Posted inBlack Migration, Health

Some Black Women Say the Best Thing They Did for Their Health Was Leave America

This story was produced as part of the Association of Health Care Journalists’ German Work Study Group, with support from the Commonwealth Fund. BERLIN – Denise Banks-Grasedyck sat inside a bustling food court full of currywurst and German cuisines in Potsdamer Platz, one of Berlin’s largest shopping plazas.  The Louisiana native has lived in the […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Climate Change, Economic Development, Environmental Justice, Housing, Politics & Policy

The Black Mecca’s Climate Plan Is Costing Black Atlanta Residents Their Homes

This is the first story in a series on “climate gentrification” in Black neighborhoods. Support for this series was provided by The Neal Peirce Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting journalism on ways to make cities and their larger regions work better for all people. ATLANTA — By the time Atlanta hosts a World Cup […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather

As Altadena’s Trees Fell, So Did the Roots of a Black LA Neighborhood

Photos by Grace Mahoney This story was published in partnership with High Country News. Altadena used to disappear under the trees. Adonis Jones’ neighborhood was once defined by thick oaks and pines, their canopy guarding winding trails where Black cowboys rode, shaping his childhood memories. Now, standing on the bare site of his future master […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Politics & Policy

Deportations of African Migrants Triple Under Trump’s Second Term

African migrants in the United States are being arrested and deported at rapidly escalating rates under President Donald Trump’s second term, even though most have no criminal record.  Deportations of people from African countries are on pace to nearly triple this year compared with the annual average during the Biden administration, according to a Capital […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Culture, Extreme Weather, History

Hurricane Katrina Displaced a Generation — and Led to a Renaissance in Houston

HOUSTON — On a recent Sunday afternoon, tears welled in Sharon Becnel’s eyes as she heard her now 34-year-old daughter reminisce about the scrapbook she lost to Hurricane Katrina.  Inside the pages were Ronisha Johnson’s childhood dreams of becoming an actress and winning a big case as a lawyer. She had only packed for a […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Criminal Justice, Incarceration, News, Policing

Black Undocumented Migrants Face Far Higher Deportation Rates

One of the most underreported aspects of life for Black undocumented migrants can be summed up in one statistic: They’re deported at a rate four times more often than their numbers would suggest, according to an analysis of federal data by the Black Alliance for Just Immigration. The analysis showed that while Black migrants make […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Partner Content

Black Americans Find a Racism Respite Through ‘Blaxit’

This article was originally published by The Emancipator, a nonprofit digital magazine that reimagines the nation’s first abolitionist newspapers for a new day. Twanna Hines watched her television in shock on Jan. 6, 2021, from her Washington, D.C., home as hundreds of people who believed the lie that Donald Trump had won the 2020 election […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Elections, Politics & Policy, Voting

Understanding Phoenix’s Complex — and Growing — Black Voter Bloc

PHOENIX — Over the past two decades, Black people disillusioned by the inequalities that have defined life in other states have moved to Arizona in droves, searching for more opportunities. Still, as transplants have found hope in the battleground state, the ability to build political power has struggled to take root.  The state has emerged […]

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