40 Activism and Anti-Racism Accounts to Follow on Social Media

This list of activism and anti-racism accounts were mostly compiled from resources published by Parade, Sarah Sophie Flicker & Alyssa Klein, High Snobiety, Independent UK, and The Good Trade.

ACLU Nationwide: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Antiracism Center: Twitter

Audre Lorde Project: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook 

Because of Them We Can: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Black Women’s Blueprint: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Black Lives Matter: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Black Visions Collective: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Black Youth Project 100: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Check Your Privilege: Instagram | Facebook

Color Of Change: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Colorlines: Twitter | Instagram Facebook

Ethel’s Club: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Equal Justice Initiative (EJI): Twitter Instagram | Facebook

Equality Labs: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Families Belong Together: Twitter Instagram | Facebook

Femme Stella: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

From Privilege to Progress: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Good Good Good Co: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Grassroots Law Project: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Justice League NYC: Twitter Instagram | Facebook

Gathering For Justice: Twitter Instagram | Facebook

HuffPost Black Voices: Instagram

MPowerChange: Twitter Instagram Facebook

NAACP: Twitter Instagram Facebook

National Domestic Workers Alliance: Twitter Instagram Facebook

No White Saviors: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Official Millennial Black: Instagram

Rachel Cargle: Instagram | Twitter

RAICES: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

R29 Unbothered: Instagram | Facebook

Reclaim the Block: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Shifting the Culture: Instagram

Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ): Twitter Instagram Facebook

SisterSong: Twitter | Instagram Facebook

SpeakOut Speakers: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

The Black Curriculum: Twitter | Instagram 

The Conscious Kid: Twitter Instagram | Facebook

The Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

United We Dream: Twitter Instagram Facebook

Your Rights Camp: Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

View this post on Instagram

🚨It's never too early to talk about race.🚨 "Adults often think they should avoid talking with young children about race or racism because doing so would cause them to notice race or make them racist. In fact, when adults are silent about race or use "colorblind" rhetoric, they actually reinforce racial prejudice in children. Starting at a very young age, children see patterns — who seems to live where; what kinds of homes they see as they ride or walk through different neighborhoods; who is the most desirable character in the movies they watch; who seems to have particular jobs or roles at the doctor's office, at school, at the grocery store; and so on — and try to assign "rules" to explain what they see. Adults' silence about these patterns and the structural racism that causes them, combined with the false but ubiquitous "American Dream" narrative that everyone can achieve anything that they want through hard work, results in children concluding that the patterns they see "must have been caused by meaningful inherent differences between groups." In other words, young children infer that the racial inequities they see are natural and justified. So despite good intentions, when we fail to talk openly with our children about racial inequity in our society, we are in fact contributing to the development of their racial biases, which studies show are already in place.” (Dr. Erin Winkler, 2017) Images by @pretty_good_design, adapted from work by the Children’s Community School. #Parenting #RacialBias #TeachersOfInstagram #AntiRacist

A post shared by The Conscious Kid (@theconsciouskid) on

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