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News Articles: Race

Hundreds of white nationalists, neo-Nazis and members of the "alt-right" march down East Market Street toward Emancipation Park during the "Unite the Right" rally August 12, 2017 in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Tagged as: 

  • Race

The 'great replacement' conspiracy theory isn't fringe anymore, it's mainstream

A racist conspiracy theory is believed to have motivated the suspected gunman in the Buffalo attack. It was once a fringe belief, but it's found its way into the mainstream.

May 17, 2022
|
By:
  • Odette Yousef
On Sunday, a woman lights a candle at a makeshift memorial to the victims of Saturday's mass shooting at Tops market in Buffalo, N.Y.

Tagged as: 

  • Arts & Life

Some are calling the Buffalo suspect a 'teenager.' Is that a privilege of his race?

The white supremacist suspect in Buffalo is 18 years old. Some news organizations and commentators have called him a "teenager" and "child" rather than a "man."

May 17, 2022
|
By:
  • Anastasia Tsioulcas
Delaware State University, a historically Black institution, says the stop and search of a bus transporting members of its women's lacrosse team in Georgia was "constitutionally dubious." Here, the entrance of Delaware State University in Dover, Del., in September 2007.

Tagged as: 

  • Race

Delaware State University to file a complaint with DOJ after bus search incident

Tony Allen, Delaware State University's president, says once the complaint is officially filed, it will be made available to the campus community to read.

May 17, 2022
|
By:
  • Jonathan Franklin
Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) speaks during a Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the U.S. Capitol business meeting on Capitol Hill March 28, 2022 in Washington, DC.

Tagged as: 

  • Politics

GOP leadership has enabled white nationalism, Liz Cheney says

In the wake of the Buffalo supermarket shooting, Cheney is calling on Republican leaders to "renounce and reject" white supremacist views and those who hold them.

May 16, 2022
|
By:
  • Rachel Treisman
A photo of Roberta Drury, 32, who was killed in Saturday's shooting at a Tops supermarket in Buffalo.

Tagged as: 

  • National

Buffalo victim Roberta Drury, 32, is remembered as a great help to her family

"She would go to Tops for us all the time, actually," Moyer told NPR. "We don't really have family in the area, so it was just a great help that she could do something for us like that."

May 16, 2022
|
By:
  • Joe Hernandez
GPB News NPR

Tagged as: 

  • Race

A history professor weighs in on the Buffalo attack and white supremacy

NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Kathleen Belew, an assistant professor of history at the University of Chicago, on the threat of white supremacist movements in the U.S.

May 15, 2022
|
By:
  • GPB Newsroom
Last week, the Fulton County District Attorney in Atlanta charged rapper Young Thug (pictured) with an indictment for allegedly participating in street gang activities and violating RICO law.

Tagged as: 

  • Music News

The charges against Young Thug build on a growing trend of criminalizing rap crews

Ayesha Rascoe talks with Sidney Madden and Rodney Carmichael of NPR's Louder Than A Riot about the RICO charges against Young Thug and the wider intersection of criminal justice and hip-hop.

May 15, 2022
|
By:
  • Sidney Madden,
  • Rodney Carmichael,
  • and 2 more

Tagged as: 

  • Arts & Life

COMIC: One Sioux chef's attempt to reclaim Native American cuisine

When it comes to North American cuisine, Indigenous foods don't typically come to mind. Chef Sean Sherman is changing that by serving food that celebrates and preserves his ancestors' Lakota cooking.

May 14, 2022
|
By:
  • Chelsea Saunders and
  • LA Johnson
Abortion rights demonstrators chant during a protest outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday.

Tagged as: 

  • Race

Abortion is also about racial justice, experts and advocates say

Shrinking access to abortion in Republican-controlled states has already hit people of color hardest. They will bear the brunt if Roe v. Wade is overturned, experts and advocates say.

May 14, 2022
|
By:
  • Sandhya Dirks
A gunman entered the Hair World Salon and shot three people on Wednesday, according to Dallas police.

Tagged as: 

  • National

A Dallas Koreatown salon shooting may be linked to others at Asian American businesses

A shooting that injured three women in a hair salon this week may have been a hate crime and could be linked to two other recent shootings at businesses run by Asian Americans, Dallas police say.

May 14, 2022
|
By:
  • Rina Torchinsky
Christina and James Summers were married for 17 years. Now, she's learning to navigate life without him. "Me and my husband really worked like a team," she says. "My teammate's not here to help me, so I'm really feeling a single mom vibe, just trying to get accustomed to this."

Tagged as: 

  • Health

COVID took many in the prime of life, leaving families to pick up the pieces

In the U.S., people of color have been more likely to die at younger ages, especially among lower-income communities. That's had a ripple effect on finances, education and physical and mental health.

May 13, 2022
|
By:
  • Maria Godoy
GPB News NPR

Tagged as: 

  • National

Burial sites linked to Native American boarding schools ID'd in government report

An Interior Department report identified more than 400 Native American boarding schools that assimilated and often abused Indigenous children. The probe has uncovered more than 500 deaths so far.

May 12, 2022
|
By:
  • Noelle Evans
Delaware State University students enter the Dover campus.

Tagged as: 

  • Race

Delaware AG asks for federal civil rights review after HBCU team stopped by police

The team's bus was headed northbound on Interstate 95 in Liberty County, Ga., on April 20 after playing games in Georgia and Florida.

May 12, 2022
|
By:
  • Jonathan Franklin
Liberty County Sheriff's Office and Delaware State University logos

Tagged as: 

  • Race

Liberty County sheriff opens probe into traffic stop, drug search involving HBCU student-athletes

The Liberty County Sheriff's Office is conducting an internal investigation of a traffic stop involving the Delaware State University women's lacrosse team, after its players and head coach at the historically Black university accused sheriff's deputies of racial profiling to conduct a drug search.

May 11, 2022
|
By:
  • Benjamin Payne
A makeshift memorial for the dozens of Indigenous children who died more than a century ago while attending a boarding school that was once located nearby is displayed under a tree at a public park in Albuquerque, N.M., in 2021.

Tagged as: 

  • National

U.S. report identifies burial sites linked to boarding schools for Native Americans

A federal study of Native American boarding schools that sought to assimilate Indigenous children into white society has identified more than 400 such schools and more than 50 associated burial sites.

May 11, 2022
|
By:
  • The Associated Press
  • Load More

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