Vision, Mission & Values Our Vision A world without chains – where people are no longer shackled by racism, colonialism and imperialism, and transnational solidarity, cooperation and respect are a way ...
Welcome to the IRR’s Register of Racism and Resistance (RRR). Here you will find archived calendar entries dating back to 2014. Use the filtered search functions in the right sidebar or simply type a ...
£0.00 An educational pamphlet on the Caribbean-British actor, singer and activist Pearl Prescod - the first Black female player to join the National Theatre company.
On this day in 1979, Awaz (UK Asian women’s collective) + OWAAD (Organisation of Women of African+Asian descent) organised a powerful picket at Heathrow, protesting the horrific virginity tests, which ...
A. Sivanandan was one of the most important and influential black thinkers in the UK, changing many of the orthodoxies on ‘race’, heading the Institute of Race Relations for almost forty years, ...
£6.00 The April 2024 issue of Race & Class contains cutting-edge articles on the criminal legal system, adding to a growing number of voices and campaigns rejecting the normalisation of systemic ...
The quarterly journal of the Institute of Race Relations, Race & Class came into being during the early 1970s, at a period of rapid, mass, social and political change; of major liberation struggles ...
An IRR briefing paper that suggests ways we can push back against far-right ideas as they pass into the mainstream £0.00 Citizenship-stripping powers introduced since 2002 have enshrined a ...
£0.00 A joint submission of evidence from the PPT London steering group and the IRR to the Permanent People's Tribunal Berlin hearing, held on October 23-25 2020 £0.00 When witnesses won't be silenced ...
Every day on the streets of the UK, in playgrounds, classrooms, shops, at work, on public transport, black and minority ethnic people are racially harassed. This can take any form, from a racist tweet ...
£3.00 Past oppressions are written into our statues, our architecture and our walls. This special issue of Race & Class brings a new perspective to reparatory history.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results