Racial Reckoning Discussion Series Part II: Black Tech Innovators & Disruptors

Black entrepreneurs are creating new opportunities for themselves and others by launching startups, designing apps, and founding organizations that tackle pressing issues such as racial equity, social justice, and economic empowerment.Yet they are woefully under-represented in the industry and in mainstream media narratives about it.

 

On Feb. 27 we explored why that is and what is needed for meaningful change to occur, as told through the experiences of Black innovators and disruptors whose work is changing the face of tech and helping to create a better future for all.

Black Tech Innovators & Disruptors Racial Reckoning Truth Telling Narrative Change Racial Equity DEI Strategies Workforce Development

The Surgeon General and other health officials field questions about COVID vaccines and health equity issues from multicultural media professionals via the BIPOCXChange on Oct. 27, 2002.Top U.S. health officials leverage the power of BIPOC media to inform and ...Read More

The (MMCA)BIPOCXChange a metaverse solution created by MMCA to help Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) media increase ownership and control over how their community’s stories are told.  Free to join, The ultimate goal for the BIPOCXChange is...Read More

Aggregating Local, Digital and Mainstream BIPOC Media On New Web3 Platform Delivers Value For Publishers Beyond News Dissemination (Washington, D.C., 8.4.2022) —  This week, in response to calls for comments to proposed changes to the Com...Read More

Dear Publisher:Since 2009, U.S. banks have invested nearly $3 trillion to improve the lives of low- and moderate-income families and revitalize their neighborhoods thanks to a 1977 law—the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) —created to en...Read More

Multicultural Media & Correspondents Association Advocacy Champions

Racial Reckoning Discussion Series Part I: Good DEI vs Bad DEI

Three in four Black workers say they are more likely to work for or st...