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About this Collection | Protests Against Racism Web Archive | Digital Collections | Library of Congress
About this Collection | Protests Against Racism Web Archive | Digital Collections | Library of Congress
The police murder of George Floyd on May 25th, 2020 was the one major act which sparked American and global civil unrest during 2020 relating to institutional and systemic racism, police brutality, and unsettled issues from the era of colonization and the African slave trade. The Protests Against Racism Web Archive contains a selection of websites documenting protests and activism sparked by the murder of George Floyd, where Mr. Floyd was the “tipping point,” the “last straw;” the web archive also includes websites documenting earlier killings of victims of racism and police brutality. Coverage encompasses protests against racism and police brutality against Blacks, police reform (both the liberal and conservative reactions to police brutality); critical grassroots movements (i.e. local Black activism, multiracial activism). This project covers “Black Lives Matter” protests and protests named in the idea of "Black Lives Matter" but not organized by the Black Lives Matter organization; the impact of these protests in various aspects of society: police reform; racism in sports, business/corporations, legislation and legislative-related activism, educational institutions, religion; reaction of Conservative America (i.e. local, regional, and state groups); other areas of society impacted by these nation-wide and global expressions, etc. This is a highly selective collection that primarily focuses on U.S. sites, and includes a small global component. Social media platforms were out of scope for this collection.
·loc.gov·
About this Collection | Protests Against Racism Web Archive | Digital Collections | Library of Congress
“Lacks Educational Value”? Critics Slam Florida’s Rejection of AP African American Studies Course
“Lacks Educational Value”? Critics Slam Florida’s Rejection of AP African American Studies Course
Civil right advocates, educators and lawyers, like Ben Crump, are fighting Florida education officials who rejected a new Advanced Placement course for high school students on African American studies. Officials say the course “lacks educational value,” and Republican Governor Ron DeSantis claims the course violates state law. Opponents object to the course’s inclusion of works by scholar and former Black Panther Angela Davis, and of material on intersectionality, reparations and Black queer history, among other topics. Last year, Florida passed a so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law that prevents Florida teachers from discussing sexuality and gender identity in classrooms. We go to Miami and Tallahassee to speak to Dr. Steve Gallon, a lifelong educator and a former teacher, principal and superintendent, who now serves as an elected school board member for Miami-Dade County Schools, and Democratic state Senator Shevrin Jones, the first openly gay person to serve in the state’s Senate.
·democracynow.org·
“Lacks Educational Value”? Critics Slam Florida’s Rejection of AP African American Studies Course
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Khalil Gibran Muhammad & E. Patrick Johnson on the Fight over Black History
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Khalil Gibran Muhammad & E. Patrick Johnson on the Fight over Black History
We host a roundtable with three leading Black scholars about the College Board’s decision to revise its curriculum for an Advanced Placement course in African American studies after criticism from Republicans like Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. The revised curriculum removes Black Lives Matter, slavery reparations and queer theory as required topics, while it adds a section on Black conservatism. The College Board, the nonprofit organization that administers Advanced Placement courses across the country, denies that it buckled to political pressure. “Florida is a laboratory of fascism at this point,” says Khalil Gibran Muhammad, professor of history, race and public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. We also speak with two scholars whose writings are among those purged from the revised curriculum: Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, professor of African American studies at Northwestern University, and E. Patrick Johnson, dean of Northwestern’s School of Communication and a pioneer in the formation of Black sexuality studies as a field of scholarship.
·democracynow.org·
Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Khalil Gibran Muhammad & E. Patrick Johnson on the Fight over Black History
Law School Named for Black Attorney in Groundbreaking Move for Legal History
Law School Named for Black Attorney in Groundbreaking Move for Legal History
The Florida St. Thomas University College of Law has recently rebranded to the Benjamin L. Crump College of Law at St. Thomas University in recognition of the prominent Black civil rights lawyer. Crump is a Florida State University College of Law graduate and has offices in California, Florida, and Washington, D.C. He is widely recognized […]
·jdjournal.com·
Law School Named for Black Attorney in Groundbreaking Move for Legal History
Antiracism: A Starter Booklist
Antiracism: A Starter Booklist
“One either allows racial inequities to persevere, as a racist, or confronts racial inequities, as an anti-racist. There is no in-between safe space of 'not racist.'” ― Ibram X. Kendi, How to Be an Antiracist The following 11 titles, a mix of history, social science, and memoir, offer facts and reflections on systemic racial injustice as well as ways to channel feeling into action.
·libraryjournal.com·
Antiracism: A Starter Booklist
Better Serving Library Patrons Behind Bars - Ithaka S+R
Better Serving Library Patrons Behind Bars - Ithaka S+R
Over the past several years, public, state, academic, and law libraries have increasingly sought to serve people in prison through a variety of services. Now, with a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Ithaka S+R is undertaking a planning project that will set the stage for future partnerships to develop and pilot wrap-around library services to meet the information needs of people who are currently incarcerated.
·sr.ithaka.org·
Better Serving Library Patrons Behind Bars - Ithaka S+R
Chicago Tribune Report: “As Attempts to Ban Books Across the Country Increase, Chicago Establishes ‘Book Sanctuaries’: ‘Encouraging And Alarming'”
Chicago Tribune Report: “As Attempts to Ban Books Across the Country Increase, Chicago Establishes ‘Book Sanctuaries’: ‘Encouraging And Alarming'”
From The Chicago Tribune: Last week, city and Chicago Public Library officials declared Chicago a sanctuary city for those stories, by establishing “Book Sanctuaries” across the city’s 77 distinct community areas and 81 library branches. That entails a commitment to expand local access to banned or challenged books through library programming. [Clip] Chicago Public Library […]
·infodocket.com·
Chicago Tribune Report: “As Attempts to Ban Books Across the Country Increase, Chicago Establishes ‘Book Sanctuaries’: ‘Encouraging And Alarming'”
Letter of Concern to FBI Regarding Threats of Violence in Libraries
Letter of Concern to FBI Regarding Threats of Violence in Libraries
During the Summer and Fall of 2022, threats directed to public and school libraries and library workers escalated, including the forced temporary closure of five public library systems due to bomb and shooting threats. On September 27, the executive board of the American Library Association (ALA) transmitted a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray expressing concerns about the threats directed to public and school libraries and library workers.
·ala.org·
Letter of Concern to FBI Regarding Threats of Violence in Libraries
Using Open Educational Resources to Promote Social Justice
Using Open Educational Resources to Promote Social Justice
ACRL announces the publication of Using Open Educational Resources to Promote Social Justice, edited by CJ Ivory and Angela Pashia, which explores the opportunities and challenges of moving the discussion about open educational resources (OER) beyond affordability to address structural inequities fo
·acrl.ala.org·
Using Open Educational Resources to Promote Social Justice
Two Justices Issue Challenge on Race
Two Justices Issue Challenge on Race
By tradition, U.S. Supreme Court justices do not speak to each other about cases they will decide until after oral arguments. But during oral arguments, they often speak to each other through the lawyers appearing before them. Two justices sent very clear messages to some of their colleagues through lawyers arguing Tuesday in a major voting rights case.
·constitutioncenter.org·
Two Justices Issue Challenge on Race
Philadelphia apologizes for history of prison experiments on Black men, hopes to rectify medical mistrust within community | CNN
Philadelphia apologizes for history of prison experiments on Black men, hopes to rectify medical mistrust within community | CNN
Philadelphia has apologized for experiments conducted on mostly Black men incarcerated in the city's now-inactive Holmesburg Prison, which exposed subjects to herpes, skin blistering chemicals, radioactive isotopes, and poisonous chemicals used during the Vietnam war.
·cnn.com·
Philadelphia apologizes for history of prison experiments on Black men, hopes to rectify medical mistrust within community | CNN
Latinx Heritage Month
Latinx Heritage Month
By Jennifer Mendez What is Latinx (or Hispanic) Heritage Month? Each year, Americans observe National Latinx/Hispanic Heritage Month from September 15 to October 15, by celebrating the histories, c…
·notesbetweenus.com·
Latinx Heritage Month
National Hispanic Heritage Month 2022: PALABRA Archive Releases 50 New Streaming Recordings | 4 Corners of the World
National Hispanic Heritage Month 2022: PALABRA Archive Releases 50 New Streaming Recordings | 4 Corners of the World
(This is a guest post by Catalina Gómez, Curator of the PALABRA Archive in the Latin American, Caribbean and European division) Following its annual National Hispanic Heritage Month tradition, the Hispanic Reading Room in the Latin American, Caribbean and European division (LAC&E) announces the digital release of 50 new streaming audio recordings in the PALABRA …
·blogs.loc.gov·
National Hispanic Heritage Month 2022: PALABRA Archive Releases 50 New Streaming Recordings | 4 Corners of the World
Racial Justice & Equity Resources, KXCI
Racial Justice & Equity Resources, KXCI
KXCI Racial justice and equity resources offering support and advocacy for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color). If you know about a resource or opportunity that you would like to see listed below, please email us at community@kxci.org.
·kxci.org·
Racial Justice & Equity Resources, KXCI