Black youth who attend racially segregated schools are more likely to have behavior problems and to drink alcohol than Black youth in less segregated schools, according to a UC San Francisco study ...
More than half a century after racial segregation practices like redlining were outlawed, data suggests race still plays a huge role in determining what kind of neighborhood a child grows up in.
In 1934, a youth baseball team from Springfield, Mass., arrived in segregated North Carolina for the Eastern Regionals. But everything changed when the team’s only African-American player stepped off ...
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