
Blaque American Research, Cultural, and Policy Center
The Blaque American Research, Cultural, and Policy Center is a repository for innovative research relevant to Blaque Americans. BARCP is independent and nonpartisan. This center spreads political and cultural awareness nationwide throughout Blaque American communities. This is done through such activities as education drives about reparations and policies, distributing information about candidates' stances and grassroots candidates in impending elections, and sponsoring community events.
Our goal is to build community by ascending Blaque Americans for political, ethical, and cultural reasons and to foster an appreciation for and increase knowledge of Blaque American history, Blaque American culture, and their vast contributions of them to the world.
A Blaque American is anyone one can trace their lineage to the country America and may identify as Negro, American Indian, Moor, Aboriginal, Black American, Or Tribe of Judah. The dates for this determination are 1300-1870, as many Blaque Americans were present before the Declaration of Independence (1776) and the American constitution was established (1787). Many Blaque Americans can trace their lineage before the 1870 census which was the first detailed account of Blaque Americans that they were reclassified in the United States. This 1870 census occurred five years after slavery was abolished. Obviously, It is a given that Blaque Americans were in America before this official date.
The splinter lineages within the Black American ethnicity are all welcomed. We are not concerned with what individual Blaque Americans identify as. The goal is resonance, aligned goals, and preservation of culture.
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Black American Research, Cultural, and Policy Center
Research Articles
Research Purpose
Advance Research
The Center will plan and maintain a community-engaged, focused, and high-quality research program. The Center's research program should build on existing knowledge regarding Black Americans and should be directly linked to their demands and interests.
Communicate Research
The Center will devise and implement a dissemination plan that communicates findings from research conducted both inside and outside of the Center, as well as boosts people's usage of research and data for researchers, federal and state policymakers, and community members.
A great deal of work is focused on culture, family, social support, policies, sexual health, and philosophy. Modern research may be divided into the following thematic domains:
• Discrimination & Racism
• Reparations via cash infusion and land acreage
• Culture
• Genocide and ethnocide prevention
• Delineation and preservation of unique Identity and ethnicity
• Politics
• Sexual health and family building
• Identity
• Economics
The case for Reparations
The case for reparations for Blaque Americans is compelling. From its inception, the United States has been characterized by racial prejudice and exclusion, with Blaque Americans bearing the brunt of this ill-treatment. Slavery, reclassification, Jim Crow laws, redlining, and mass incarceration have contributed to Blaque Americans' systematic disadvantage and isolation from full citizenship rights.
It is now time for America to make amends for its prior and current transgressions and compensate Blaque Americans to prevent their genocide. Such a move would be a significant step toward healing. Providing reparations would also send an effective message about America's intent to right historical injustices and make things right for Blaque Americans.


















































