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John Barros, Former Head of Economic Development, Joins Race for Boston Mayor
A former top official in Boston Mayor Marty Walsh’s administration announced Thursday that he will run to replace his former boss. John Barros, who recently stepped down as the city’s chief of economic development after seven years in the position, launched his campaign at the Dorchester restaurant he owns with other family members. He joins a field of declared...
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State Rep. Jon Santiago Announces Bid for Boston Mayor
State Rep. Jon Santiago is joining the growing pool of candidates in the race for Boston’s next mayor. Santiago, an ER doctor at Boston Medical Center, has been vocal about the state’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. He has pressured leaders in Massachusetts to move more quickly and tighten restrictions and weighed in on the evidence that shows the...
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State Rep. Santiago Joins Boston Mayoral Race
A fourth candidate jumped into the race for mayor of Boston: state Rep. Jon Santiago, an emergency doctor.
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Sand, Surf and Segregation: A Fight for Civil Rights in St. Augustine, Florida
Purcell Conway, a civil rights activist from St. Augustine, Florida, talks about the watershed moments that led to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and why it’s still not the end of the fight for racial equity in the United States.
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Fighting to the Front: Civil Rights Icon Reflects on Challenges, Championing Equal Access
Johnnie R. Turner, a former Tennessee state representative, talks about her experience with implicit segregation on buses and public spaces even after courts have ruled to desegregate.
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A Pioneering Pediatrician On Desegregating a Philadelphia Boarding School
Dr. Albert Gaskins, a doctor and desegregationist, speaks about his record as a civil rights activist as a young man and young professionals to open doors for other Black Americans.
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Opening Doors and Minds: Honoring Denver's 1st Tenured Black Teacher
Marie L. Greenwood, the first tenured Black teacher in the Denver public school system so revered that she had an elementary school named after her, recalls how she fought to open the gates for more Black teachers in a system that didn’t have faith in them.
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A Physician's Work Promoting Equity in Medicine
Dr. Edward S. Cooper, the first Black President of the American Heart Association and Martin Luther King Jr.’s physician, has spent his life sealing the health gap for Black Americans.
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Sitting In and Taking a Stand: A Civil Rights Activist's 61-Year Journey
Rev. William B. Moore talks about how Black student of the time used civil disobedience to gain small victories during the Civil Rights Movement, and how participating as a sit-in protester shaped the rest of his life as an activist.
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In the Footsteps of the ‘Little Rock Nine'
Dr. LaVerne Bell-Tolliver, a native of segregated Little Rock, Arkansas, recalls her experience as the first Black student attempting to desegregate Forest Heights Junior High School.
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Elaine Brown: A Black Panther's Journey in Breaking New Ground
Elaine Brown is accustomed to breaking new ground — and overcoming adversity is a challenge she’d conquered long before she made history in the 1970s as the first and only woman to lead the Black Panther Party.
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Housing Study Sheds Doubt That Millennials Are More Racially Progressive Than Previous Generations
UCLA Assistant Professor of Sociology S. Michael Gaddis dishes on new study that reveals Millennials may not be as racially progressive as previously believed.
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Study Suggests Millennials Show Racial Bias While Looking For Roommates
While some data shows that millennials may be the least racially biased group in the nation, they still show “strong racial bias and anti-Blackness” when looking for roommates, a UCLA study released today suggests.
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Experts Worry Over COVID-19 Vaccine Skepticism
Some people remain skeptical of the coronavirus vaccine, especially in minority communities, despite massive clinical trials and widespread assurances it’s safe.
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Health Experts Eye Nutrition in Examining COVID-19's Disproportionate Impact on People of Color
COVID-19 has proven to hospitalize and kill people of color at high rates, and experts say nutrition could play an important role in fighting off the virus.
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Trump, Biden Debate Race and Law Enforcement
President Donald Trump and Democratic Nominee for President Joe Biden debate race issues in the United States and the role of law enforcement at the first Presidential Debate in Cleveland, Oh.
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Black Leaders Call for Better COVID-19 Response in Boston
Black leaders in Boston are calling on the city to step up its response to the coronavirus crisis in their communities as the pandemic continues to disproportionately impact people of color. The Black Boston COVID-19 Coalition, a group dedicated to ensuring coronavirus response and recovery, claim they have seen a rise in cases in neighborhoods like Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan and…
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Calls for More COVID-19 Protections
Black leaders in Boston are calling on city officials to step up efforts to combat coronavirus in their communities.
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Push for Diversity in Little Free Libraries
Little Free Libraries, or book-sharing boxes, are a trend in over 100 countries, including the U.S. Some Bay State natives are on a mission to ensure that the books inside represent the global community we now live in.
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Professor Resigns After Falsely Claiming Black Identity
A George Washington University professor who apologized in an essay last week for assuming “identities within a Blackness that I had no right to claim” resigned, the university said.