Erik Nielson is Professor of
Liberal Arts at the
University of Richmond who has become well known as an expert in the use of
rap music as evidence in criminal trials.[1][2][3] His book Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics, and Guilt in America, with co-author Andrea Dennis, was published in November 2019 and received the Hugh Hefner Foundation First Amendment Award in October 2020.[4][5] He was a consulting producer and interviewed for the documentary As We Speak: Rap Music on Trial, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2024 and distributed by Paramount + starting on February 27, 2024.[6][7] He has served as an expert in court cases, and his testimony has been cited to exclude rap lyric evidence.[8]
Nielson's research focuses on the relationship between
African-American culture and
policing, as well as the relationship between hip hop and politics.[9][10][11] He has written for the New York Times and other mainstream news outlets on these issues.[12][13][14][15][16][17][18] He was the lead author of three amicus briefs with the
US Supreme Court, two of which were jointly submitted with his frequent collaborator,
Killer Mike.[19][20][11][21] Nielson and
Travis L. Gosa edited The Hip Hop & Obama Reader.[22] Nielson was a featured participant in WRIC News' series
Richmond and Race, a discussion among community leaders about race relations and police accountability in Richmond, VA.