The State of Black Hair in America: How the U.S. Government Regulates Black Hair

In 2018, the U.S. Navy made history when it changed its policy to allow women to be able to wear their natural hair in “non-traditional” styles such as dreadlocks, braids and ponytails. Despite this change in policy, it is still perfectly legal for the U.S. government to regulate how black women wear their hair in the workplace.  For example, under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, employers are permitted to regulate and enforce specific dress codes including how a woman can wear their hair in the workplace.  Although these laws are race neutral, meaning they are supposed to be applied equally to everyone, it disproportionately affects women of color, and black women in particular. Eleanor Abraham of InStyle magazine, gives us a thorough account of the history of how black hair is still being repressed and regulated and the history of discrimination  Read more.

 

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The natural hair movement isn’t a new phenomenon. For those of us born in the ‘60s and ‘70s we can remember living in the times of the black cultural revolution where black hair infiltrated the mainstream media with powerful images of activist Angela Davis and actress Pam Grier rockin’ their natural afros everywhere. In those times wearing your natural hair was based on a resistance to the racist Euro-centric “idealistic” beauty standards and a proclamation of black self-love.

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