system and accelerated my political radicalization". Jones was deeply affected by the trial and verdict. In an October 2005 interview, Jones said he had been "a rowdy nationalist on April 28th" before the King verdict was announced, but that by August 1992 he had become a communist. Jones's activism was also spurred by seeing the deep racial inequality in New Haven, Connecticut, particularly in prosecution of drug use. Jones has said, "I was seeing kids at Yale do drugs and talk about it openly, and have nothing happen to them or, if anything, get sent to rehab ... And then I was seeing kids three blocks away, in the housing projects, doing the same drugs, in smaller amounts, go to prison." After graduating from law school with his Juris Doctor in 1993, Jones moved to San Francisco, and according to his own words, "trying to be a revolutionary". He became affiliated with many left activists, and co-founded a socialist collective called Standing Together to Organize a Revolutionary Movement (STORM). It protested against police brutality, held study groups on the theories of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin, and aspired to a multi-racial socialist utopia. Career Early career Jones was affiliated with the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights, which had brought him to the city as a legal observer in 1992. In 1995, Jones initiated their project of Bay Area PoliceWatch, the region's only bar-certified hotline and lawyer-referral service for victims of police abuse. The hotline started receiving fifteen calls a day. Jones described the development of the project: "We designed a computer database, the first of its kind in the country, that allows us to track problem officers, problem precincts, problem practices, so at the click of a mouse we can now identify trouble spots and troublemakers", said Jones. "This has given us a tremendous advantage in trying to understand the scope and scale of the problem. Now, obviously, just because somebody calls and says, 'Officer so-and-so did something to me,' doesn't mean it actually happened, but if you get two, four, six phone calls about the same officer, then you begin to see a pattern. It gives you a chance to try and take affirmative steps. Ella Baker Center for Human Rights By 1996, Jones founded a new umbrella NGO, the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. He operated out of "a closet-like office" within the space of Eva Paterson, executive director of the Lawyers' Committee, and used his personal computer. In 1996–1997, Jones and PoliceWatch led a campaign to gain the firing of officer Marc Andaya from the San Francisco Police Department. Andaya was accused of excessive force in the in-custody death in 1995 of Aaron Williams, an unarmed black man who fought on the street with several officers. There was community outrage about his death and pressure on the department to bring justice against Andaya, who witnesses saw kick Williams in the head. In the year after the incident, the press reported that Andaya had a record of incidents of misconduct in the 1980s. The San Francisco Chronicle reported in addition that Andaya was named in 10 complaints between 1983 and 1993, eight of them allegedly for misuse of physical force, when he was a policeman with the Oakland Police Department. Investigation revealed more brutality complaints in Oakland and two lawsuits against him; the San Francisco Police Commission voted to fire Andaya in June 1997 for falsifying his application to the departm.... Discover the Van Jones popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Van Jones books.

Best Seller Van Jones Books of 2024

  • Van v. Jones synopsis, comments

    Van v. Jones

    Tenth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals

    BOGGS, C. J., delivered the opinion of the court. COOK, J. (p. 22), delivered a separate concurring opinion. MOORE, J. (pp. 2324), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.

  • Klopp synopsis, comments

    Klopp

    Anthony Quinn

    'A love letter to the great man himself.' The Times 'Immensely readable.' Observer 'Delightful.' Mail on Sunday 'Highly enjoyable.' Guardian 'Informative and emotive.' ...

  • Jones v. Van Benthuysen synopsis, comments

    Jones v. Van Benthuysen

    United States Supreme Court

    Mr. Assistant AttorneyGeneral Smith for the plaintiff in error. Mr. John D. Rouse and Mr. William Grant, contra.

  • My Turn synopsis, comments

    My Turn

    Norman Wisdom

    Norman Wisdom's early years could easily have come straight from the pages of a Dickens novel. Left by their frightened mother, illtreated by a brutal father, Norman and his br...

  • Super Visible synopsis, comments

    Super Visible

    Margaret Stohl

    Inspired by the hit podcast The Women of Marvel and cowritten by the #1 New York Times bestselling coauthor of Beautiful Creatures, this eyeopening and engaging book celebrates the...

  • Beyond the Messy Truth synopsis, comments

    Beyond the Messy Truth

    Van Jones

    NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER  A passionate manifesto that exposes hypocrisy on both sides of the political divide and points a way out of the tribalism that is tearing Ameri...

  • Joe Dolan synopsis, comments

    Joe Dolan

    Ronan Casey

    Growing up in poor circumstances in the midlands town of Mullingar might seem an unlikely start for a musical superstar, but that's exactly the journey Joe Dolan travelled in his a...

  • Stronger synopsis, comments

    Stronger

    Gareth Thomas

    You’re not born with resilience but you can find it on the journey with hard work, belief and the help of those around you.Gareth Thomas has learned to push on even when everything...

  • Strictly Me synopsis, comments

    Strictly Me

    Mark Ramprakash

    Mark Ramprakash is arguably the greatest English batsman of his generation, but he is also an enigma. He is among an elite group of players who have scored 100 firstclass centuries...

  • Rest in Pieces synopsis, comments

    Rest in Pieces

    Bess Lovejoy

    A “marvelously macabre” (Kirkus Reviews) history of the bizarre afterlives of corpses of the celebrated and notorious dead.For some of the most influential figures in history, deat...

  • Dagboek van Julia Jones - Boek 3 synopsis, comments

    Dagboek van Julia Jones - Boek 3

    Katrina Kahler

    Julia Jones' Dagboek Boek 3 – Mijn geheime droom door Katrina KahlerEen dagboek voor meiden van 9 tot 12 jaar over vriendschap, pesten en het leren opkomen voor jezelf. ...

  • John P. Van Ness and William Jones, Plaintiffs in Error v. the Bank of the United States synopsis, comments

    John P. Van Ness and William Jones, Plaintiffs in Error v. the Bank of the United States

    United States Supreme Court

    This case comes before the Court upon a writ of error, directed to the judges of the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, sitting for the county of Washington. It is an acti...

  • How to Create Comics the Marvel Way synopsis, comments

    How to Create Comics the Marvel Way

    Mark Waid

    The new, Marvelapproved, ultimate guide for modern comic creators! Marvel Comics and modern industry legend Mark Waid takes creators and fans on an allnew journey of creative disc...

  • The Mirror and the Palette synopsis, comments

    The Mirror and the Palette

    Jennifer Higgie

    A dazzlingly original and ambitious book on the history of female selfportraiture by one of today's most wellrespected art critics.Her story weaves in and out of time and plac...

  • The Perils of Extremism synopsis, comments

    The Perils of Extremism

    Jason Van Tatenhove

    An explosive behind the scenes look at the Oath Keepers: what makes them tick, who they are, and what they REALLY stand for. The Oath Keepers first made a name for themselves with ...

  • Gargantua and Pantagruel synopsis, comments

    Gargantua and Pantagruel

    Francois Rabelais & M. A. Screech

    The dazzling and exuberant moral stories of Rabelais (c. 14711553) expose human follies with their mischievous and often obscene humour, while intertwining the realistic with carni...

  • The Seekers synopsis, comments

    The Seekers

    John Densmore & Viggo Mortensen

    The iconic drummer of The Doors investigates his own relationship with creativity and explores the meaning of artistry with other artists and performers in this compelling and spel...

  • Wayward synopsis, comments

    Wayward

    Vashti Bunyan

    'Magical and transporting . . . Wayward proves that Bunyan has lived the best possible life, on her own idiosyncratic terms'Maggie O'Farrell'A gorgeous account of outsiderness and ...