Posted inCulture, History, LGBTQ, Politics & Policy

As Chicago Celebrates Jesse Jackson’s Life, Those He Inspired Confront What’s Next

Jeanette Taylor, the alderwoman of Chicago’s 20th Ward, first met the Rev. Jesse Jackson in 2012. At the time, she was an organizer with the Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, and her executive director insisted that she meet him. Taylor was nervous: She knew his national stature, his speeches, his mystique — and “sometimes when you […]

Posted inCulture, History, Politics & Policy

Remembering the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s Impact and Civil Rights Leadership

The Rev. Jesse Jackson — a grandfather, husband, and storied civil rights icon — has passed away. Jackson died peacefully Tuesday morning, surrounded by family, according to a statement issued by the Rainbow People United to Save Humanity (PUSH) Coalition. Last fall, Jackson was hospitalized at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, where he received “good […]

Posted inHealth Equity, Partner Content, Transportation, Voices of Change

How Rosa Parks’ Legacy Inspired a New Fight Over Who Could Ride the Bus

Originally published by The 19th Decades after her act of defiance, Rosa Parks galvanized a cadre of activists to protest their own conditions and, though the scope of her legacy for them is still coming into focus, it remains just as powerful. They were fighting for disability access, and, like Parks, they used public transportation […]

Posted inFederal Overhaul, Politics & Policy

DEI Didn’t Start With ‘Wokeness’ — What Trump Gets Wrong

Federal Overhaul is a multipart series that explores the impact of the Trump administration’s restructuring of the federal government on Black communities. President Donald Trump and his allies have turned diversity, equity, and inclusion into a catchall slur. The administration claims to be eliminating DEI, but what it’s doing is conflating issues, attacking long-established civil rights […]

Posted inHistory

The Renewed Urgency of Preserving Black History

Black Voters and the Fight for Democracy is a multipart series that explores the stakes of the 2024 election for our communities. This project was produced as part of the Advancing Democracy Fellowship. Bold. Assertive. Unafraid of questioning people or circumstances. That’s how 82-year-old Rosita Stevens-Holsey describes her “Aunt Pauli.” “Even if she was talking […]

Posted inHistory, Policing, Politics & Policy

Gaza, Student Protest, and the Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement

Looking at the images might make you feel as if you’ve stepped back in time. Late on Tuesday, New York City police clad in riot gear entered Columbia University and removed dozens of peaceful pro-Palestinian demonstrators, leading them away with their hands zip-tied behind their backs. Over the past week, hundreds of college students calling […]

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