Building a pro.black world moving beyond de&i work and creating spaces for black people to thrive
Learn to create a nonprofit organization and society in which Black people can thrive In Building A Pro-Black World: A Guide To Creating True Equity in The Workplace and In Life, a team of dedicated nonprofit leaders delivers a timely roadmap to building pro-Black nonprofit organizations. Refreshing...
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken, New Jersey :
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
[2023]
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Edición: | First edition |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009757914106719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Part I Enacting Pro-Black Leadership: A Better World Is Possible
- Going Pro-Black
- Defining Pro-Black
- What Does Pro-Black Mean?
- What Are the Characteristics of a Pro-Black Organization?
- What Would a Pro-Black Sector Sound, Look, Taste, and Feel Like?
- When Blackness Is Centered, Everybody Wins: A Conversation with Cyndi Suarez and Dax-Devlon Ross
- Leading Restoratively: The Role of Leadership in a Pro-Black Sector
- Our Promise to the Community
- Pro-Black Organizational Leadership
- Reimagine Staff Wellness
- Prioritize Psychological Safety
- Restore Worker Dignity
- Build Leadership Pipelines
- Conclusion
- Part II Building Pro-BlackInstitutions: Narrative and Forms
- What It Looks Like to Build a Pro-Black Organization
- The Failures of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI)
- Interrogating Governance to Construct a Pro-Black Organization
- Supporting Organizations to Build Pro-Black Structures
- To Build a Public Safety That Protects Black Women and Girls, Money Isn't the Only Resource We Need
- Narratives as Symbolic Resources
- Oppressive Narratives That Shape Perceptions of Black Women in the United States
- Black People and the Police
- A Framework for Making the Visible Invisible
- Combatting Disinformation and Misinformation: A Struggle for Democracy and Racial Justice
- Framing the Problem
- Online Disinformation's Racist Impact
- Old Narratives, New Tactics
- The Rise of Anti-Trans Disinformation
- The Mainstreaming of White Supremacist Ideology
- Reframing False Narratives
- How to Combat Disinformation
- Forms: A New Theory of Power
- Hierarchy and Justice
- Hierarchy as a Form
- Functional Hierarchies
- Forming Justice
- A Journey from White Space to Pro-Black Space
- The Dam Breaks.
- New Leadership Sets an Audacious Vision-and Offers a Framework for Action
- Organizing Human Resources as If People Matter
- The Need for New Thinking
- Part III Building Pro-Black Institutions: Philanthropy and Evaluation
- The Emergence of Black Funds
- Reimagining Philanthropy to Build a Culture of Repair
- A New Philanthropic Model
- Rooting the New Model in Repair
- A Journey-Not a Destination
- Toward a Liberated Future
- How Philanthropy Can Truly Support Land Justice for Black Communities
- Self-Determination and Land Justice
- Our Freedom Dream
- What Does Black Feminist Evaluation Look Like?
- Nothing Is Broken: What Evaluation and Philanthropy Can Learn from Abolitionism
- Part IV Implementing Reparations: Health and Well-Being
- Revolutionary Black Grace: Finding Emotional Justice in Global Black Communities
- Scars from the Language of Whiteness
- Between Us . . . Black Women and Men
- Honoring Our Journey, Finding Our Connection
- Black Privilege Is Not the Answer
- The Emotional, Not the Political
- What Is Healing Justice?
- Our Collective Wisdom and Memory Enable Well-Being
- Wellness Is Liberation
- Our Interdependence Is Essential
- Our Wellness Requires Honoring All Bodies
- A New Vision for Addressing Structural Racism
- The US "Healthcare System" Is a Misnomer-We Don't Have a System
- Equitable Care
- Driven by Profit
- The Racial Divide
- Black Distrust
- Health Equity
- Data-Driven Solutions
- Systemic Alignment
- Pro-Black Actions That Health Justice Organizations Can Model
- Acknowledgment: A Vital Antiracism Tool
- Acknowledging Racial Health Disparities to Address Them
- Understanding Health Equity
- Next Steps, Sustained Actions
- Repairing the Whole: How Reparations Can Address Physical and Mental Health
- Can Reparations Heal?
- Reparations and Trauma
- Acknowledgment of Harm.
- Increasing Black Wealth to Improve Black Health
- Decolonization of the Medical Industry
- Turning Research into Action
- Addressing Inequities in Health Technology
- Systemic Risks Associated with Healthcare Technology
- Activism to Address the Harms of Health Technology
- Part V Implementing Reparations: Work and Ownership
- Resurrecting the Promise of 40 Acres: The Imperative of Reparations for Black Americans
- Eligibility: Black American Descendants of Persons Enslaved in the United States
- Calculating What Is Owed
- Prioritizing the Mean of the Racial Wealth Gap
- The Cost of Slavery
- The Promise of 40 Acres
- Culpability: A Matter of National Responsibility
- Learning from Other Cases: Precedents for Reparations
- Precedents for HR 40: Lessons Learned
- Conclusion
- Solutions Centering Black Women in Housing
- A History of Racist Policies
- From Racist Exclusion to "Predatory Inclusion"
- Toward Repair: Addressing Black Women's Exclusion from Housing
- A New Vision: Centering Black Women in Housing
- Linking Racial and Economic Justice: The Struggle of Our Time
- The Long March of Institutions
- Challenging Harmful Narratives Through Data Linked to Activism
- The Importance of Historical Analysis
- The Struggle for Economic Democracy
- What If We Owned It?
- Organizing for Sovereignty
- The Emergence of Black Food Co-ops
- Healing for Sovereignty
- Completing the Action That Was Thwarted: Moving Through Trauma
- Building for Sovereignty
- Developing a Food Co-Op: Seven Principles
- Seven Internationally Recognized Co-op Principles of the ICA (International Co-operative Alliance)
- 1. Voluntary and Open Membership
- 2. Democratic Member Control
- 3. Member Economic Participation
- 4. Autonomy and Independence
- 5. Education, Training, and Information
- 6. Cooperation Among Co-operatives.
- 7. Concern for Community
- How Do We Build Black Wealth?: Understanding the Limits ofBlack Capitalism
- The Enduring Appeal of Black Capitalism
- Black Capitalism's Shortfalls
- Capitalism and Inequality
- Can Racial Capitalism Be Reformed?
- What Do Racial and Economic Justice Require?
- Part VI Organizing for the Future: Community and Politics
- Making Black Communities Powerful in Politics-and in Our Lives
- Justice Beyond the Polls: Investing in Black Youth Organizers
- Black Youth Fighting Voter Suppression
- Investing in Black Youth: Beyond Electoral Engagement
- Black Youth Organizing for a Better Future-For Everyone
- The Liberatory World We Want to Create: Loving Accountability and the Limitations of Cancel Culture
- Love, a Forgotten Tongue
- Medicine to Harvest
- Cancel Culture
- Building a Bridge Together-One Ancestor, One Bone, One Ligament at a Time
- Loving Accountability-an Antidote
- Dimensions of Thriving: Learning from Black LGBTQ+/SGL Moments, Spaces, and Practices
- Rejecting the Deficit Approach, the Medical Model, the Status Quo
- Pursuing a Bridge to Thriving
- Surviving Encounters with Oppression
- What Is Thriving?
- Pro-Blackness Is Aspirational: A Conversation with Cyndi Suarez and Shanelle Matthews
- About the Authors
- Index
- EULA.