The history of the US Black Power movement and its constituent groups such as the Black Panther Party has recently gone through a process of historical reappraisal, which challenges the characterization of Black Power as the violent, misogynist and negative counterpart to the Civil Rights movement. Indeed, scholars have furthered interest in the global aspects of the movement, highlighting how Black Power was adopted in contexts as diverse as India, Israel and Polynesia. This article highlights that Britain also possessed its own distinctive form of Black Power movement, which whilst inspired and informed by its US counterpart, was also rooted in anti-colonial politics, New Commonwealth immigration and the onset of decolonization. Existing ...
Although histories have been written about the transnational character of the anti-apartheid solidar...
Black Studies is a hugely important, and yet undervalued, academic field of enquiry that is marked b...
This article argues that the experience of the “Windrush generation,” Black Caribbean post–Second W...
The history of the US Black Power movement and its constituent groups such as the Black Panther Part...
This article details the extensive security regimes deployed against Black Power in the Caribbean th...
This article examines the grassroots Black internationalist organizing of the British Black Panther ...
Though born in the American South in the mid-1960s, the Black Power movement traveled the world in t...
This thesis examines in detail the rise and fall of the British Black Power movement. It is the firs...
Open access articleThis essay examines a growing literature on postcolonial Black Britain that seeks...
A group of West African and West Indian immigrants in London identified themselves as the British Bl...
This article challenges the local focus of much of the work on the Northern Ireland Troubles, by exa...
The Black Supplementary School Movement has a fifty-year tradition of resisting racism in Britain. C...
<p>The US Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was an organization of the Black Power Movement, a cu...
This thesis examines in detail the rise and fall of the British Black Power movement. It is the firs...
Black Star documents the Asian Youth Movements that emerged in 1970s and 1980s Britain. These organi...
Although histories have been written about the transnational character of the anti-apartheid solidar...
Black Studies is a hugely important, and yet undervalued, academic field of enquiry that is marked b...
This article argues that the experience of the “Windrush generation,” Black Caribbean post–Second W...
The history of the US Black Power movement and its constituent groups such as the Black Panther Part...
This article details the extensive security regimes deployed against Black Power in the Caribbean th...
This article examines the grassroots Black internationalist organizing of the British Black Panther ...
Though born in the American South in the mid-1960s, the Black Power movement traveled the world in t...
This thesis examines in detail the rise and fall of the British Black Power movement. It is the firs...
Open access articleThis essay examines a growing literature on postcolonial Black Britain that seeks...
A group of West African and West Indian immigrants in London identified themselves as the British Bl...
This article challenges the local focus of much of the work on the Northern Ireland Troubles, by exa...
The Black Supplementary School Movement has a fifty-year tradition of resisting racism in Britain. C...
<p>The US Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was an organization of the Black Power Movement, a cu...
This thesis examines in detail the rise and fall of the British Black Power movement. It is the firs...
Black Star documents the Asian Youth Movements that emerged in 1970s and 1980s Britain. These organi...
Although histories have been written about the transnational character of the anti-apartheid solidar...
Black Studies is a hugely important, and yet undervalued, academic field of enquiry that is marked b...
This article argues that the experience of the “Windrush generation,” Black Caribbean post–Second W...