The Ongea Mama Series is an online collaborative series between Black Women Radicals and the African Women’s Development Fund.
Read MoreZalika U. Ibaorimi will lead two teach-ins for The School for Black Feminist Politics on ontological, spiritual, and material deviant making.
Read MoreNadege Green, founder of Black Miami-Dade, an emerging digital storytelling and history platform that resists the erasure of Miami's Black past, offers insight on the pioneering leadership of Black women in the health field in Miami, Florida.
Read MoreWriter Yasmina Price interviews author Nina Lorez Collins, daughter of filmmaker, Kathleen Collins, about her mother’s legacy, the dynamics of their relationship, and the process of preserving and archiving her mother’s artistic output.
Read MoreBreya Johnson will kick off the 2022 School for Black Feminist Politics series by leading two online teach-ins on June Jordan and the care ethics of Black women writers
Read MorePan-African Feminist Solidarity with Africans In Ukraine is crucial at this political juncture. Join our upcoming event to learn more about solidarity efforts with African and Caribbean students and migrants fleeing the Ukraine.
Read MoreActivist Leah Thomas, who coined the term “intersectional environmentalism”, shares why centering those at the margins is key to building an inclusive and sustainable environmental justice movement.
Read MoreJoin us for an upcoming conversation with Andrea “Philly” Walls, founder of The Museum of Black Joy.
Read MoreBlack feminists make history everyday. We must honor their leadership during Black History Month and beyond.
Read MoreWriter Karla Mendez reflects on the power of Sonia Sanchez, whose pioneering work has changed the way we view poetry.
Read MoreThe founder of Black Miami-Dade, Nadege Green, will be taking over Black Women Radicals Instagram during the week of January 10th.
Read MoreJoin us for an upcoming conversation with Nadege Green, founder of Black Miami-Dade.
Read MoreAurielle Marie’s poetry collection, Gumbo Ya Ya, is a demand for and insistence on the cultivation of other worlds where Black gxrls are free from constant violence, terror, regulation, and judgement – where joy, pleasure, and peace are not only possible but abundance.
Read MoreWriter Karla Mendez reflects on the life of Irene Amos Morgan, whose refusal to submit to Jim Crow interstate travel laws helped pave the way for the Montgomery Bus Boycotts.
Read MoreBahamian human-environment geographer Dr. Adelle Thomas shares her expertise on the impact of climate change and injustice on Caribbean nations.
Read MoreA reading list by Maria Clara Araújo dos Passos from her teach-in ““The Political-Pedagogical Praxis of Afro-Brazilian Travestis and Trans Women (1979-2020)” for the School for Black Feminist Politics.
Read MoreMecca Jamilah Sullivan’s new book, The Poetics of Difference: Queer Feminist Forms in the African Diaspora, offers a mapping of an alternative history of intersectionality that takes seriously the theoretical contributions and impact of Black queer feminisms.
Read MoreBriona Simone Jones interrogates the fortitude, power, and futurity of the Black lesbian literary tradition in her new anthology, Mouths of Rain.
Read MoreA reading list on Reproductive Justice.
Read MoreBlack feminist activist, educator, and scholar Loretta J. Ross has paved the way for reproductive justice activism. In contemporary discourses on reproductive healthcare and abortion access, let’s not forget the leadership of Ross and other Black feminists who have and continue to be at the vanguard of reproductive justice.
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