70 years later, schools — and moms — are still fighting segregation
After Brown v. Board, White families pulled their kids out of Pasadena’s public schools. Decades have passed, and neighborhood parents are still working toward integration.
More from The 19th
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Miss USA’s mental health crisis: Why the pageant world needs a wake-up call
Miss USA and Miss Teen USA have both stepped down amid allegations of a toxic work environment, sparking a larger conversation about the mental health of pageant participants.
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Black women entrepreneurs want more federal support to start and grow businesses
As the Biden administration highlights its economic efforts, Black women say they need more resources to launch and sustain new businesses and create generational wealth.
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Getting an abortion is hard for people from states with bans. It’s even harder if they’re undocumented.
In Florida, Arizona and Texas, laws that target undocumented people or deny them driver’s licenses make it especially difficult for them to travel out of state for care.
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Obama’s anti-apartheid activism lives on in a college monument — and on the minds of these students
As pro-Palestinian students urge Occidental College to vote for divestment, they compare their fight with the campus protest movement of the 1980s.
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What happens when women use their voices
We have seen a vice president and a porn star, both boldly taking up space and speaking in public as a means of wielding power.
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The friendships forged in a governors group chat
Democratic women governors brag on their states — and one another. They talk to The 19th about learning from one another about policy, what it takes to lead and what they see as “women’s issues.”
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The Amendment: Octavia Butler’s Vision of 2024 with Dr. Ayana Jamieson
In this episode of The Amendment, Octavia Butler scholar Dr. Ayana Jamieson joins the show to help Errin answer questions surrounding Butler’s novel “Parable of the Sower.”
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Angela Alsobrooks wins Democratic primary in crucial Maryland Senate race
The winner of the pricey, hard-fought primary could become the fourth Black woman to serve in the U.S. Senate. First she’ll have to defeat a popular former governor.
The 19th opens applications for its third Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Fellowship cohort
The program provides graduates and mid-career alums of Historically Black Colleges and Universities with full-year, salaried fellowships in reporting, audience engagement, and product and technology.
From the Collection
The 19th News Network
AAPI Heritage Month: Leaving our mark on American democracy
This month, we’re telling the stories of people who are carving out space as the nation gains new citizens and another generation of American-born AAPI people comes of age.
The Amendment: Octavia Butler’s Vision of 2024 with Dr. Ayana Jamieson
In this episode of The Amendment, Octavia Butler scholar Dr. Ayana Jamieson joins the show to help Errin answer questions surrounding Butler’s novel “Parable of the Sower.”
The 19th is committed to covering the unfinished business of voting rights
Here are our plans in this pivotal election as part of our participation in the Advancing Democracy Fellowship.
Join The 19th
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