images-20

Newest Content
ZMag Culture/Race
  • avatar

    Lesher: Blindness of Privilege

    Because the recent shootings at the Peachtree Mall in Columbus,...

  • Barber: Why It’s Possible to Reject the Klan and Still Support Racism

    We can neither forgive nor ignore the way 400 years of white supremacy have been naively reduced to whether a candidate will disavow the support of a hate group leader. Racism lives on in policies that perpetuate racial disparities, with or without the KKK.

  • Piascik: The Northern Student Movement

    Tens of thousands of young Americans were inspired by the lunch counter sit-ins that began in Greensboro, North Carolina and spread throughout the South. NSM Students at Yale University were no exception and some of them got together in the Fall of 1961 to form the NSM.

  • Isaacs: Hurricane Sandy Is Still Drowning The Poor

    It is a few months short of three years since Hurricane Sandy barreled down on NYC. The flooded subways have new barriers. The submerged hospital generators are back in order. The boardwalks along the shore are up and trod by beachgoers once again. But what of the thousands of poor renters, most on public assistance, who lost their homes that day? I don’t know all their stories. I only know one intimately, and it is not a happy story.

  • Greenberg: Race Curriculum Controversy

    In 2001, I was hired to help open the Center School, a small school in Seattle Public Schools, and I began teaching the Race Unit in 2002. Drawing in part from a district-wide training on racism called Courageous Conversations, the Race Unit established safe norms for racial dialogue

  • Isaacs: From Baltimore to Palestine

    The increasingly militarized attacks on rebellious neighborhoods in the U.S. seem more and more like armed forces brought to bear on Palestinians in the Middle East.

  • Pascale: U.S. Language Policy

    Authors Pascale and Cook write in "U.S. Language Policy": "According to the U.S Census, in three decades, no single racial or ethnic group will comprise the majority of the U.S. population. In many parts of the U.S. this reality has already arrived.... "The United States prides itself on being 'a nation of immigrants,' yet it has cultivated a multicultural, monolingual society."

  • Rothstein: From Ferguson to Baltimore: The Fruits of Government-Sponsored Segregation

    In 1925, 18 Baltimore neighborhood associations came together to form the “Allied Civic and Protective Association” for the purpose of urging both new and existing property owners to sign restrictive covenants, which committed owners never to sell to an African American

  • avatar

    Street: No True Justice

    Throughout its coverage of the dramas sparked by the police killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York City—and by the Grand Jury non-indictments of their killers—U.S. corporate media has framed the racial issue at stake as about how police carry out their tasks, how they police.

  • avatar

    Zeese: Ferguson Exposes the Reality of Militarized, Racist Policing

    The killing of Michael Brown by a Ferguson, Missouri police...

images-145

Culture/Race Audio

images-71

Culture/Race Video
  • avatar

    Lesher: Blindness of Privilege

    Because the recent shootings at the Peachtree Mall in Columbus,...

  • Barber: Why It’s Possible to Reject the Klan and Still Support Racism

    We can neither forgive nor ignore the way 400 years of white supremacy have been naively reduced to whether a candidate will disavow the support of a hate group leader. Racism lives on in policies that perpetuate racial disparities, with or without the KKK.

  • Piascik: The Northern Student Movement

    Tens of thousands of young Americans were inspired by the lunch counter sit-ins that began in Greensboro, North Carolina and spread throughout the South. NSM Students at Yale University were no exception and some of them got together in the Fall of 1961 to form the NSM.

  • Isaacs: Hurricane Sandy Is Still Drowning The Poor

    It is a few months short of three years since Hurricane Sandy barreled down on NYC. The flooded subways have new barriers. The submerged hospital generators are back in order. The boardwalks along the shore are up and trod by beachgoers once again. But what of the thousands of poor renters, most on public assistance, who lost their homes that day? I don’t know all their stories. I only know one intimately, and it is not a happy story.

  • Greenberg: Race Curriculum Controversy

    In 2001, I was hired to help open the Center School, a small school in Seattle Public Schools, and I began teaching the Race Unit in 2002. Drawing in part from a district-wide training on racism called Courageous Conversations, the Race Unit established safe norms for racial dialogue

images-76

images-66

Blogs

images-95

Culture/Race Books

images-102

WP-Backgrounds by InoPlugs Web Design and Juwelier Schönmann
Skip to toolbar