Community organizations allege that St. James Parish has discriminated against Black residents by allowing chemical facilities in majority Black areas, dubbed “Cancer Alley”
Headed into the holidays, union workers at PushBlack, one of the nation’s few Black-led nonprofit media organizations, laid off six of its workers
Across the Northeast this month, states will mark the complicated history of anointing a singular Black leader to represent their community, a settler colonial tradition that persists today
The Biden administration sued Tennessee over targeting people living with HIV, most of whom were Black, but Trump has canceled potential future efforts in other states
As the administration unfurls wide-ranging attacks on racial justice, leaders in the reparations movement are considering different strategies to ensure the longevity of their work
Anti-fatness is anti-blackness. In this way, fatness, as with blackness, is always and already criminalized, penalized, objectified, and marginalized
Gov. Mike Parson’s racist and hypocritical pardon history reflects the U.S. criminal justice system’s insidious bedrock of white supremacy and Black dehumanization
The mass dismissal of Black educators as part of the landmark case was cataclysmic for Black education—and the impact is still felt today
The FBI recently released it’s annual hate crimes report, but much of the data is severely underreported.
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