| The Center for Social Inclusion works
to build a fair and just society by dismantling structural racism.
We partner with communities of color and other allies to create strategies
and build policy reform models to end racial disparity and promote
equal opportunity. With our partners we conduct applied research,
translate it, teach our communities, inform the public, convene stakeholders,
nurture multiracial alliances and support advocacy strategies.

July 2, 2008: CSI joins the
Culture Project for a discussion on race, art and structural
transformation.
On
Monday, July 14th, Lynne Wolf and Lynda Turet will
represent CSI at a discussion on structural racism to follow a
performance of Expatriate, a new play at the Culture Project on
black womanhood, sexuality, art and addiction. The discussion will be
joined by playwright and performer Lenelle Moise, performer Karla
Mosley, and director Tamilla Woodard.
The
discussion will cover what structural racism is, including how it
shapes and interacts with identity. What does structural racism look
like, how does it interact with and shape "culture" and what does
public policy have to do with art? What role does art play in helping
us understand our context and in challenging our reality to support
new politics and policy for a more just society across race, gender,
sexual identity and class? These and other questions will be
addressed in this wide-ranging, interactive discussion.
To purchase tickets to the July 14th
event,
click here.
June 19, 2008: CSI On Race
and Human Rights
To support the U.S. visit of
Doudou Diène, the UN
Special Rapporteur on Contemporary Forms of Racism, Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, CSI provided an
analysis of the ways in which U.S. policies perpetuate racialized
poverty and fail to meet our international obligations to end racial
discrimination.
Click here to read the analysis.
The Special Rapporteur was in the U.S.
from May 18 to June 6, 2008. CSI examined public policy in light of
our treaty obligations under the International Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD), which
commits the United States to take concrete steps to combat racism, and
to submit regular progress reports on its efforts.
“This analysis highlights the connections
between human rights and the structural racism approach,” says Lynne
Wolf, who wrote CSI’s report. “The U.S. has tried to interpret CERD
in ways that limit consideration of disparities according to race. We
have tried to make clear that federal policy impacting housing,
education and transportation have the effect of exacerbating
concentrated poverty in communities of color, and ensuring that racial
discrimination is perpetuated, rather than eliminated.”
In a related issue, the United States
pulled out of the World Conference on Racism in Durban, South Africa
in 2001, and has indicated that it may not participate in the follow
up conference scheduled for this year or the Durban Review Conference
scheduled for 2009. CSI and 32 other organizations and individuals
sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on June 10th
urging that the U.S. play an engaged and constructive role in these
efforts to combat racism on a global scale.
Click here to read the letter.
May 15, 2008: Jacob Faber on
Structural Racism, Hurricane Katrina, and the Need for Infrastructure
Investment
CSI Researcher Jacob Faber
presented at the
Deep South Center for Environmental Justice’s
second national symposium on
Race, Place, and the Environment After Katrina,
May 15, 2008. The presentation, Renewing New
Orleans: What we can learn from Katrina about
building strong communities,
reflects on how structural racism drives disinvestment in our
communities and made New Orleans vulnerable. These problems are not
unique to New Orleans or the Gulf Coast, and we must engage in a
national fight about infrastructure investment, spending priorities,
and tax revenue.
Click here to view presentation:
Renewing New Orleans
April 23,2008: Jacob Faber Testifies in Front of
New York City Council's Immigration Committee
On April 10, 2008,
Researcher Jacob Faber testified in front of the New York City
Council’s Immigration Committee on the challenges structural racism
pose for creating relationships between immigrant communities and
communities of color. The hearing, put together by the New York
Immigration Coalition, focused on the positive impact immigrants have
on New York City.
Click here to read
the testimony.
CSI Testimony
April 7, 2008, Maya Wiley on Structural Racism
and Food
On March 27, 2009 Maya Wiley led a webinar for the
Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation to discuss Structural Racism and
the Food System. Find out more about how the food we eat, and
the agricultural system that delivers it to our plate, is shaped by
and contributes to racialized inequity in out society.
Click here to view the webinar presentation:
Structural Racism and the Food System
March 19, 2008: Maya Wiley
on Obama’s Speech on Race
Speaking of race and the decline
of the American middle class, Barack Obama warns that “opportunity
comes to be seen as a zero sum game, in which your dreams come at my
expense.”
Writing on Afro-Netizen, CSI Director Maya Wiley
explains why the fortunes of the white middle class are
inextricable from our nation’s commitment to overcoming structural
racism.
March 18, 2008: Mafruza Khan
on Economic Growth
CSI Deputy Director recently wrote
"Growth
for What and What Kind of Growth?" for the
blog of the Movement Vision Lab, laying out a vision for development
that looks beyond narrow GDP considerations to examine the overall
well-being of the people and the communities that development aid is
supposed to help.
March 13, 2008: CSI welcomes the Alston/Bannerman
Program to its new home
With great excitement, we announce that the Alston/Bannerman Program
is becoming part of the Center for Social Inclusion. This will both
expand Alston Bannerman’s programs and activities and increase CSI’s
effectiveness in working with partner organizations to develop policy
proposals, proactive strategies, leadership capacity and alliances to
confront and dismantle structural racism.
The
Alston/Bannerman program, which celebrates its 20th
anniversary in 2008, has provided sabbaticals to nearly 200 organizers
of color, working on an array of issues in communities across the
nation. The sabbatical program was established in recognition of the
importance of community organizing in promoting social change, with
the idea that providing organizers with space to pull back from the
demands of their work for a period of strategic reflection is a vital
way to strengthen the movements within which they work.
The Alston/Bannerman community is a powerful network of leaders for
social justice with enormous depth and breadth of organizing
experience, and CSI will work to bring alumni together to forge a
strong bridge between the worlds of public policy and racial justice
advocacy. After a brief hiatus for planning and resource development,
we will continue the sabbatical program, and augment it with a senior
fellowship that brings long-time organizers together to address
problems of common concern.
For more information
on how the Alston/Bannerman program will be expanded, click here.
The Alston Bannerman Leadership
Initiative at CSI.
For more information about
the Alston/Bannerman Program, please visit
www.alstonbannerman.org.
March 12, 2008: USA Today Features
CSI work in South Carolina
On March 9, 2008, USA Today
printed “Black farmers work to keep land with co-ops,” an article
profiling African-American landowners in lower Richland County, South
Carolina, where CSI recently released a report on sustainable
development initiatives to build healthier communities. Seventy-two
percent of lower Richland residents own their own land, mostly arable
tracts that have often been owned by the same family for generations.
Our report,
Growing Together, offers
recommendations for building a sustainable metropolitan region around
Columbia, SC that would build opportunity for rural landowners in the
region, where rural communities lack the basic infrastructure
necessary to create a thriving economic base. The recommendations
include the development of organic farming, cooperative farming
structures that allow small family farms to compete in a market
dominated by big agribusiness, and the production of renewable energy
sources such as biofuels and geothermal power.
Click here
to read the article.
March 6, 2008: Correction
In an email blast sent
on February 21, 2008 to announce International Language Day we had a
typo. In the "What is International Mother Language Day" portion of
the fact sheet reading “East
Pakistan gained independence in 1972 to become Bangladesh”
it should
read 1971. To view the new updated
version of International Language Day,
click here.
February 29, 2008:
Katrina Survivors Respond to Sen.
Vitters’ Attack On UN Commenters on Gulf Coast Housing
At a regional meeting of community
advocates working together to push for government support for
equitable rebuilding in the Gulf Coast, several survivors of Hurricane
Katrina reacted to Senator David Vitters’ (R-LA) attack on a statement
by the UN Special Rapporteur on housing and the UN Independent Expert
on Minority Issues condemning ongoing demolition of public housing in
New Orleans. As many as 5,000 poor families in New Orleans stand to
lose their homes because of the planned demolition of public housing
in their city.
Click here to read the full press
release:
Survivors speak out on Vitters' Attack on UN
February 21, 2008: Can
You Hear Us? Many Voices for Our Common Future
Today is
International Language Day. Established by UNESCO in 1999,
International Language Day promotes the linguistic and cultural
diversity of our planet. The Center for Social Inclusion wants
to take a moment to honor the linguistic and cultural diversity of its
home, New York City, and to note that this richness is key to ensuring
a vital future for the City, the region, and the nation as a whole.
Today, we are
thrilled to announce a partnership with the CUNY Honors College Spring
2008 Seminar on The Peopling of New York at Queens College. Through
the lens of one globalized NYC neighborhood, the seminar will explore
Flushing’s rich and complex demographic composition and transitions,
and how linguistic diversity is alternately viewed as a community
asset as well as a community challenge. With the goal of promoting
public awareness and activities to commemorate International Language
Day, we will develop a website that explores issues, institutions, and
community stakeholders that create bridges across race, ethnic,
cultural and linguistic boundaries.
But this is just the beginning. With elections across the City and so
much at stake as the demographics of New York change, we are planning
a city wide celebration of International Language Day on Feb. 21,
2009.
For more information on International Language Day,
click here.
February 7, 2008: Maya Wiley Speaking at the
Community Church of New York for Black History Month
The Community Church of New York is celebrating Black History Month
with Sunday Service speakers. Among other speakers, Maya Wiley
will be speaking on Sunday, February 24, 2008 at 11 AM.
Maya will be presenting, Into the Open: Race in a Time of
"Colorblindness."
For more information: The Community Church of New York
celebrates Black History Month
February 6, 2008: Correction
In an email blast sent on February 1, 2008 to
announce the publication of Growing Together: Thriving People for a
Thriving Columbia, we erroneously referred to Columbia, SC as the
poorest region in the country. The sentence should have read, “…the
South is the poorest region in the country, with 15% of its people
living in poverty.” We regret the error.
January 18, 2008: CSI Releases New
Report-Growing Together: Thriving
People for a Thriving Columbia
Press
Release for CSI's Report-Growing Together: Thriving People for a Thriving
Columbia
As South Carolina heads for the
primaries, Democrats and Republicans alike need to support policies
that promote economic growth that benefits everyone, creating more
opportunities especially for the most marginalized residents. Failure
to invest in the Columbia region’s low-income Black communities has
kept them trapped in poverty and isolated from opportunity. Beyond
this, it signals larger problems of public disinvestment and
inappropriate use of public resources that is driving unhealthy growth
and hurting the entire region.
For several years, CSI has been working
with community leaders to realize their vision for development of the
region that will build incomes and preserve the environment at the
same time.
To find more, including policy
recommendations and action steps, read the report:
Growing Together: Thriving People
for a Thriving Columbia
To View the Toolkit, see:
South Carolina, Columbia Region Report
Toolkit
To View Archived Updates/Announcements
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