Program Schedule

The National Center for Civil and Human Rights offers ongoing programming for everyone — young professionals, families with children, students, and adults. With both virtual and in-person programs, there is something for everyone. Learn more about what we have to offer below.

NCCHR Disclaimer: All comments of the moderators and guests of our programs represent the thoughts of each individual and do not represent an official position of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights.

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To kick off Trans Awareness Week, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights is hosting a conversation about what safety, freedom, and equity mean for the transgender community in the face of rising anti-trans legislation. In 33 states, more than 100 bills have been introduced that restrict transgender rights -- on issues ranging from...

In collaboration with USA TODAY, we're inviting guests to examine how racism continues to shape our country in this free virtual event titled, “Power To The People: How Voting Laws Have Shaped The United States And Black America." This conversation focuses on how equal access to voting is essential to the promise of democracy. This event...

If a democracy is only as healthy as its parts, then the people participating in it are its beating heart. What will it take to reimagine and revive civic engagement, from reviving national service to diversifying the political talent pipeline? Panelists: TBA "Reimagining American Democracy" is a monthly virtual series that will address these very...

In light of Covid-19 and its disparate effects on communities of color, conversations about race and equity are more necessary than ever. Join us for the next Equitable Dinners: Lift Every Voice on Sunday, November 21 with a focus on Anti-Racism and Truth & Reconciliation. We are also celebrating National Native American Heritage Month. Equitable...

Join us Thursday, December 16 for the Reimagining American Democracy series' seventh and final episode, on the subject of “Democracy in America, Democracy in the World.” This event will feature Deval Patrick, former governor of Massachusetts, Ibram X. Kendi, founding director of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research, and Anders Fogh Rasmussen, former NATO...

  Join The Center as we celebrate the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for MLK Day. A day full of activities for the entire family includes interactive story times, spoken word performances, visual artist talkbacks, and more! For a list of activities, please see below: 11:00am-11:15am Mama KoKu Interactive Story Time 11:45am-11:55am Visual...

In September 1906, a mob of 5,000 white people killed 25 African Americans over a four-day killing spree that began in the Five Points neighborhood of downtown Atlanta. Though it is a defining moment in Atlanta’s history, the 1906 Atlanta Race Massacre is largely unknown and unrecognized today. A coalition of Atlanta organizations is working...

Equitable Dinners Atlanta and the Fulton County Remembrance Coalition present Stories from the Soil, a series of conversation dinner events remembering the lives of 36 documented victims of racial terror in Fulton County between 1889 – 1936. Stories from the Soil serves to create a narrative to counter that of white supremacy by identifying the...

Join The Center on Wednesday, February 23 at 7pm for a discussion about the history of convict labor at two sites in Atlanta—Bellwood Quarry, now the centerpiece of Westside Reservoir Park, and the Chattahoochee Brick Company. Convict leasing was a practice government leaders and private businesses used after Emancipation to re-enslave Black men and women...

Join The Center on Friday, February 25th at 12:30pm for a virtual story time featuring the book The Electric Slide & Kai by Kelly Baptist. Kai is a young man who isn’t very coordinated and he’s having trouble getting down the steps of the Electric Slide. There’s a family wedding coming up and he doesn’t want to...