Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
White Skin, Black Masks by Frantz Fanon
Borderlands by Gloria Anzaldua
This Bridge Called My Back by Cherrie Moraga & Gloria Anzaldúa
The Karma of Brown Folk by Vijay Prashad
Why are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria by Beverly Daniel Tatum
White Like Me by Tim Wise
Other People’s Children by Lisa Delpit
The Next American Revolution by Grace Lee Boggs
Redefining Realness by Janet Mock
Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay
The Possessive Investment in Whiteness: How White People Profit From Identity Politics by George Lipsitz
The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. DuBois
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
The Shifting Grounds of Race by Scott Kurashige
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
Orientalism by Edward Said
How to Make White People Laugh by Negin Farsad
Pink Sari Revolution: A Tale of Women and Power in India by Amana Fontanella-Khan
I, Rigoberta Menchu: An Indian Woman in Guatemala by Rigoberta Menchu
Friends Disappear: The Battle for Racial Equity in Evanston by Mary Barr
Love Life of an Asian Guy
POC Aesthetics
LatinXcellence
USCIS Español
My Favorite F Word Is Feminism
Calvin Terrell: Consultant, Speaker, Trainer, & Soul Warrior
HuffPost Black Voices
Dear Evanston
Wokémon
Xicanisma
The Atlas of Beauty
Remezcla
Selma
12 Years a Slave
The Butler
The Trials of Muhammad Ali
Hidden Figures
Precious Knowledge
American Revolutionary: The Evolution Of Grace Lee Boggs
13th
Color of Fear
Halls of Anger
Moonlight
I Am Not Your Negro
Get Out
Paris is Burning
Sorry to Bother You
The Hate You Give
The Birth of a Nation
The Alliance of Filipinos for Immigrant Rights & Empowerment (AFIRE) is a grassroots community organization that builds the capacity of Filipino/a/xs* to organize on issues of social, racial, and economic justice that affect undocumented immigrants, domestic workers, seniors, and youth.
The arab american action network AAAN strives to strengthen the arab community in the chicago area by strengthening its capacity to be an active agent for positive social change. As a grassroots nonprofit, our strategies include community organizing, advocacy, education, providing social services, leadership development, cultural outreach and forging productive relationships with other communities.
Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Chicago, a member of Advancing Justice, has a mission to empower the Asian Am community through advocacy, by utilizing education, research, and coalition-building.
Assata's Daughters is a grassroots intergenerational collective of radical Black women located in the city of Chicago. We identify our work as part of the larger Black Lives Matter movement. Our programs aim to escalate, deepen, and sustain this movement for collective liberation.
BYP 100 is an activist member-based organization of Black 18-35 year olds, dedicated to creating justice and freedom for all Black people. We do this through building a collective focused on transformative leadership development, direct action organizing, advocacy and education.
Chicago Votes Action Fund does volunteer-driven democracy and builds power for our generation
A collective for South Asian youth in the Chicago/midwestern area that does community outreach, organizing, and holds an annual retreat at University of Chicago for three days centering on activism, identity, and history.
IYJL is a Chicago-based organization led by undocumented organizers working towards full recognition of the rights and contributions of all immigrants through education, leadership development, policy advocacy, resource gathering, and mobilization.
KINETIC, Advancing Justice Chicago’s youth empowerment program, works to create a community for, and increase the visibility of, Asian American and immigrant students by broadening each youth’s understanding of the root causes of racial inequity, while also pushing them to create and act on solutions.
KRCC’s mission is to empower the Korean American community through education, social service, organizing/advocacy and culture.
We are an arts education and youth development organization founded in 1996 by three women. KL has a mission of working to provide access to programs that preserve, promote, and present urban arts and culture.
WCG is a grassroots, inter-generational effort to center the voices and experiences of the young people most targeted by police violence in Chicago.