‘Auntie’ Myrna Carter Jackson, prominent Birmingham, Alabama, civil rights activist, leaves legacy of learning and leadershipBarnett Wright2024-06-06T08:07:21-05:0006.06.24|Community|
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute celebrates 30 years as a community jewelAnthony Cook2022-11-17T16:15:00-06:0011.17.22|Community|
Myrlie Evers-Williams to receive Birmingham Civil Rights Institute’s 2022 Shuttlesworth AwardPhil Pierce2022-11-08T08:28:29-06:0011.08.22|Community|
Can’t Miss Alabama brings you the best in food festivals and good musicShirley Jackson2022-04-28T09:00:16-05:0004.28.22|Community|
Power Moves: DeJuana Thompson’s storytelling passion helps find solutions in AlabamaMichael Tomberlin2022-05-03T11:20:41-05:0004.27.22|Community|
Put a spring in your step with lively entertainment from Can’t Miss AlabamaShirley Jackson2021-03-24T13:21:18-05:0003.25.21|Community|
BCRI Launches “When Resilience Speaks: A Community Response to COVID-19”Alabama News Center Staff2020-04-06T10:53:26-05:0004.06.20|Community|
On this day in Alabama history: The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute opened to the publicAlabama News Center Staff2019-11-15T14:16:55-06:0011.16.19|Community|
Andrea Taylor, BCRI president and CEO, talks about institute’s role in increasingly complex societyPhil Pierce2017-11-29T09:53:38-06:0011.29.17|Community|
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute celebrates 25 years of education, dialogue and historyPhil Pierce2017-11-29T09:50:37-06:0011.29.17|Community|
Richard Arrington Jr. to receive Fred Shuttlesworth Human Rights AwardBarnett Wright2017-08-29T14:13:16-05:0008.29.17|Community|
An Alzheimer’s love story: How a celebrity couple deals with the diseaseSolomon Crenshaw Jr.2016-03-10T07:53:06-06:0003.08.16|Community|