United States -- Race relations
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United States -- Race relations
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United States
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Incoming Resources
- Racism without racists, color-blind racism and the persistence of racial inequality in America, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva
- The essential Kerner Commission report, edited and introduced by Jelani Cobb, with Matthew Guariglia
- I am not your negro, a major motion picture directed by Raoul Peck, from texts by James Baldwin ; compiled and edited by Raoul Peck
- Be a revolution, how everyday people are fighting oppression and changing the world--and how you can, too, Ijeoma Oluo
- In their names, the untold story of victims' rights, mass incarceration, and the future of public safety, Lenore Anderson
- Our savage neighbors, how Indian war transformed early America, Peter Silver
- A history of me, written by Adrea Theodore ; illustrated by Erin K. Robinson
- Jim Crow and policing, Kevin P. Winn with Kelisa Wing
- We were eight years in power, an American tragedy, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Ida B. Wells, by Diane Bailey
- Our migrant souls, a meditation on race and the meanings and myths of "Latino", Héctor Tobar
- Caste, the origins of our discontents, Isabel Wilkerson
- Long time coming, reckoning with race in America, Michael Eric Dyson
- Woke racism, how a new religion has betrayed Black America, John McWhorter
- From rage to reason, my life in two Americas, Janet Langhart Cohen with Alexander Kopelman
- Uncomfortable conversations with a black man, Emmanuel Acho
- Between the world and me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
- An indigenous peoples' history of the United States, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
- The new Jim Crow, mass incarceration in the age of colorblindness, Michelle Alexander
- Allow me to retort, a black guy's guide to the Constitution, Elie Mystal
- Dreams from my father, a story of race and inheritance, Barack Obama
- A little devil in America, notes in praise of black performance, Hanif Abdurraqib
- Caste, the origins of our discontents : adapted for young adults, Isabel Wilkerson
- I am not your negro., written by James Baldwin ; directed by Raoul Peck, Widescreen
- The future of whiteness, Linda Martín Alcoff
- The civil rights movement, by Craig E. Blohm
- So you want to talk about race, Ijeoma Oluo
- A testament of hope, the essential writings and speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr., edited by James Melvin Washington
- Who was Ida B. Wells?, by Sarah Fabiny ; illustrated by Ted Hammond
- Citizen, an American lyric, Claudia Rankine
- So you want to talk about race., by Ijeoma Oluo, MP3
- Uprooting racism, how white people can work for racial justice, Paul Kivel
- Racial innocence, unmasking Latino anti-Black bias and the struggle for equality, Tanya Katerí Hernández
- When they call you a terrorist, a story of Black Lives Matter and the power to change the world, Patrisse Khan-Cullors and Asha Bandele ; adapted with Benee Knauer
- The civil rights movement, an interactive history adventure, by Heather Adamson
- Locking up our own, crime and punishment in black america, James Forman, Jr
- Accidental courtesy., Daryl Davis, race & America, directors, Matthew Ornstein, Widescreen
- All God's children, the Bosket family and the American tradition of violence, Fox Butterfield
- A colony in a nation, Chris Hayes
- The matter of black lives, writing from the New Yorker, edited by Jelani Cobb and David Remnick
- Desegregation and integration, Kevin P. Winn with Kelisa Wing
- The devil you know, a Black power manifesto, Charles M. Blow
- Stamped from the beginning, the definitive history of racist ideas in America, Ibram X. Kendi
- Having our say, the Delany sisters' first 100 years, by Sarah Louise and Annie Elizabeth Delany, with Amy Hill Hearth
- The third reconstruction, America's struggle for racial justice in the twenty-first century, Peniel Joseph
- Don't label me, an incredible conversation for divided times, Irshad Manji
- An African American and Latinx history of the United States, Paul Ortiz
- Caste, the origins of our discontents, Isabel Wilkerson
- Let it shine, stories of Black women freedom fighters, Andrea Davis Pinkney ; illustrated by Stephen Alcorn
- The 1619 Project, a new origin story, created by Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times Magazine
Outgoing Resources
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