• The Most Important Civil Rights Issue of the Obama Era?

    In what will likely be remembered as one of history’s greatest ironies, America’s first black president has led the country during a time of some of the greatest civil rights setbacks of the modern era. There was the Shelby County v. Holder Supreme Court ruling, which undid crucial provisions of the Voting Rights Act. While…

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  • Shutting Down the School-to-Prison Pipeline

    Who could forget the alarming image of St. Petersburg, Fla., police officers clasping handcuffs around the wrists of Ja’eisha Scott, a 5-year-old African-American girl, as they placed her under arrest for throwing a tantrum at school?   A video camera captured the incident on March 14, 2005, which took place at Fairmount Park Elementary School…

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  • World Champion Gymnast Focuses on Talent, Not Racism

    For world champion gymnast Simone Biles, her talent has become her job. “When I’m healthy, I go to the gym from 9 to 6:30 p.m. and train twice, from 9 to 12 and 2:30 to 6:30, so seven hours a day,” Simone tells The Root in an airy, petite voice from Spring, Texas. “I do…

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  • Quote of the Day: President Barack Obama on Human Rights

    Read a transcript of the president’s speech in its entirety here. Henry Louis Gates Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and founding director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. He is also the editor-in-chief of The Root. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Black Beauty Queens Have Broken Barriers

    Keli Goff is The Root’s special correspondent. Follow her on Twitter.  On Saturday Nov. 9, 2013, Ytiyish “Titi” Aynaw will make history as the first woman of African descent to represent Israel in the Miss Universe pageant. Aynaw, who is of Ethiopian Jewish ancestry, is the first black woman to hold the Miss Israel title. She…

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  • GOP Blocks Black Nominees to Thwart Obama

    The modern-day Republican Party appears to have a problem with black people—and especially black people in positions of power. Perhaps that can explain why they spend so much political capital trying to deny, undermine or prevent African Americans from entering or staying in the ruling class. Earlier this year, in anticipation of then-U.N. Ambassador Susan…

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  • The Perils of Asking for Help While Black

    We’ve seen too many cases like Renisha McBride’s this year. On Nov. 3, the 19-year-old Detroit resident was involved in a car accident. After knocking on the door of a home in Dearborn Heights, Mich. for help, McBride was shot in the head by someone in the residence. You’ll remember Jonathan Farrell, the unarmed man…

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  • Renisha McBride Is Dead, and ‘Stand Your Ground’ Questions Emerge

    Editor’s note: This story has been updated from an earlier version to reflect new developments. A Michigan woman’s death has joined the ranks of shootings that gun control advocates and those concerned about the dangers of racial profiling attribute to a gun owner emboldened by a “Stand your ground” law.   On Nov. 3, Detroit…

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  • Photo Essay: The Few and Mighty: Interracial Political Families

    They say all is fair in love and politics—well, that’s not the exact phrase, but the emergence of New York City Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio and his wife, Chirlane McCray, on the political scene, sheds light on the beauty of the human heart to find its true counterpart, regardless of race or political affiliation. The…

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  • Christie’s Respect for Obama Key to Minority Votes

    (The Root)—Although the Republican National Committee’s 2012 “autopsy” report has been gathering dust on the shelf ever since it was rolled out to much fanfare earlier this year, it looks like at least one 2016 presidential contender actually printed off that report and read the part about the urgent need for Republicans to make inroads…

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