Coverage lane

Black America

This lane reads Black America as a domestic power base and a global diaspora node: policy, migration, media, capital, foreign-policy imagination, and Africa-facing strategy.

What Ali tracks

Domestic power with global consequences.

Coverage follows Black political power, media narratives, economic strategy, institutional influence, immigration, education, foreign policy, and the relationship between Black America and Africa.

Why it matters

Black America is already transnational.

African and Caribbean migration, global media, remittances, and identity politics mean the U.S. Black public cannot be understood only through domestic categories.

Paid path

Briefing or media audit.

Best paid next step: a briefing for a specific decision or a media/intelligence audit for creators and organizations trying to convert audience attention into durable leverage.

Watchlist
01Black immigrant growth

African, Caribbean, Latin American, and European-origin Black communities reshape the U.S. Black public.

02Media narratives and foreign policy

How Black America sees Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, and global power.

03Capital and institution building

Business, education, philanthropy, remittances, creators, and organizational power.

04Domestic politics as world signal

U.S. racial politics affects how the wider Black world reads American power.

Evidence base

Starting sources include Pew's Black immigrant research and CFR Americas-style regional/topic organization. The paid analysis layer translates demographic and policy signals into strategy for readers, creators, and institutions.