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The Black Panther Party Platform and Program - Pamphlet
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The Black Panther Party Platform and Program

description The Black Panther Party Platform and Program Overview

The Black Panther Party Platform and Program, published in 1966, presented a comprehensive response to racial inequality within the United States. Authored by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, it detailed the party’s Ten-Point Program demanding full employment, education, decent housing, an end to police brutality, and equal healthcare. This document served as a foundational statement for the Black Panther Party, articulating its goals and strategies for achieving social justice and empowering African Americans during the Civil Rights era. It remains relevant for scholars studying 20th-century political activism and community organizing.

insights Ranking position

The Black Panther Party Platform and Program ranks #35 of 315 in the Pamphlet ranking, behind Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans, ahead of An Agreement of the People.

help The Black Panther Party Platform and Program FAQ

What are the ten points in the Black Panther Party Platform and Program about?

The points demand employment, decent housing, education, an end to police brutality and other forms of political and economic self-determination. Each demand appears under a paired structure often summarized as What We Want and What We Believe.

Who wrote the Black Panther Party's Ten-Point Program?

Black Panther Party founders Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale drafted the original platform in Oakland, California. It appeared in 1966 as a foundational statement of the organization.

Did the Black Panther platform call only for changes to policing?

No, policing was one major concern, but the document also addressed jobs, housing, education, military service and imprisonment. Its ten demands framed racial injustice as an economic and political problem as well as a law-enforcement issue.

Was the Ten-Point Program ever revised?

Yes, the Black Panther Party published a revised platform in 1972. The later version changed some wording and expanded the emphasis on community control and broader political conditions.

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