Posted inHistory, Politics & Policy

Ghana’s President Calls Slave Trade ‘Greatest Crime,’ Pushes U.N. for Reparations

In a first coordinated African-led effort at the United Nations, leaders have declared the Transatlantic Slave Trade as “the greatest crime against humanity” and called for reparations.   African leaders recently took the global stage at the U.N.’s General Assembly in New York, where Ghana’s president, John Dramani Mahama, announced plans to submit the first formal […]

Posted inFood Access, Politics & Policy

For 30 Years, a Report Tracked Hunger in America. Now It’s Been Canceled

After three decades of tracking food insecurity, understanding the reality of Americans without access to reliable food may become more difficult due to the discontinuation of a federal survey. The Household Food Security Report is an annual, national survey that monitors the severity of food insecurity in U.S. households. The United States Department of Agriculture […]

Posted inPolitics & Policy

Calls for ‘New Blood’ Grow at Congressional Black Caucus Gathering

WASHINGTON — Twenty-two-year-old Dequavius Pitts was excited to be at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Annual Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C. The recent Georgia Southern University graduate is interning in the city, and curious to see how panelists discussed issues such as LGBTQ rights. Pitts can talk about his concerns with more seasoned Black members of […]

Posted inHigher Education, Politics & Policy

Black Students Confront Right-Wing Visitors as HBCU Security Tensions Grow

It took less than 30 minutes for white men with signs that read “Deport All Illegals Now” and “DEI Should Be Illegal” to know they weren’t welcome on Tennessee State University’s campus.  The conservative group was quickly escorted off campus by law enforcement as Black students shouted phrases like, “Go, get out of here,” and […]

Posted inHigher Education, Politics & Policy

Black Professors on Turning Point’s Watch List Face Harassment On and Off Campus

As the news spread of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination two weeks ago, a student in Professor A.D. Carson’s “Black Voice” class made sure the room door was locked.  The University of Virginia professor had told them in passing that he was on the Professor Watch List, a website created by Turning Point USA, a […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Politics & Policy

How a $5 Billion Federal Project Could Sink the Lower Ninth Ward Forever

Willie Calhoun knows how to live with water. His home, cradled between the Mississippi River and a patchwork of canals, is split by the surging, ever-present current. But it wasn’t always that way in the Ninth Ward. Before the largest canal known as the Industrial Canal was built, the stretch of land between the river […]

Posted inCriminal Justice, Partner Content, Politics & Policy

Fact Check: Social Media Said Salt Trucks Were Used to Block ICE Agents in Chicago. This Is What Really Happened.

It sounds like a bit of poetic justice, street-protest style: there have been widespread reports on social media that activists opposed to mass deportation raids were using trucks loaded with rock salt, which is typically used to clear frozen roads, to obstruct the work of agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the organization that is, […]

Posted inPolitics & Policy

ICE Is Stepping Up Raids. Know Your Rights Before They Knock.

Federal immigration agents have begun stepped-up enforcement in Chicago, making the nation’s third-largest city the latest focal point in the Trump administration’s efforts to deport undocumented immigrants.  The details are few, but the endeavor — known as “Operation Midway Blitz” — is a part of President Donald Trump’s dispute with Democratic mayors and “sanctuary cities.” […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice, Politics & Policy

Soot, Sickness, and Silence: A Black Louisiana Community Is Still Struggling After an Explosion

ROSELAND, La. — For 11 days after an oil and lubricant factory blew up less than a mile from her home, Millie Simmons could not stand outside for more than 10 minutes at a time.  “I could hardly breathe,” the 58-year-old child care worker said outside her home on Sept. 4. Soot and an oily […]

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