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Giuliana Perrone – RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2024
This article considers a subset of lawsuits in which emancipated people sued to have their enslavers' bequests to them honored. It contends that we should see these suits as contests over reparations. By exploring this unappreciated history, this article argues that enslavers themselves believed reparations were due and were willing to pay them,…
Descriptors: Slavery, African American History, Compensation (Remuneration), Social Justice
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Darla Linville; Molly Quinn; Nicoletta Christodoulou – Journal of Education, 2025
Discussions of Black history and school desegregation in many K-12 schools have been narrowed to a few heroic figures and moments. Historic representations are currently challenged by a nationwide movement to uphold White supremacy and deny the violent history of racism in the US. The revisionist claims are challenged in this qualitative narrative…
Descriptors: African American History, African American Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, School Desegregation
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Mine Sadrazam; Ümmü Bayraktar – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2023
The great economic power of the United States of America allowed its attitude towards the African American population living on its land to be ignored for a long time. However, the lives of the African Americans and the time they have lived have started to manifest itself in music as well as various visual arts. Protest music is written and…
Descriptors: Racism, African Americans, African American History, Music
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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)
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Colleen Farry – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2024
The Re-membering Blackness Digital Archive at the University of Scranton shares the university's racial story as part of a campus-wide initiative devoted to reconciliation and collective memory. By bringing together archival records on Black history in a thematic digital collection, the project presents a corrective lens through which the…
Descriptors: Archives, Academic Libraries, African American History, Electronic Libraries
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
Baran, Cavit; Chyn, Eric; Stuart, Bryan A. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023
This paper studies the impact of the First Great Migration on children. We use the complete count 1940 Census to estimate selection-corrected place effects on education for children of Black migrants. On average, Black children gained 0.8 years of schooling (12 percent) by moving from the South to North. Many counties that had the strongest…
Descriptors: African American Children, African American History, Migrants, Migrant Children
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Alex J. Kenney – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
Black suffering at historically and predominantly white institutions cannot be analogized with other racially minoritized groups. By drawing upon insights from Black Critical Theory (BlackCrit), this study elucidates how antiblackness as a distinct form of racism manifests in Black undergraduates' lives. This study is guided by an instrumental…
Descriptors: African American Students, Undergraduate Students, Racism, Predominantly White Institutions
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Wiggan, Greg; Teasdell, Annette; King, LaGarrett J.; Murray, Alana; James-Gallaway, ArCasia – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
"Countering Miseducation: Situating K-12 Social Studies Education within the Black Intellectual Tradition" combines two separate articles--Part I "Re-membering" The Teachings of PtahHotep: Educational Implications of the Oldest Book in the World" and Part II "Locating Early 20th Century K-12 Black Social Studies…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Elementary Secondary Education, Social Studies, African American History
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Ortega-Williams, Anna; Harden, Troy – Youth & Society, 2022
Positive youth development (PYD), while embraced in many sectors of youth work, has faced criticism for its primary emphasis on positive personal change and adaptation, without a strong emphasis on social justice and culture, especially relevant for African Americans. Additional models of PYD addressing these conceptual gaps have emerged, however…
Descriptors: Youth Programs, Racial Bias, African Americans, Trauma
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Stanley, Melissa K.; Schroeder, Stephanie – Social Studies, 2023
The American Civil Rights Movement has often been misrepresented in textbooks, children's literature, and other curricular materials. With knowledge of the ongoing curricular distortion around Black history in P-12 curricula in mind, this article explores how a commonly used social studies curriculum, "Studies Weekly"®, represents the…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Curriculum, Civil Rights, Whites
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Moffa, Eric; Winston, Jake – Social Studies, 2023
During the 2020-2021 academic year, Virginia piloted a state-designed secondary African American history elective in 16 school divisions. Using the framework of Racial Pedagogical Content Knowledge (RPCK), this study examined the treatment of race in the new course by analyzing the state-created curriculum materials and interviewing three teachers…
Descriptors: African American History, History Instruction, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Race
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Tyriese James Holloway; Jeannette Moon; Lisa Yuk Kuen Yau – Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 2024
This article is a collaboration among three Philadelphia public school teachers who wrote curriculum units based on their new learning and research of W.E.B. Du Bois' groundbreaking book, "The Philadelphia Negro" (1899) of the Seventh Ward. Du Bois' book was the first major race study of an African-American urban community ever published…
Descriptors: African American History, Authors, Racism, Scholarship
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Chapman-Hilliard, Collette; Hunter, Evelyn; Adams-Bass, Valerie; Mbilishaka, Afiya; Jones, Bianca; Holmes, Ecclesia; Holman, Andrea C. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2022
Civic engagement is important for individual and collective development, and may serve as a means of collective agency for Black people. However, few studies have examined culture-specific factors that promote civic engagement among Black populations. In the current study, we use survey data to examine how racial identity dimensions (racial…
Descriptors: Racial Identification, Citizen Participation, African American Attitudes, African American History
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Kristen E. Duncan; Alex E. Chisholm; Terrance J. Lewis – Critical Education, 2025
The current anti-truth context, in which discussions of race and racism in K-12 schools are rendered illegal, is just the latest iteration of anti-Black legislation that impacts schools. In this article, we historicize the contemporary moment by using BlackCrit and fugitive pedagogies to discuss how Black teachers have navigated discussions of…
Descriptors: Racism, Elementary Secondary Education, African American Teachers, African American Students
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