Related Stories
BAR Editors
"What would Glen Ford say?" That question is one which we often ask ourselves two years after his passing. Glen was extremely prescient,
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
I was very proud to write the preface to Glen Ford's book, The Black
Glen Ford
, BAR executive editor
The compilation of Glen Ford's work, "The Black Agenda" was publ
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
Glen Ford reminded us that Black liberation cannot be found over a cheese plate and mimosas in a $6 million southern California mansion.
Mary Uyematsu Kao
Glen Ford's legacy is recognized all over the nation. Japanese- American newspaper Rafu Shimpo printed this tribute to his work.
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Ford was among the few journalists who took a stance for Black liberation and against imperialism.
Nia Ford
Glen Ford’s daughter explains his lifelong commitment to Black people.
Mark P. Fancher
Glen Ford followed in the footsteps of another legendary Black journalist.
Pascal Robert
Black radical analysis was the foundation of Glen Ford's work.
More Stories
- Anthony Karefa Rogers-WrightLiberal climate movements keep bargaining with capitalism, but the Black Radical Tradition knows survival requires its destruction. Environmentalism must adopt principles of abolition and anti-…
- Aby L. SèneConservation in Africa has long been a smokescreen for imperial power. Veiled behind the cause of environmentalism and stopping poachers, western governments, intelligence agencies, and billionaire-…
- Abdirahman M. AhmedThe Horn of Africa was filled with hope in 2018, when Somali President Mohammed Abdullahi Mohammed, Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki, and Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed signed an agreement…
- Black Alliance for Peace US Out of Africa NetworkThe Congo remains ground zero for Africa’s resource wars, where Rwanda and Uganda act as looters for the West. While international scrutiny has largely focused on Rwanda’s aggression, Uganda’s…
- Alina SelyukhLooted African skulls come home after a century in German labs, exposing colonialism's history of dehumanizing "race science."