OUR WORK
It all begins with making a difference in our community. The NWA Branch of the NAACP is committed to addressing the issues that matter right here in Northwest Arkansas.
Upcoming Events
Below are events organized by NWA NAACP and other local organizations with similar missions.
Monday, June 8
NWA NAACP Monthly Meeting
6:30 p.m. at WelcomeHealth, 1100 N. Woolsey Ave., Fayetteville.
Please join us to meet your fellow NWA branch members and get involved in the fight for racial equality and justice in Northwest Arkansas.
Friday, June 19
A Juneteenth Celebration!
4-9 p.m. at Spring Street Studios, 704 S. Washington Ave., Fayetteville
Let’s Talk presents an outdoor cookout-styled that will include family-friendly activities including free food, music, prizes and a chance of fellowship with all of our local neighbors as we honor this historic holiday.
Saturday, June 20
NWA Juneteenth Celebration
11 a.m.-3 p.m. at The Ramble, 255 S. West Ave. (between Dickson & Center streets), Fayetteville
Celebrating 30 years of culture in NWA, the University of Arkansas and the NWA Juneteenth Planning Committee invite the community, friends and family to commemorate the anniversary of African American emancipation. This event is free to the public! We’ll have lots of fun with live music, games, giveaways, and activities for the whole family.
Saturday, June 20
NWA Freedom Festival
3-10 p.m. at Luther George Park, 300 Park St., Springdale
Freedom Festival is a day for Northwest Arkansas and surrounding areas to gather, reflect and share in a festival of music, food and fun. Freedom Festival is presented by Music Moves in partnership with The Community Cohesion Project (CCP) Foundation; sponsors include Walton Family Foundation and Tyson Family Foundation.
June 26-28
NWA Pride Weekend
Various locations in downtown Fayetteville
Now in its 22nd year, NWA Pride is Arkansas’s largest LGBTQ celebration and one of the most powerful cultural events in the region. What began in 2004 as a grassroots community gathering has evolved into a bold, joyful, and unrelenting movement, drawing more than 35,000 people to downtown Fayetteville each June to celebrate love, visibility, identity, and progress.
Oct. 1-3
NAACP Arkansas State Conference 81st Convention
Wyndham Grand Executive Center, 3201 Bankhead Drive, Little Rock
The annual gathering of the NAACP Arkansas State Conference and its regional branches, including NWA’s. Before registering, get in touch with branch leadership through our GroupMe or at our regular monthly meetings to become a delegate.
2026 Founders’ day scholarship luncheon
Thank you to the more than 150 people who joined Founder's Day Scholarship Luncheon on Feb. 15, 2026, at the Rogers Convention Center!
Benefiting NWA high school and college students, this new annual event featured Dr. Marc Lamont Hill, a cultural anthropologist, critical policy scholar and radical educator whose work explores issues of race, education, citizenship and state violence in the United States and the Middle East. He delivered an incredible keynote address on the theme “For Such a Time as This: Answering the Call to Serve.”
While the event is over, you can still see our photo gallery and video recording below, learn more about the speaker and read the event’s digital program.
Follow us on Instagram to get information about next year’s Founders’ Day event as well as others throughout the year.
For such a time as this: Answering the Call to serve
See part of Dr. Marc Lamont Hill’s incredible keynote address here.
2021 Scholarship Fundraiser
Thank you to our NWA COMMUNITY! We have raised $8,126 for our scholarship fundraiser and are well on our way to reaching our November 22 Goal of $10k! We are so grateful to all of you who have provided a financial gift for these educational scholarships! It takes all of us! Watch our program again on our Youtube channel.
Back to School Donations
The NWA NAACP Chapter raised over $1,000 to donate to St. James Baptist Church Back-to-School Event where they will be giving out backpacks to students in our community for free! We raised this money with the help of NWA NAACP members and local community members of NWA.
EDUCATION FORUM
The Northwest Arkansas NAACP hosted an Education Forum ahead of the School Board elections to dive into why you should engage with your local school board, why PTO’s matter locally, and process policies candidates plan to support during their tenure on the Fayetteville School Board. The NWA NAACP used this time to inform the public on how to connect to their local PTO and why parents' voices matter in our communities as we educate children. Check out the entire recording by clicking the YouTube link.
WELL PAST DUE: A PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATION BETWEEN THE BLACK COMMUNITY AND NORTHWEST ARKANSAS LAW ENFORCEMENT
On Monday, May 17, 2021, the Northwest Arkansas chapter of the NAACP partnered with the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., Omicron Zeta Lambda Chapter to host a virtual conversation with local law enforcement to openly discuss the relationship between BIPOC individuals and local police departments. Over 160 community members registered for this Zoom webinar event, with over 100 in attendance and over 60 views thus far on the live stream on YouTube.
Subjects like police department hiring, training, DEI efforts within the departments, instructions on what to do in certain high-risk situations— especially as it relates to BIPOC individuals—and how we build trust and good relationships with departments were central to the conversation. An overall sense from the conversation was that police departments want to show up in their community as a source of safety for community members, and they too are processing what it means for their officers to manage the stigma of being a police officer at this time.
Participating law enforcement officers included Deputy Chief Jamie Fields of the Fayetteville Police Department, Chief Steve Gahagans of the University of Arkansas Police Department, Chief Jon Simpson of the Bentonville Police Department, Chief Deputy Jay Cantrell of the Washington County Police Department, Chief Cody Harper of the Centerton Police Department and Captain Derek Hudson of the Springdale Police Department. The event was moderated by Shaun Mayo.
“The NWA NAACP sincerely thanks all representatives of local law enforcement who participated in our first community conversation. True progress begins with open dialogue. We love being part of a community that encourages progress and growth. We hope to make this a bi-annual event as we work to keep lines of communication open,” says Dr. Coby Davis, current president of the NWA NAACP.
Feedback from the community members and law enforcement professionals who attended was overwhelmingly positive. Many people expressed gratitude that this conversation took place. The NWA NAACP hopes this will be just one of many regular conversations to be held with local law enforcement to continue building bridges and a healthy dialogue as it relates to policing matters and the BIPOC community.