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Chocolate City No More: Changing Demographics & Gentrification of Washington, D.C

Anacostia Community Museum

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Object Details

Creator

Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research

Views

1,200

Video Title

Chocolate City No More: Changing Demographics & Gentrification of Washington, D.C

Description

Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium The Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration, gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014. CHOCOLATE CITY NO MORE: CHANGING DEMOGRAPHICS AND GENTRIFICATION OF WASHINGTON, D.C. : a conversation of the changing racial and socio-economic profile of Washington, D.C. proper and the greater metro area over the past 20+ years. Audience Q&A follows the panel. Panelists: • Dr. Natalie Hopkinson Writer and Fellow, The Interactivity Foundation • Dr. Derek Hyra Associate Professor, American University • Dr. Sabiyha Prince Author/ Anthropologist, Independent Scholar • Moderator: Blair A. Ruble Vice President for Programs, Woodrow Wilson Center BACKGROUND BM20ACM.eventbrite.com The program references the museum’s 1994 landmark exhibition Black Mosaic, a multicultural, multilingual exhibition which examined race, nationality, and ethnicity of black immigrants in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. 20 years have passed since the Black Mosaic exhibition, and in that time both the local and national contexts have changed. Formerly predominately “Black” cities, like Washington, D.C., are changing in demographic composition. Immigration is a hotly debated national issue. Latinos have come to outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority in the United States. Native-born Black populations are declining while African immigrant populations have hit an all-time high. To address these important topics the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, in partnership with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, hosted a full day of discussions on race, immigration,gentrification, education, museums, and community in the Washington D.C. metro area on September 19, 2014. Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium September 19, 2014 9:00am – 4:30pm Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center One Woodrow Wilson Plaza - 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20004-3027 The Revisiting Our Black Mosaic Symposium received financial support from: • Anacostia Community Museum • Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars • Latino Initiatives Pool, a federal fund administered by the Smithsonian Latino Center • National Museum of African American History and Culture • Smithsonian Consortium for Understanding the American Experience • Smithsonian Consortium for Valuing World Cultures

Video Duration

1 hr 25 min 37 sec

Uploaded

2015-12-08T00:59:58.000Z

Type

Symposia
YouTube Videos

See more by

Anacostia_Community_Museums

Data Source

Anacostia Community Museums Collections and Research

YouTube Channel

Anacostia_Community_Museums

YouTube Category

Education

Topic

African Americans

Metadata Usage

Usage conditions apply

Record ID

yt_feGIOEoBaGc

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