Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 37 |
Descriptor
African Americans | 37 |
Social Justice | 37 |
Racism | 20 |
Activism | 10 |
Equal Education | 7 |
Females | 7 |
Resistance (Psychology) | 6 |
Critical Race Theory | 5 |
Diversity | 5 |
Intersectionality | 5 |
African American History | 4 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 26 |
Reports - Research | 13 |
Dissertations/Theses -… | 9 |
Reports - Descriptive | 5 |
Reports - Evaluative | 5 |
Information Analyses | 4 |
Books | 2 |
Collected Works - General | 1 |
Creative Works | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 8 |
Postsecondary Education | 8 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 2 |
Secondary Education | 1 |
Audience
Location
Alabama | 2 |
Australia | 1 |
California | 1 |
Canada | 1 |
Florida | 1 |
Illinois (Chicago) | 1 |
Michigan | 1 |
Nevada | 1 |
Ohio | 1 |
Ohio (Cleveland) | 1 |
Oklahoma | 1 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Brown v Board of Education | 1 |
Plessy v Ferguson | 1 |
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Mary Soylu – Art Education, 2024
The National Memorial for Peace and Justice (NMPJ) opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. The memorial provides a sacred site where people can gather and reflect on America's history of racial injustice and represents an essential milestone in the ongoing process of racial reckoning in the United States. As Alabama has historically been…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Racism, Social Justice, Activism
Renae D. Mayes; Riley Drake; Sylvia A. Hollins; Shontell M. White; Ashanti E. Webster – Professional School Counseling, 2024
Antiracism in school counseling calls for an active stance in addressing racism in K-12 schools while building homeplace to affirm and protect students. As such, this qualitative study focuses on how Black school counselors understand and reclaim Black joy and resistance as a part of homeplace, a place where students' humanity is affirmed and…
Descriptors: African Americans, School Counselors, Racism, Social Justice
Trina R. Shanks; Jin Huang; William Elliott III; Haotian Zhang; Margaret M. Clancy; Michael Sherraden – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
Successful Black reparations require a policy for delivering payments, one that provides for effective identification, disbursement, asset protection, and asset growth over time. In this article, we suggest a structural solution (structured wealth accumulation of reparations payments) to a structural challenge (deeply embedded racial wealth…
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), African Americans, Slavery, Social Justice
Cody R. Melcher – Teaching Sociology, 2024
This article analyzes 764 syllabi spanning 2012 to 2023 to illustrate how, why, and when the sociological canon evolves. It is shown that in terms of frequency of assignment, W. E. B. Du Bois has clearly entered the sociological canon, overtaking both Weber and Durkheim. The timing of these changes also suggests that Du Bois's addition to the…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Justice, Activism, Sociology
Hanadi Shatara; Muna Saleh – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2024
This article puts into conversation publications that exemplify solidarities across movements and communities, with a focus on examples of solidarities of Black and Indigenous scholars and activists with and for Palestine and Palestinians. We argue that it is essential for educators and education researchers to engage in solidarities across…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Activism, Scholarship, African Americans
Dominique McDaniel – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2024
Social media serves as a virtual platform for young people to foster community and amplify marginalized voices, allowing them to actively engage with societal issues and take on roles as activists, advocates, and allies. A 2021 study (McDaniel, 2022) on teens revealed diverse literacy practices employed to address social justice, civil unrest,…
Descriptors: Social Media, Activism, African Americans, Females
Deaweh E. Benson; Vonnie C. McLoyd; Jozet Channey – Youth & Society, 2024
Many Black young adults engage in their communities through critical action, or activism, as they transition into adulthood. However, knowledge about predictors of critical action remain sparse. The present longitudinal study addresses this gap by exploring links between critical action, ethnic-racial identity, and racial discrimination among 143…
Descriptors: African Americans, Young Adults, Adolescents, Activism
Kathryn Anne Edwards; Lisa Berdie; Jonathan W. Welburn – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
Reparations policies that seek to make amends for a harm incurred face exigent challenges. In this article we focus on what makes reparations successful and what policy components are necessary, if not sufficient, for success. To study the success of reparations policy design we employ a case study approach. Our analysis investigates the…
Descriptors: African American History, African Americans, Slavery, Compensation (Remuneration)
LaShawn Taylor – ProQuest LLC, 2024
For centuries, Black people in the U.S. have had to navigate structural and institutional racism. This is especially true for the system of policing, which evolved from pre-emancipation slave patrols. Though law enforcement agencies have made strides in the past 160 years, Black people continue to be targeted and killed by police at a…
Descriptors: Diversity, Inclusion, Racism, Law Enforcement
Katrina Stack; Derek H. Alderman – Geography Teacher, 2024
The background and resources presented in this article support teaching about two Tent/Freedom Cities--in Fayette County, Tennessee, and in Lowndes County, Alabama--that were built as a form of civil rights resistance and for housing Black sharecroppers and tenant farmers evicted by oppressive white landlords for marching, attending mass…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Activism, African Americans, African American History
Catherine Manathunga – Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on doctoral education. Pandemics throughout history have generated new educational theories and practices, accelerated some trends and signalled the abrupt end of others. The unpredictable effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have particularly impacted upon First…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Doctoral Programs, COVID-19, Pandemics
Brittney Michelle Elese Fink – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This qualitative research paper investigated the intersection of the COVID-19 pandemic and the year 2020 in sparking a phenomenon of hiring chief diversity officers (CDOs) in higher education. By exploring the interplay between the pandemic, racial justice movements, evolving higher education landscape, and institutional accountability, this study…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Barriers, Social Justice
Natasha N. Johnson – School Leadership & Management, 2024
Historically, there remains an underrepresentation of Black women in and en route to the highest levels of organisational leadership. The divide is all the more pronounced in the field of education, one in which women represent a large share of the community. Particularly relevant for Black women is the incongruence between their heightened…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Women Administrators, African Americans
Elizabeth Benninger; Shereen Naser; Sinéad M. O'Neill – School Psychology International, 2024
Dominant knowledge systems rely on a Western perspective of creating and disseminating new information. These systems marginalize traditional ways of knowing including co-creating knowledge, personal narratives and lived experiences, as well as inherited cultural knowledge. Additionally, Western knowledge systems have centered the White adult male…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Minority Groups, Social Justice, School Psychology
Nicholas Rickards – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
From James Baldwin's (1962) "A Letter to My Nephew," which laid bare the brutalities of being black in 1960s America, to Chanelle Miller's published victim impact statement addressed to her assailant, which provided vocabulary and was kindle for #MeToo, examples abound demonstrating the ways in which the open letter continuously surfaces…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Academic Language, Minority Groups, At Risk Persons