Despite taking a defiant tone in the immediate wake of the infamous rally, the four men charged by federal authorities have all pleaded guilty.
Direct action can persuade, it can inspire, and it can change circumstances on the ground.
The daughter of a KKK Grand Dragon discusses life with the Klan, how she escaped, and the state of hate today.
Californians are arrested on Charlottesville-related charges, Missouri is down to one abortion clinic, and researchers may have found a far-off moon.
And it has identified six monuments and roughly 30 street names that could soon possibly meet the chopping block.
Charlottesville has come to define the nature of modern racism primarily as southern, embodied in tiki torches, Confederate flags, and violent outbursts, but that belies the insidious roots of racist policy in the north.
White nationalism didn't go underground after Charlottesville: It went mainstream.
Antifascist demonstrators prepare signs for their counter-protest to the Unite the Right rally in Washington, D.C., on August 12th, 2018.
In the months since the first Unite the Right rally, white supremacist and anti-Semitic incidents have only grown.
The National Park Service has approved plans for a "white civil rights rally" to be held across from the White House on the anniversary of the Charlottesville Unite the Right rally.
When Josh Damigo finds out his brother is the new face of the white nationalist movement, finding the roots of radicalization becomes personal.
With a new school year underway in Charlottesville, here's how teachers are addressing the recent violence.
What happens when achieving your purpose comes at the expense of someone else?
"We saw it coming," said a Virginia officer, but they couldn't stop it. Still, law enforcement experts say measures can be taken—even when protestors are armed.
The city's removal of Confederate statues in the dead of night was Baltimore's latest attempt to make peace with the ghosts of the Civil War.
It took days for the president to respond to the tragedy in Charlottesville, but just minutes to respond to the one in Barcelona.
Through hateful words and violent action, the white-supremacist marchers have lost their right to privacy.
The resignations followed the president's controversial comments about the violence Charlottesville, Virginia.
The president claims left-wing extremists are as violent as the alt-right. Does he have a point?
The president told reporters gathered at Trump Tower that the alt-left was responsible for violence at this past weekend's protests.
The white nationalist organizers in Charlottesville used the same social media tools as everyone else. One professor argues that means we need to rethink how we approach the First Amendment.
Trump was criticized over the weekend for his initial response to the violence in Charlottesville.
When violent white supremacists attack and kill people, criticizing divisiveness and urging people to unite is, at best, a dodge.