The highlights this week: The Egyptian government increasingly wades into geopolitics in the Horn of Africa, Chad closes its ...
The civil war between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) saw an estimated 600,000 ...
Civil rights veteran Prexy Nesbitt retraces his path from Chicago’s West Side to African liberation struggles, reflecting on ...
Jackson was a protégé of Martin Luther King Jr. before carving out his own place in the African-American struggle ...
The latest report, by a team of investigators working for the UN Human Rights Council, accuses top politicians in the ...
The peripheralisation of Africa was again evident at this month’s Munich Security Conference – the world’s premier forum on ...
Return to Southampton County examines emancipation, United States Colored Troops service, and the unfinished struggle ...
This is the fourth and final in a series of articles by Michigan Advance throughout February celebrating Black History Month.
Civil rights icon Jesse Jackson leaves behind a movement that lacks a single unifying leader, but his legacy of inclusion could help it carry on.
A pioneering author and the first Black U.S. senator are among the influential Black men featured on historical markers in.
In some ways, the fact that there is no obvious individual to take the mantle is part of Jackson’s legacy, say civil rights activists, elected leaders and scholars. He advocated for leaders at all ...
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