White Supremacy Cultural Values: Healing the Disease That Hurts Us All
Virtual Zoom EventPresentation explores how racism plagues our country and our world and how to create a culture that serves us all.
Presentation explores how racism plagues our country and our world and how to create a culture that serves us all.
Presenter will be Professor Lorgia García Peña, Lorgia García Peña, who specializes in race and colonialism and Afro-Latinx studies.
Princeton High School racial literacy students offer their annual presentation.
Community members read an amended version of Frederick Douglass' influential speech, given on July 5, 1852, in Rochester, New York, to the Rochester Ladies Anti-Slavery Society.
Learn about the work of the Witherspoon Street Presbyterian and Nassau Presbyterian Churches to reconcile their histories and find a path forward, together.
Dr. Synatra Smith, project manager for the NJ Black Heritage Trail, discusses the initiative to highlight Black history, heritage and culture.
Dr. Nathalie Edmond discusses strategies for centering racial justice and balancing compassion with accountability highlighted in her newly published book.
Dalit American activist and author Thenmozhi Soundararajan will speak about her work to end caste oppression in America.
Black Women leaders in education have historically promoted anti-racism, while being victimized by racism. This talk will focus on the intersectional challenges (gender and race) faced by Black women in educational leadership.
Panel on the history of several Princeton institutions' involvement with slavery, discrimination or institutionalized racism
Historical re-enactor Ivey Avery presents on the life of Harriet Tubman, the political and societal issues that existed during her time and their lasting impact today.
Professor Hettie V. Williams will discuss the crucial role Black women played in the Civil Rights Movement in New Jersey.