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Black Justice, Black Joy: Dreaming Bigger in the Fight for Civil Rights

Wednesday, March 22, 2023 | page

Black Justice, Black Joy Dreaming Bigger in the Fight for Civil Rights By Lindsey Norward Senior Staff Writer For weeks following the horrific murder of George Floyd in May 2020, protesters took to the streets, their hands clasped onto signs as their feet marched along the pavement. Brimming with passion and energy, the sounds of […]

Black History Month Spotlight: Robert L. Carter

Wednesday, February 5, 2014 | news

“As I take the measure of my life and experience, it is, at a personal level, a story of struggle and triumph. With the support of family and community, I overcame the limits of racial exclusion, discrimination, and poverty to become a leading civil rights lawyer and ultimately a federal judge. Brown v. Board sits […]

Black History Month Spotlight: Jean Fairfax

Thursday, February 13, 2014 | news

LDF celebrates the life and work of Jean Fairfax, one of the unsung heroines of civil rights movement. A great humanitarian, organizer, strategist and activist, Mrs. Fairfax served as the Director of Community Services at LDF from the 1960s through 1984, where she was instrumental in organizing among black families and parents in school desegregation cases. […]

Black History Month 2016: “Civil Rights, Equality, and Justice: Then & Now”

Thursday, February 4, 2016 | news

Milestones in LDF’s Fight for Voter Equality In this first “Throwback Thursday” (#tbt) installment of our “Civil Rights, Equality, and Justice: Then & Now” series for Black History Month 2016, we will take a look at two voting rights milestones in the LDF decades-long fight for voting rights and political participation nationwide. Then: Smith v. […]

Black firefighter hopefuls who sued 16 years ago turn out for physical testing

Wednesday, November 2, 2011 | news

LaShonn Tomlinson always had dreams of becoming a Chicago firefighter, but while working at Amtrak’s Union Station storage yard, those dreams often passed him by. “For years, I would see the new candidates running down Canal Street, and I’d be wondering when it would be my turn,” said Tomlinson, 38. “But I never got the […]

Black Farmers FAQ: Addressing Systemic Discrimination

Thursday, October 19, 2023 | case-issue

Black Farmers FAQ The history of discrimination against Black farmers and policy initiatives to remedy these inequities. Black farmers have long faced systemic discrimination by public and private institutions and barriers to economic mobility. Inequities in the administration of government farm programs and discrimination by the U.S. Department of Agriculture have had a devastating impact […]

Black Arkansas Voters Sue Over Racially Gerrymandered Congressional Map

Tuesday, May 23, 2023 | news

Today, the Legal Defense Fund (LDF), O’Melveny & Myers LLP, and longtime Arkansas civil rights attorney, Arkie Byrd, filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of the Christian Ministerial Alliance, and individual voters, Patricia Brewer, Carolyn Briggs, Lynette Brown, and Mable Bynum, challenging Arkansas’s 2021 congressional redistricting. Plaintiffs allege that the redistricting violates the Fourteenth and […]

Black and Brown Schools Already Over-Policed

Tuesday, January 22, 2013 | news

“When we look at whose schools are policed and which students have to go through metal detectors, get pad-downs, get drug-searched on a routine basis, it’s our students of color and our communities of color across this country,” said Matthew Cregor, of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund. “The Newtown, Connecticut, massacre has led […]

Black Alabama Voters Win Fair Congressional Representation for Remainder of the Decade

Thursday, May 8, 2025 | news

CONTACT: Ella Wiley, ACLU, media@aclu.org, 925-819-0555 Troi Barnes, LDF, media@ldf.org. 929-736-1528 A federal court has ruled after a full trial that Alabama’s 2023 congressional map not only violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act but was enacted by the Alabama Legislature with racially discriminatory intent. This ruling establishes that  the Alabama congressional map must include […]

Bipartisan Brief Filed in Support of Texas Death-Sentenced Prisoner, Duane Buck

Wednesday, March 9, 2016 | news

Yesterday, Hon. Mark L. Earley, Hon. Timothy K. Lewis, Hon. Gregory B. Craig, and Hon. Sheila Jackson Lee filed a “friend of the court” brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to consider the appeal of Texas death-sentenced prisoner, Duane Buck. Mr. Buck, an African-American man, was sentenced to death after his own attorneys introduced “expert” […]

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