A recent ICE raid revealed the rock and the hard place that New York City’s Chinese laborers are stuck between
The state has one of the highest eviction rates in the U.S., and Black women and children are disproportionately the target
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
When the federal government shutdown halted SNAP benefits, Indigenous leaders amped up efforts to share traditional food and knowledge within communities
In this Q&A with Prism, members of EqualHealth’s Campaign Against Racism discuss their strategies for surviving authoritarianism while working to sustain the well-being of their communities across the globe
A heat vulnerability index created by Northwestern University could direct environmental resources to Chicago’s most impacted neighborhoods, but it’s locked behind bureaucracy
A movement in Canada for the Yukon River to be granted legal personhood is reaching across the U.S. border
Building on the legacy of Black-owned bookstores, Charis Books, Red Emma’s, and other booksellers serve as intellectual and cultural hubs during rising authoritarianism
The Department of Justice claims that a loan forgiveness initiative for educators of color discriminates against white teachers. Local educators say it’s a needed effort to bridge a diversity gap in Providence classrooms
Through the stories of women who lost their husbands during the genocide, we can understand real solidarity in struggle
An estimated 125,000 immigrant girls and women in Canada are at risk of female genital mutilation, but health care systems don’t view reconstructive surgery as “necessary“
My uncle was one of the Palestinian hostages Israel released in the ceasefire deal. He returned to a broken land, carrying unspeakable scars
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