Anna Lee shares how to better represent often overlooked members of theAsian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander community.
17-year-old student Sara Bonaparte writes about racism in Italy and its impact on her identity as a mixed-race young woman.
Slam poet and student Shnayjaah Jeanty shares her poem about Black name stereotyping and how Black people reclaim their identity and power with their names.
In her photo series “Brown Is,” 20-year-old Nila Varman celebrates solidarity between South Asian people and communities.
“It’s time our societies accepted Black people without needing us to conform to White beauty standards first,” writes 18-year-old student Petiri Ira.
21-year-old student and radio host Nila Varman in the U.K. writes about the misrepresentation of South Asians in the media.
The anti-colourism activist writes at the invitation of Malala Yousafzai
16-year-old student Karabo Nwamusi shares her reflections on colourism in South Africa.
19-year-old Jennifer Lee is helping Asian Americans with disabilities tell their stories.
18-year-old Sabina Patawaran discusses co-founding the Australian High School Anti-Racism Kit.
The role of race in the climate movement.
As Chinatowns around the world reel from racial and economic injustice, young women are organising to save these iconic neighbourhoods.
Students from Brazil, Senegal and South Africa share how the organisation Black Girls Surf taught them confidence on and off the board.
18-year-old racial and reproductive justice activist Mikayla Tillery writes about the Black maternal mortality crisis in the U.S. and how to address it.
Digital creator Eileen Huang discusses the power of social media for political education.
16-year-old Thai student Pat Sevikul writes about the way racism has affected her and her work founding the youth-led organisation Stick to Change.
21-year-old anti-colourism student advocate TK Saccoh investigates intersecting oppressions that contribute to the erasure of Black girls.
To understand the complexities of intersectionality and how it affects Black girls and women today, we need to understand the term’s history.
Korean American student Rachael (Suhyoung) Kong writes about her experiences with racism and the recent rise in anti-Asian hate crimes in the U.S.
Student poet Fatimata Cham shares her poem about the perception of criminals and how the U.S. justice system treats Black people.