Race
Jorge and Richie Down by the Schoolyard
And though America is merely a society of cliques, I often wish America’s cliques behaved like the cliques back in middle school.
Rising to the Moment
Latino Rebels Radio: March 4, 2021
Trigueño Supremacy (OPINION)
No one understands that race is imaginary better than someone who’s multiracial.
The Unbearable Latinx Whiteness of It All (OPINION)
It really needs to change.
A Look Forward: How the 1776 Report Protects Trump and Other Racists (OPINION)
Any attack on ethnic studies, racial diversity training, and other types of education that clearly centers Black people and other people of color should be of interest to the Latinx community.
A Mexican Belonging
Latino Rebels Radio: January 28, 2021
Dear America, With Trump Gone, Are You Still Committed to Fighting White Supremacy? (OPINION)
White supremacy will no longer be as obvious as an attack on our Capitol.
The Antagonist: A Latin[ish] Podcast
Host Hector Luis Alamo chats with Arturo Dominguez, an anti-racist activist and journalist based in Texas
University of Puerto Rico to Create New Afro-Diasporic and Racial Studies Program
According to a January 11 release, the grant period will span three years from January 2021 to December 2023.
Thousands of Brazilians Who Won Elections as Black Candidates in 2020 Previously Ran for Office as White
Brazil is undergoing a strange racial reckoning after bombshell revelations that thousands of veteran politicians had changed their self-identified race between the 2016 and 2020 elections.
Experts: Capitol Riot Product of Years of Hateful Rhetoric
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — The storming of the U.S. Capitol is a jarring but natural product of years of violence and hateful rhetoric stoked by disinformation and conspiracy theories, experts on far-right extremism said as they pored over images of Wednesday’s riot.
Rooting Out Racism in Children’s Books
The data is disturbing.
Equations For Liberation, A Conversation With Kelly Lytle Hernandez (A Latino USA Podcast)
The community of researchers at Million Dollar Hoods helps us understand how much money is being spent to incarcerate Black and Brown communities, daring to imagine what would be possible if we invested those funds in housing, education, or employment instead.
Will the Biden Administration ‘Look Like America’? (OPINION)
As much as I believe the people who run our government should look like the people they represent, I get that Biden’s promise won’t be easy to keep, even in the era of so-called racial reckoning.
Racism at the County Level Associated With Increased COVID-19 Cases and Deaths
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all people, but not necessarily in the same way.
Ilia Calderón: My Skin Color Doesn’t Define Me (A Latino USA Podcast)
Ilia Calderón tells Maria Hinojosa about her book “My Time to Speak: Reclaiming Ancestry and Confronting Race,” her journey to becoming the first Afro-Latina anchor for a major national news network in the U.S., and what it’s like to raise a mixed-race child at a time of deep political, cultural, and racial divisions in the country.
Guía antirracista para periodistas hispanohablantes en los Estados Unidos
El reclamo inició un proceso de redacción y edición colectiva a cargo de expertas afrolatinas que acaba de concluir.
A Third of the Latino Vote (A Latino USA Podcast)
We sit down with Cadava and with longtime Latino Republicans to explore the history of Latinos in the Republican Party, and talk about what President Trump might mean for their future.
Who Is the ‘Negrito/a/x?’ (OPINION)
If JLo is a “Negrita del Bronx,” then what do we call a Black Puerto Rican woman from the Bronx?
Latinos Need to See Structural, Systemic Racism Right Now (OPINION)
Survey data show that Latinos are less likely than others to think about policing as a racial justice issue.
Scared Shitless (Remember the Show! Podcast)
A chat with Dan Cady, whose essay, “Rise, Fall, Repeat: El Monte’s White Supremacy Movements,” is featured in the new book ‘East of East: The Making of Greater El Monte.’