Romantic relationships are in a weird place right now. Statistically things are shifting, but the numbers are particularly stark for Black Americans. In the last 50 years, the percentage of Black women who have yet to walk down the aisle has more than doubled; now 48 percent haven’t jumped the broom. Professor and author Dianne M. Stewart argues that there are policies in place keeping Black women from partnering, resulting in what she calls forbidden Black love. Could policy shifts have a major impact on the marriage rate? And why does marriage even matter in the first place?
Read More:
Black Women, Black Love: America's War on African American Marriage
Submit your policy questions!
We want to know what you’re curious about.
Credits:
Jonquilyn Hill, host
Sofi LaLonde, producer
Cristian Ayala, engineer
A.M. Hall, editorial director of talk podcasts
Want to support The Weeds? Please consider making a donation to Vox: bit.ly/givepodcasts
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ukraine and the global food supply crisis
What the Alito leak means for Roe — and everything else
The Most Dangerous Branch: Roe v. Wade
Why do we go to war?
Weeds Time Machine: The Clean Air Act
Tax time at the culture wars
Taxes! Let’s get right Intuit.
The Great Expiration
The art of the gerrymander
The myth of US energy independence
Why it’s so hard to move in America
Russia's terrible invasion
A quick update
Why San Francisco’s school board got booted
Democracy in crisis: The two-party problem
The curse of the midterms
Beijing, boycotts, and the enduring politics of the Olympics
Affirmative action could be doomed (again). What comes next?
It’s not about Ukraine. It’s about Putin.
Think of the children
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Tiny Desk Concerts - Video
60 Minutes
Left, Right & Center
The Axe Files with David Axelrod
Kickass News