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Feb 07

Is ‘I Am Not Your Negro’ the latest victim of online ‘vote brigading’?

By Elizabeth Flock

The Oscar-nominated ‘I Am Not Your Negro’ has gotten glowing reviews from critics. But online, the reviews for the film look very different.

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Jan 17

Watch 16:12
The first black president faced great expectations. What will be Obama’s legacy on race?

By PBS News Hour

What did the election of America’s first black president mean for the United States? And how did President Obama’s policies and rhetoric advance issues important to the black community? Rael Nelson James of the Bridgespan Group, James Peterson of Lehigh…

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Jan 12

Watch 5:51
Depicting colonialism and globalization through art ‘full of contradiction’

By PBS News Hour

A “Wind Sculpture” by visual artist Yinka Shonibare MBE was recently installed in front of the National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. It’s the seventh in Shonibare's series of vibrantly colored and patterned public artworks that are made…

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Dec 21

Watch 7:32
Unveiling the long-hidden story of the Attica prison takeover

By PBS News Hour

In September 1971, Attica Correctional Facility in upstate New York became the site of a bloody uprising that would shock the nation. Over several days, some 1,300 inmates seized parts of the prison, demanding better living conditions. Heather Ann Thompson…

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Dec 21

Watch 10:38
How Obama’s unique background shaped his outlook on race

By PBS News Hour

The Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi Coates has criticized President Obama’s policies toward black Americans. Perhaps for that reason, he was invited to discuss such issues with Mr. Obama several times throughout the president's second term. As part of a collaboration with The…

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Dec 04

Stopping police violence starts long before the courtroom

By Rebecca Oh

Legal experts say that reforming police policy and training are much more effective than prosecutions in reducing instances of police uses of force.

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Nov 15

Gwen’s Take on journalism, race and Queen Latifah

By Larisa Epatko

We at the PBS NewsHour and Washington Week lost our dear colleague, Gwen Ifill, to cancer on Monday. During her life, she often was called upon to discuss journalism, but other topics, too: among them, race, music and advice for…

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Oct 25

Watch 8:49
How the n-word became the ‘atomic bomb of racial slurs’

By PBS News Hour

Its effect can be explosive and painful: Harvard University professor Randall Kennedy has traced the history of the N-word to understand the evolution of the infamous racial slur. Kennedy joins special correspondent Charlayne Hunter-Gault to discuss this history, including reappropriations…

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Sep 29

UN panel says the U.S. owes reparations to African-Americans

By Eugene Mason

The United States owes African-Americans reparations for slavery, a recent United Nations report said.

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Sep 29

Blacks, whites live in ‘different worlds’ when it comes to police relations

By Laura Santhanam

Race plays a major role in the way people view law enforcement in their communities, according to a new study that comes out following several high-profile police killings.

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Full Episode
Monday, Nov 3
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