The University of Tennessee at Knoxville

08/22/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 08/22/2024 13:39

The Conversation: Offensive Names Dot the American Street Map − A New App Provides a Way to Track Them

The racially motivated tragedy in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, when a white supremacist murdered nine Black worshippers, and the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, two years later compelled Americans to confront the role played by memorials, monuments and other symbols in glorifying racist ideologies.

George Floyd's murder at the hands of a white Minneapolis police officer in 2020 only lent urgency to that challenge. Part of the racial reckoning in the wake of Floyd's death is a movement to remove offensive names from public places.

Professor of Geography Derek Alderman joined Joshua F.J. Inwood of Penn State University and Daniel Oto-Peralías of Pablo de Olavide University to share research on a new app designed to allow users to conduct nationwide inventories of discriminatory road names. Read about their findings at The Conversation.

UT is a member of The Conversation, an independent source for news articles and informed analysis written by the academic community and edited by journalists for the general public. Through this partnership, we seek to provide a better understanding of the important work of our researchers. Read more of our articles published by The Conversation on the UT News page.

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