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- Up one level
- *Racial Equity Tools - Structural Racism
An extensive collection of resources on understanding and addressing structural racism; includes resources on "systems thinking".
- 25th National Health Equity Research Webcast - Structural Racism
UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, Friday, September 13th, 2019
Panelists:
Felicia Arriaga, PhD
Appalachian State University
Derek Griffith, PhD
Vanderbilt University
Zinzi Bailey, ScD, MSPH
University of Miami
Moderator
Anissa Vines, PhD
- Camara Jones - Impacts of Racism on Health
The Impacts of Racism on Health. Camara Phyllis Jones, MD, MPH, PhD, Department of Health and Social Behavior and Department of Epidemiology, Division of Public Health Practice, Harvard School of Public Health. 2000
- Chronic Disparity: Strong and Pervasive Evidence of Racial Inequalities
POVERTY OUTCOMES Structural Racism. Keith Lawrence, Aspen Institute on Community Change and Terry Keleher, Applied Research Center at UC Berkeley. For the Race and Public Policy Conference 2004
- City of Durham Racial Equity & Inclusion Division
will look within all aspects of City government to closely examine policies, practices, budget allocations, and programs that may perpetuate institutional racism and systemic inequities. See the July 22, 2020 Racial Equity Taskforce (RETF)'s initial report to the Durham City Council, to address, develop, and implement policies and actions to ensure a more equitable Durham community.
- Critical race theory ban leads Oklahoma college to cancel class that taught ‘white privilege’
Hannah Knowles, The Washington Post, May 29, 2021
- Institutional Reform to Promote Antiracism
Patsy M. Polston, Derrick D. Matthews, Shelley D. Golden, Carol E. Golin, Marissa G. Hall, Emmanuel Saint-Phard, Alexandra F. Lightfoot. Institutional Reform to Promote Antiracism: A Tool for Developing an Organizational Equity Action and Accountability Plan. Prev Chronic Dis 2023;20:220368. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd20.220368
- Little Fires Everywhere
On The Media, June 11, 2021.
Trump may be out of office, but the GOP's campaign to limit voting rights, free speech, and reproductive rights is still in full-swing. Where do you focus your attention when there are little fires everywhere? Plus, a look at a chilling new look for America: the "authoritarian mullet" — culture war in the front, the destruction of democracy in the back, and how critical race theory became a right-wing bogeyman.
1. Jay Rosen [@jayrosen_nyu], professor of journalism at New York University and media critic for PressThink, on why journalists should still be in "emergency mode."
2. Jake Grumbach [@JakeMGrumbach], assistant professor of political science at the University of Washington, on how Republican state lawmakers reduce "democratic performance" when they take power.
3. Ryan P. Delaney [@rpatrickdelaney], education reporter for St. Louis Public Radio, on a Missouri school district's debate over Critical Race Theory, and Adam Harris [@AdamHSays], staff writer at The Atlantic, on how conservatives constructed the critical race theory boogeyman.
- Slow Your Roll to Know Your Role: Moving beyond training to build trust for transformation
Presented by Jannah Bierens, MPH, MA, at the 43rd UNC Annual Minority Heath Conference, February 24, 2022 (virtual)
We are all impacted by anti-Black racism and other intersecting power imbalances. However, due to
our varying proximity to oppression, we are impacted differently. Therefore, our approach to advancing
equity will differ based on our racial/ social identities. Centering shared humanity is important, but
more critical and often left out, is that our various cultures are influenced by oppression.