Civil Rights & Social Justice - Page 8

After sunset, Black people had to be out of these hostile sundown towns. It was a matter of life and death in some instances.

While unrelated to the 2023 shooting death of Leonard Cure, the charges show a pattern of aggressive behavior on the part of Buck Aldridge.

The 60th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act demands a sustained commitment to building and sustaining Black political power beyond the ballot box. 

Sixty years after the Voting Rights Act, the future its authors dreamed seems further away than ever. But we must keep pushing forward.

The next time you wear your denim, remember that interwoven into the fabric are stories of struggle and resistance.

In this personal essay, Dominique Morgan details how something as simple as going to the restroom became a trial for Black trans women.

Xavier Davis is suing Jefferson Lines after a white bus driver made Black men sit in the back of the bus headed to Minnesota.

The Supreme Court has called citizenship a fundamental right. Chief Justice Earl Warren in 1958 described it as the “right to have rights.”

Sonya Messing was a mother and a loving person who has left behind a hole in the hearts of family, friends, and the people in her community.

About a decade after Flint’s water crisis caused national outrage, the replacement of lead water pipes still isn’t finished.

For Damon Landor and many other incarcerated individuals who practice minority religions, the outcome could determine whether justice is just in name or inclusive of reparations.

This year’s Juneteenth celebrations take place against the backdrop of a federal government covered in fascism and hostile toward these core tenets of a free society.