Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Black male studies (BMS), [1] also known as Black men's studies, [2] [3] Black masculinist studies, [4] African-American male studies, [5] and African-American men's studies, [6] is an area of study within the interdisciplinary field of Black studies [7] [8] [9] that primarily focuses on the study of Black men and boys. [10]
United States of America – Racial and Ethnic Composition (NH = Non-Hispanic) Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race. Race / Ethnicity Pop 2000 [137] Pop 2010 [138] Pop 2020 [139 ...
Black men have shorter lifespans than any other group in the US besides Native American men. [196] Black people have higher rates of obesity, diabetes, and hypertension than the US average. [194] For adult Black men, the rate of obesity was 31.6% in 2010. [197] For adult Black women, the rate of obesity was 41.2% in 2010. [197]
In 2020, African American voters made up about 13% of the U.S. electorate, with a record 30 million eligible to vote that year, according to Black Men Vote, another organization dedicated to ...
39% of Black-owned businesses were owned by Black women in 2021, while men owned 53%. In the 2023 fiscal year, the SBA backed 4,781 loans to Black-owned businesses, totaling $1.45 billion.
The Black Men’s Research Institute “will fill a void in research, scholarship, curriculum, and public engagement.” The illustrious Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia — America’s only ...
The experimentation and abuse set onto black bodies in the pursuit of medical development has a long and treacherous history. The Tuskegee experiment is one of the more well known experiment, where black men with Syphilis were left untreated to ease the doctors' curiosities concerning the natural course of the disease when left untreated. Many ...
A new survey of high schoolers in the class of 2023 showed a sizable gap between Latino, Black and male students who want to go to college compared to those who think they’ll go.