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DUKAS_119887825_EYE
Kimberle Crenshaw: the woman who revolutionised feminism ? and landed at the heart of the culture wars. From police brutality to sexual harassment, the lawyer fights to ensure black women?s experiences are not ignored. So why are her ideas being denounced
Kimberle? Crenshaw, an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory, poses for a portrait at Stone Canyon Overlook in Los Angeles.
Crenshaw is an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory who developed the theory of intersectionality. She is a full-time professor at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School, where she specializes in race and gender issues.
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119887830_EYE
Kimberle Crenshaw: the woman who revolutionised feminism ? and landed at the heart of the culture wars. From police brutality to sexual harassment, the lawyer fights to ensure black women?s experiences are not ignored. So why are her ideas being denounced
Kimberle? Crenshaw, an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory, poses for a portrait at Stone Canyon Overlook in Los Angeles.
Crenshaw is an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory who developed the theory of intersectionality. She is a full-time professor at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School, where she specializes in race and gender issues.
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119887798_EYE
Kimberle Crenshaw: the woman who revolutionised feminism ? and landed at the heart of the culture wars. From police brutality to sexual harassment, the lawyer fights to ensure black women?s experiences are not ignored. So why are her ideas being denounced
Kimberle? Crenshaw, an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory, poses for a portrait at Stone Canyon Overlook in Los Angeles.
Crenshaw is an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory who developed the theory of intersectionality. She is a full-time professor at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School, where she specializes in race and gender issues.
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119887805_EYE
Kimberle Crenshaw: the woman who revolutionised feminism ? and landed at the heart of the culture wars. From police brutality to sexual harassment, the lawyer fights to ensure black women?s experiences are not ignored. So why are her ideas being denounced
Kimberle? Crenshaw, an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory, poses for a portrait at Stone Canyon Overlook in Los Angeles.
Crenshaw is an American lawyer, civil rights advocate, philosopher, and a leading scholar of critical race theory who developed the theory of intersectionality. She is a full-time professor at the UCLA School of Law and Columbia Law School, where she specializes in race and gender issues.
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524335_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524334_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524368_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524333_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524331_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524326_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524332_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524330_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524329_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524340_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524342_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524364_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524338_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524341_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524339_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524336_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524328_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524324_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524337_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524327_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
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DUKAS_119524366_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524323_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524367_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524363_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119524325_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524321_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524320_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524365_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_119524322_EYE
Leila Hassan Howe: ‘My life was made hell. You’d just hear a tirade against immigrants’. The march she led in 1981 helped forge a black British identity. She talks about revolution, police brutality and Black Lives Matter
Leila Hassan Howe photographed in London. Howe is a British editor and activist, who was a founding member of the Race Today Collective. She worked for the Institute of Race Relations and became editor of the Race Today journal in 1986. Hassan was also a member of the Black Unity and Freedom Party and the British Black Panthers.
© Yves Salmon / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_119467560_EYE
Black or blue: the complex double-lives of Oakland's Black police officers. Many Black officers feel pressure to both assimilate into the force and keep the respect of their community.
Deputy Chief of Police at Oakland Police Department LeRonne Armstrong in front of the Eastmont Station in Oakland, California, United States on October 15, 2020.
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DUKAS_119467562_EYE
Black or blue: the complex double-lives of Oakland's Black police officers. Many Black officers feel pressure to both assimilate into the force and keep the respect of their community.
Deputy Chief of Police at Oakland Police Department LeRonne Armstrong at his office in East Oakland, California, United States on October 15, 2020.
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DUKAS_119467561_EYE
Black or blue: the complex double-lives of Oakland's Black police officers. Many Black officers feel pressure to both assimilate into the force and keep the respect of their community.
Portrait of Deputy Chief of Police at Oakland Police Department LeRonne Armstrong (TOP) at the Eastmont Station in Oakland, California, United States on October 15, 2020.
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DUKAS_120748408_EYE
Black Lives Matter protests
A portrait of Indi Koonce, 17, at the memorial for George Floyd at at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, September 30, 2020.
Photo by Jenn Ackerman
@ackermangruber
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DUKAS_120748467_EYE
Black Lives Matter protests
The memorial for George Floyd at at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, September 30, 2020.
Photo by Jenn Ackerman
@ackermangruber
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DUKAS_120748409_EYE
Black Lives Matter protests
A portrait of Dante Malik Fornizy, 21 (blue jacket), Indi Koonce, 17 (black shirt), and Nicole Ocansey, 22 (beige sweater) at the memorial for George Floyd at at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, September 30, 2020.
Photo by Jenn Ackerman
@ackermangruber
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Black Lives Matter protests
A portrait of Nicole Ocansey, 22, at the memorial for George Floyd at at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, September 30, 2020.
Photo by Jenn Ackerman
@ackermangruber
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Black Lives Matter protests
A portrait of Dante Malik Fornizy, 21, at the memorial for George Floyd at at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on Wednesday, September 30, 2020.
Photo by Jenn Ackerman
@ackermangruber
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118619693_EYE
Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118619687_EYE
Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118619683_EYE
Opal Tometi is a human rights activis
Opal Tometi is a human rights activist, writer, strategist, and community organizer. She is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter movement. Photographed in Los Angeles.
© Bethany Mollenkof / Guardian / eyevine
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