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Acclaimed scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw’s new book, ‘#SayHerName: Black Women’s Stories of Police Violence and Public Silence,’ honors Black women and girls – an often overlooked group in ...
KIMBERLE CRENSHAW: With the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, we have an opportunity to correct some of the historical wrongs and to identify some of those continuing dynamics in the women ...
In Kimberlé Crenshaw’s new book #SayHerName: Black Women’s Stories of State Violence and Public Silence, out today, the UCLA and Columbia University law professor thoughtfully memorializes ...
KIMBERLÉ CRENSHAW: Well, we’ve been trying to respond to it for the last three years, Amy, but the attack on critical race theory, the anti-woke attack on antiracism, it was always going here.
KIMBERLÉ CRENSHAW: There are those who are gonna tell us from this moment on that the project of equality is over with and that the only thing that we're doing is, you know, continuing to talk ...
When Crenshaw was marching against deadly anti-Black policing more than two decades later, in 2014—as she recounts in her most recent book, #SayHerName: Black Women’s Stories of Police ...
Watch Now On this week’s At Liberty podcast episode, you’ll hear from Kimberlé Crenshaw, pioneering CRT scholar and Distinguished Professor of law at Columbia University and UCLA, who unpacks the ...
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Kimberlé Crenshaw received the W.E.B. Du Bois Medal from Harvard's Hutchins Center for African and African American Research Oct. 1.
CRENSHAW: We’ve already heard that the approach is not to claim the mantle of “wokeness.” The approach is to focus on jobs, the approach is to focus on pocketbook issues.