Teaching Colonization and Decolonization During the “CRT” Panic
We have the tools we need to teach anticolonial history. The anti-“CRT” erasure movement shows why we must.
The Future is Another Country
We have the tools we need to teach anticolonial history. The anti-“CRT” erasure movement shows why we must.
White conservatives would rather burn our history than admit their place in it. That’s why we need “CRT” now more than ever.
You can’t tell the story of Midwestern cities like Toledo without being honest about their white supremacy problems.
Three school board members share their struggle to provide students with the best possible education amid anti-“CRT” scaremongering.
To ignore critical race theory is to set our democracy back, to neglect the difficult history of our country, and to further marginalize students.
The anti-racist protests of the Kerner Commission reveal that if structural racism can be overcome in U.S. democracy, the moral weight of white supremacy must be eradicated otherwise democratic protest will forever be read as a threat.
Ibram X. Kendi’s much-anticipated second book, How to Be An Antiracist, hit shelves across the world last month.
The Activist History Review invites proposals for our September 2019 issue, “Antiracism in America.”
Khristie’s sustenance of racism hurts not only themselves and the Tiffanys of the world, but also rolls the clock back and provides an incubator for white supremacy that stunts the growth of all communities—more specifically communities of color, the same supportive communities that will “stick with her” through thick and thin.