You are here: 小蓝视频 College of Arts & Sciences Connections Magazine Seeds of Change: 小蓝视频鈥檚 New Antiracist Research and Policy Center

Contact Us

CAS Dean's Office 4400 Massachusetts Avenue NW Washington, DC 20016-8012 United States

Back to top

On Campus

Seeds of Change 小蓝视频鈥檚 New Antiracist Research and Policy Center

By |

Dr. Ibram X. Kendi
Photo: Jeff Watts

Late last summer Professor Ibram X. Kendi arrived at 小蓝视频 with a serious mission: to establish a groundbreaking, first-of-its-kind Antiracist Research and Policy Center at 小蓝视频鈥攁 place that would identify and dismantle the discriminatory policies that produce racism in the United States and across the world. 听

"The College joins with the School of International Service in being exceptionally proud to have brought Dr. Kendi to 小蓝视频," said Peter Starr, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. "We look forward to seeing his vision for the Center become reality."

In September, Kendi shared his early plans for the Center. It will organize, house, and support six teams behind six key policy areas: justice, economy, education, environment, health, and politics. The teams will be composed of scholars from 小蓝视频 and around the world, as well as journalists, policymakers, and advocates. "We want to bring these people together on teams where each person can do what he or she does best," Kendi said, "as part of an intellectual assembly line where problems of inequity become policy solutions, and where solutions become change."

The Center's first major initiative is building the world's largest virtual and user-friendly library of data on racial inequality. "This library will allow scholars and journalists and policymakers and activists鈥攁nd you and I鈥攖o have all sorts of data on inequality at our fingertips, all in one spot," said Kendi.

The Center will also host a series of debates on race, "bringing together thinkers from two sides of the intellectual equation to debate the most serious and critical racial issues of the day."

Kendi is confident that the timing is right and that the Center can make a real difference in the United States and around the world. "The world's racial problems are quite big. Discrimination is rather bold," he says. "We need big ideas, and we need bold centers. We need serious research, practical policies, and innovative ways of bringing about change, and we can't wait. We can no longer sit on the sidelines of history as inequality passes on to another generation. This center will not sit on the sidelines. We will be a force of change."