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Bryan Stevenson Explains How It Feels To Grow Up Black Amid Confederate Monuments
"I think we have to increase our shame — and I don't think shame is a bad thing."
by
Ezra Klein
,
Bryan Stevenson
via
Vox
on
May 24, 2017
The GOP’s Long History With Black Colleges
Could President Trump actually win over the leaders of historically black colleges and universities?
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
,
Theodore R. Johnson III
via
Politico Magazine
on
February 27, 2017
Burning 'Brown' to the Ground
In many Southern states, "Brown v. Board of Education" fueled decades of resistance to school integration.
by
Carol Anderson
via
Teaching Tolerance
on
October 1, 2016
Why Busing Failed
Getting the history of “busing” right enables us to see more clearly how school segregation and educational inequality continued in the decades after Brown.
by
Matt Delmont
via
Why Busing Failed: Race, Media, and the National Resistance to School Desegregation
on
March 6, 2016
"Jim Crow Must Go"
Thousands of New York City students staged a one-day boycott to protest segregation – and it barely made the history books.
by
Matt Delmont
via
Salon
on
February 3, 2016
How a Young Joe Biden Turned Liberals Against Integration
Forty years ago, the Senate supported school busing—until a 32-year-old changed his mind.
by
Jason Sokol
via
Politico Magazine
on
August 4, 2015
The Real Origins of the Religious Right
They’ll tell you it was abortion. Sorry, the historical record’s clear: It was segregation.
by
Randall Balmer
via
Politico Magazine
on
May 27, 2014
‘Brown v. Board of Education’ Didn’t End Segregation, Big Government Did
Sixty years after the decision, it’s worth remembering it took Congress's Civil Rights Act to finally smash Jim Crow.
by
Ian Millhiser
via
The Nation
on
May 14, 2014
Activism in the US
The Civil Rights movement led the way, soon followed by anti-war protests and activism for women’s issues and gay rights.
via
Digital Public Library of America
on
April 1, 2013
This Black Educator Looked to Conflicts Abroad for Lessons on Fighting Racism at Home
The Second Italo-Ethiopian War and the Spanish Civil War offered Melva L. Price an opportunity to examine the links between racism and fascism.
by
Keisha N. Blain
via
Smithsonian Magazine
on
September 15, 2025
‘The Canal Is Ours’
Trump’s threats to take control of the Panama Canal have precipitated a struggle over the country’s sovereignty.
by
Miriam Pensack
via
New York Review of Books
on
June 28, 2025
RFK’s Ideas About “Wellness Farms” for Young People Are Eugenic and Unconstitutional
RFK’s call for “wellness farms” revives a grim legacy of forced labor, racial injustice, and eugenics disguised as mental health reform.
by
Kylie Smith
via
Nursing Clio
on
May 8, 2025
The Great Resegregation
The Trump administration’s attacks on DEI are aimed at reversing the civil rights movement.
by
Adam Serwer
via
The Atlantic
on
February 22, 2025
No Nation Under Their Feet
A historian explores his own family's history to understand the African-American community’s internal pigmentocracy and the absurdity of racial binaries.
by
David Levering Lewis
,
Steve Nathans-Kelly
via
Chicago Review of Books
on
February 14, 2025
The Myth of the Christian State
When religion became the veil for racial violence in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
by
Ross D. Johnson
via
The Oklahoma Eagle
on
August 18, 2024
partner
Campus Protests Are Called Disruptive. So Was the Civil Rights Movement
Like student protesters today, Martin Luther King Jr. and other 1960s civil rights activists were criticized as disruptive and disorderly.
by
Jeanne Theoharis
via
Made By History
on
May 9, 2024
partner
Segregation by Eminent Domain
The Fifth Amendment allows the government to buy private property for the public good. "Public good" being the expansion of white neighborhoods.
by
Matthew Wills
,
Mara Cherkasky
,
Athena V. Scott
via
JSTOR Daily
on
June 2, 2023
There’s Unsettling New Evidence About William Rehnquist’s Views on Segregation
The Supreme Court Justice's defense of Plessy v. Ferguson in a 1993 memo continues to influence the court's interpretation of the 14th amendment.
by
Dahlia Lithwick
,
Richard L. Hasen
via
Slate
on
June 1, 2023
In Hanover, A Name is More than a Name
The sudden push to rename a historic school that educated scores of Black students reeks of revenge.
by
Samantha Willis
via
Virginia Mercury
on
March 20, 2023
A Historian Makes History in Texas
In the 1960s, Annette Gordon-Reed was the first Black child to enroll in a white school in her hometown. Now she reflects on having a new school there named for her.
by
Annette Gordon-Reed
via
The Wall Street Journal
on
February 18, 2023
The Neoliberal Superego of Education Policy
Institutional reform is no match for pervasive structural inequality.
by
Christopher Newfield
via
Boston Review
on
January 18, 2023
Can Standardized Testing Escape Its Racist Past?
High-stakes testing has struggled with overt and implicit biases. Should it still have a place in modern education?
by
Deborah Blum
via
UnDark
on
December 14, 2022
“A Solemn Battle Between Good and Evil.” Charles Sumner’s Radical, Compelling Message of Abolition
The senator from Massachusetts and the birth of the Republican Party.
by
Timothy Shenk
via
Literary Hub
on
October 24, 2022
Financing Schools
On school funding and America’s kleptocratic public school divide.
by
Esther Cyna
via
Phenomenal World
on
May 12, 2022
partner
A Formerly Enslaved Woman Helped Found a Key American University
Mary Lumpkin’s life helps us to better understand the post-Civil War push for education.
by
Kristen Green
via
Made By History
on
May 10, 2022
They Called Her ‘Black Jet’
Joetha Collier, a young Black woman, was killed by a white man in 1971, near the Mississippi town where Emmett Till was murdered. Why isn’t her case well-known today?
by
Keisha N. Blain
via
The Atlantic
on
April 28, 2022
Who Gets to Be American?
Laws controlling what schools teach about race and gender show an awareness that classrooms are sites of nation-building.
by
Jonna Perrillo
via
Boston Review
on
March 21, 2022
Why the School Wars Still Rage
From evolution to anti-racism, parents and progressives have clashed for a century over who gets to tell our origin stories.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
March 10, 2022
partner
Inequality Has Long Driven Black Parents to Pull Children From Public Schools
What’s happening amid the coronavirus pandemic is nothing new.
by
Amaarah DeCuir
via
Made By History
on
February 24, 2022
From Inclusive Public Schools to Divisive Concepts
Some personal reflections from American Historical Association president James H. Sweet on the recent wave of "divisive concepts" laws.
by
James H. Sweet
via
Perspectives on History
on
December 15, 2021
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