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Action-Resource Guides

ARPC action-resource guides are designed to curate critical analysis and resources in the form of accessible, actionable tools. From deep dive, multi-media toolkits such as our Pointing the Farm Bill Toward Racial Justice Toolkit, to event summary guides, such as the Abolition of Abortion Laws Resource guide, our action-resource materials are all grounded in ideas, scholarships, and recommendations developed collaboratively with grassroots communities and interdisciplinary teams of scholars.
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Vintage photo of man on tractor, Photo courtesy of the FSC/LAF Black farmer archivesPhoto courtesy of the FSC/LAF Black farmer archives

Pointing the Farm Bill Toward Racial Justice

ARPC is thrilled to announce the release of our Pointing the Farm Bill toward Racial Justice toolkit. Created in partnership with the Federation of Southern Cooperatives, and based on the analysis of many grassroots organizations and farmers at our 2023 Farm Bill Summit, the toolkit outlines opportunities for advancing racial justice and equity, along with climate justice, in the 2024 Farm Bill and beyond.

Protestors carrying signs and banner that reads, abolish all abortion laws now

Abolition of Abortion Laws Resource Guide

The Abolition of Abortion Laws Resource Guide, produced as a result of our January 25 event with the Center on Health, Risk, and Society and the DC Abortion Fund, brings together speaker recordings, further readings, and ways to take action for students, scholars, and community members interested in reproductive justice at the intersections with racial justice and equity.

James Meredith seated in a classroom

Affirmative Action Resources

Over the past two years, ARPC has worked to educate, inform, and empower the public as we enter the next stage in the struggle for educational access for everyone. These two social media toolkits can be used to spread awareness about the implications of the supreme courts decision on affirmative action.
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Murdock house.

Slavery at СÀ¶ÊÓƵ

ARPC Fellow Mia Owens, who earned her master’s degree in Public History, left behind an important legacy at СÀ¶ÊÓƵ. She created a virtual subject guide, — a rich resource that students and researchers can use to learn about the historical influences of slavery on the СÀ¶ÊÓƵ campus and throughout the metropolitan area.

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