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Viewing 31–60 of 187 results.
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1918 Flu Pandemic Upended Long-standing Social Inequalities – At Least for a Time
The first flu children encounter shapes their immune systems. This had a surprising effect on Black and white mortality rates in 1918.
by
Elizabeth Wrigley-Field
,
Martin Eiermann
via
The Conversation
on
December 16, 2022
What Asian Immigrants, Seeking the American Dream, Found in Southern California Suburbs
How new arrivals remade the east San Gabriel Valley — and assimilated in it.
by
James Zarsadiaz
via
Los Angeles Times
on
October 17, 2022
L.A. Backstory: The History Behind the City Council’s Racist Tirades
Where did the behind-closed-doors racist garbage from some leading Los Angeles elected officials come from?
by
Harold Meyerson
via
The American Prospect
on
October 13, 2022
Living in White Spaces: Suburbia's Hidden Histories
The Black women and men who worked and slept in white homes are mostly invisible in the histories of suburbia.
by
David S. Rotenstein
via
The Metropole
on
October 10, 2022
The Mapping of Race in America
Visualizing the legacy of slavery and redlining, 1860 to the present.
by
Anika Fenn Gilman
,
Catherine Discenza
,
John Hessler
via
Library of Congress
on
July 28, 2022
partner
The 1950 Census, a Treasure Trove of Data, Was the Last of its Kind
Unveiling the 1950 Census reveals the value of these types of records.
by
Dan Bouk
via
Made By History
on
April 1, 2022
The Stories of the Bronx
"Urban Legends: The South Bronx in Representation and Ruin" is a vibrant cultural history that looks beyond pervasive narratives of cultural renaissance and urban neglect.
by
Emily Raboteau
via
New York Review of Books
on
March 17, 2022
North from Mexico
The first black settlers in the U.S. West.
by
Herbert G. Ruffin II
via
BlackPast
on
February 9, 2022
partner
How Prop. 187 Transformed the Immigration Debate and California Politics
Much of the anti-immigrant rhetoric and policy in the news today is similar to a movement that swept the country 20 years ago.
via
Retro Report
on
December 3, 2021
End the Generation Wars
Lazy assumptions about young and old cloud our politics.
by
James Chappel
via
The New Republic
on
November 15, 2021
It’s Time to Stop Talking About “Generations”
From boomers to zoomers, the concept gets social history all wrong.
by
Louis Menand
via
The New Yorker
on
October 7, 2021
The Census Has Revealed A More Multiracial U.S. One Reason? Cheaper DNA Tests
DNA testing kits have shifted the way both researchers and the public think about race and identity. This shift is evident in the 2020 U.S. Census data.
by
Hansi Lo Wang
via
NPR
on
August 28, 2021
As American as Family Separation
Though the cruelties of the Trump administration’s “Zero Tolerance” policy were unique, they were part of an American tradition of taking children from parents.
by
Hari Kunzru
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 9, 2021
Mapping and Making Gangland: A Legacy of Redlining and Enjoining Gang Neighbourhoods in Los Angeles
How race-based legacies of disinvestment initiated by New Deal Era redlining regimes were followed by decades of over-policing at the scale of the neighborhood.
by
Stefano Bloch
,
Susan A. Phillips
via
Urban Studies
on
May 13, 2021
House Arrest
How an automated algorithm constrained Congress for a century.
by
Dan Bouk
via
Data & Society
on
April 14, 2021
partner
Trump’s Border Wall Belongs to Biden Now
A border policy divorced from history can’t do what policymakers want.
by
Kevan Q. Malone
via
Made By History
on
April 11, 2021
What Is Happening to the Republicans?
In becoming the party of Trump, the G.O.P. confronts the kind of existential crisis that has destroyed American parties in the past.
by
Jelani Cobb
via
The New Yorker
on
March 8, 2021
The Great Migration
1915 marked the beginning of the largest domestic migration in American history. Hundreds of thousands of Black Americans began relocating north.
by
Will Donnell
via
wcd.fyi
on
February 20, 2021
The Politics of a Second Gilded Age
Mass inequality in the Gilded Age thrived on identity-based partisanship, helping extinguish the fires of class rage. In 2021, we’re headed down the same path.
by
Matthew Karp
via
Jacobin
on
February 17, 2021
Immigration Hard-Liner Files Reveal 40-Year Bid Behind Trump's Census Obsession
The Trump administration tried and failed to accomplish a count of unauthorized immigrants to reshape Congress, the Electoral College and public policy.
by
Hansi Lo Wang
via
NPR
on
February 15, 2021
The New National American Elite
America is now ruled by a single elite class rather than by local patrician smart sets competing with each other for money and power.
by
Michael Lind
via
Tablet
on
January 20, 2021
partner
Southern Journey: The Migrations of the American South 1790-2020
The maps embrace everyone —free and enslaved, from the first national census of the late 18th century to the sophisticated surveys of the early 21st century.
by
Ed Ayers
,
Justin Madron
,
Nathaniel Ayers
via
American Panorama
on
January 1, 2021
Degeneration Nation
How a Gilded Age best seller shaped American race discourse.
by
Adam Morris
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
December 14, 2020
Georgia On My Mind
The suburbs of Atlanta, where I grew up in an era still scarred by segregation, have transformed in ways that helped deliver Joe Biden the presidency.
by
Shirley W. Thompson
via
New York Review of Books
on
November 19, 2020
“We Don’t Want the Program”: On How Tech Can’t Fix Democracy
“Start-ups: they need philosophers, political theorists, historians, poets. Critics.”
by
Jill Lepore
,
Danah Boyd
via
Public Books
on
November 2, 2020
City Sketches and the Census
Life across the United States in 1880.
by
Bailey DeSimone
via
Library of Congress
on
October 20, 2020
Circulating the Facts of Slavery
How the American Anti-Slavery Almanac became an influential best seller.
by
Teresa A. Goddu
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
July 28, 2020
Trump Doesn’t Understand Today’s Suburbs—And Neither Do You
Suburbs are getting more diverse, but that doesn't mean they’re woke.
by
Thomas J. Sugrue
,
Zack Stanton
via
Politico Magazine
on
June 8, 2020
The Evolution of the American Census
What changes each decade, what stays the same, and what do the questions say about American culture and society?
by
Alec Barrett
via
The Pudding
on
March 30, 2020
100 Years Ago, Congress Threw Out Results of the Census
The results of the 1920 census kicked off a bitter, decadelong political squabble. Could the same happen again in 2020?
by
Walter Reynolds Farley
via
The Conversation
on
February 4, 2020
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