Sentences with phrase «about racial violence»

Because who wouldn't rather fight a Babadook than fight racists who are spreading fake news about racial violence in an attempt to undermine an uplifting success story?
Amazon # 1 best selling book about racial violence and black on white crime.
As an example, she pointed to the success online feminist activists had in raising awareness of the misogynist aspect of a mass shooting in Santa Barbara earlier this year and awareness about the racial violence and tensions in Ferguson, Missouri.»
It's almost as if this is an 85 - minute movie about the mob and a 30 - minute story about racial violence north of the Mason - Dixon line are just smashed together.

Not exact matches

We're truth telling about police violence and racial injustice in the criminal system.
Although he was talking about the state of the planet, his words are also apt on the topic of racial justice: If you look at the data that shows how racial violence has evolved throughout history and aren't frustrated or exhausted, then you probably don't understand the full story.
She's never seen athletes not only speak freely about ending police violence and racial injustice, but also throwing their livelihoods, money, and bodies on the line for the cause.
But at a time when more and more athletes of color are speaking loudly about police violence and racial injustice, Jordan and Newton are somewhat muted.
If sports have lately served as a staging ground for national discourse about concussions, domestic violence, child abuse, gay rights and racial sensitivity, it's because we have so few live, public spectacles around which discussion of any kind can take place.
Sports have served as a staging ground for national discourse about concussions, domestic violence, child abuse, gay rights and racial sensitivity.
And frankly from what I've heard about them - I haven't seen them myself directly but from what I've heard about them - they sound to me to be effectively criminal attacks, because incitement of violence, threats of violence, racial abuse, are all crimes.
It isn't about violence, abuse, racial identity, masochism, guilt, or any other themes piled onto the audience's conscience like weights on the barbell in Unbreakable.
Both of the presumed frontrunners feel like challengers: The Shape of Water, with its offbeat fantasy, sudden violence, and, um, interspecies sex; and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, which delights in confounding viewer expectations and has endured controversies about an ill - conceived racial subplot.
The Center on the Developing Child is particularly concerned about the needs of children who face the cumulative burdens of poverty, maltreatment, violence, racial and ethnic discrimination, and family mental illness.
We are particularly concerned about the needs of children who face the cumulative burdens of poverty, maltreatment, violence, racial and ethnic discrimination, and family mental illness.
Most of the remainder involve claims of racial discrimination, complaints about the quality of instruction provided English language learners, claims that schools have not provided female students with equal athletic opportunity, and charges that schools have not dealt adequately with sexual violence and other forms of sexual harassment.
«Michael Brown,» a Facing History blog post written by Los Angeles Associate Program Director Mary Hendra, is featured on the list as an excellent resource for teaching about racial profiling and / or police violence.
YA / Mature Readers: Teens will appreciate Gilb's heated and candid tale about 15 - year - old Sonny's quandaries over the volatile relationship between his mother and new stepfather, racial prejudice and violence, and his sexual and intellectual awakenings, necessitating choices between lust and love, crime and education.
In each of their essays, the curators weave art - historical narratives into narratives about the South as a center of slavery, ongoing racism, and social justice: analyses of the assemblages of Southern artists Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns, or the color photography of William Eggleston and William Christenberry, mix with accounts of the civil rights movements and racial violence.
That's now obviously elevated, but even early on artists were talking to us about their concerns with racial injustice and violence and the like.»
«Through her monumental paintings, Abney gives us the chance to have a meaningful conversation about issues of racial violence and social justice.»
Racial discrimination reinforces negative stereotypes about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, which can become internalised and generate lateral violence.
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