新2皇冠备用

Since the murder of George Floyd in 2020, the humanitarian and development sector has had to contend with a racial reckoning and confront the deep-seated legacy of racism that has shaped and perpetuated our present-day aid structures. As many practitioners, academics, and activists have pointed out, the racism present in modern aid work is not a new phenomenon, but one that has persisted—often unnoticed or ignored by the organizations and individuals dedicated to saving lives and alleviating human suffering.

Below are some of the recommendations and resources compiled by our community on the topic of anti-Blackness and racism.

Recommendations

  1. Make anti-racism a central part of your work: Identify, recognize, and analyze how anti-Blackness and racist ideals or practices may show up in your organization. For example, ask: How do racism and anti-Blackness affect your hiring, recruitment, and retention processes?
  2. Engage in ongoing learning, collaboration, and development regarding anti-racism and anti-racist action by:
    1. Investing in racial bias training and providing resources for trainings that build awareness and opportunities within the workplace to create an environment conducive to learning about others’ cultures, backgrounds, and experiences.
    2. Create opportunities to engage and involve Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) staff in this process without resorting to tokenism or placing the burden on them.
  3. Understand the complexity of applying anti-racist work to a global lens: Recognize that the implications of race, ethnicity, color, and nationality for marginalized populations vary in different contexts around the world.

友情链: 皇冠体育最新网站(皇冠welcomeAPP下载) 皇冠手机版下载 | 皇冠体育免费软件(皇冠体育app下载安卓) 皇冠体育在线下载 | 皇冠crown最新登录入口(皇冠体育手机网页版登录) 皇冠体育手机版下载 | hg皇冠APP 应用(皇冠体育体育软件) 皇冠体育官网下载 | 皇冠体育手机版(皇冠体育平台app下载) 最新皇冠体育在线下载 | 皇冠crown全站app下载(皇冠体育手机登录) 2022年皇冠体育官方客户端下载 | 皇冠体育app在线入口(皇冠体育下载链接) 皇冠体育在线下载 |