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Why the Harlem Cultural Festival, known as “Black Woodstock,” was forgotten for decades.
“She was prescient in many ways,” says Nina Banks, editor of a new book on the speeches and writing of Sadie T. M. Alexander.
An excerpt from a Federal Reserve conference series about race and the economy focused on diversifying the profession itself.
Economist Dambisa Moyo on the evolving roles and responsibilities of corporate boards
A personal connection to slavery sparked a reckoning that lead to reparations.
According to a recent survey, 30% of Black investors under 40 first got into the market in 2020.
Professor Dorothy Brown of Emory University became a “detective,” searching for data on how the tax code impacts Black Americans.
Smaller businesses owned by women and people of color often lack the banking relationships that larger companies have.
It’s part of a reappraisal of brands long criticized for their demeaning or racist roots.
In a new book, sociologist Reuben Jonathan Miller explores the punishments formerly imprisoned people face after their release. Read an excerpt here.