Black Lives Matter: resources to tackle injustice

We want to dedicate this post to those fighting for equality and justice by sharing helpful books, resources, and articles. 

Throughout history, there have been moments that can be said to have been inflexion points in race relations. These moments shock our core beliefs as a society and force each of us to redefine who we are and who we want to be. The recent killings of Ahmaud Aubrey, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd in America, are such moments.

Like Martin Luther King Jr’s “I Have a Dream Speech" and his subsequent assassination, the election of Barack Obama and the subsequent election of Donald Trump, we are faced with a series of momentous occurrences that have sent shockwaves through global and local communities forcing each individual to come to terms with the society in which they exist, and perhaps for some, for the first time truly question the values, and belief systems their position in that society depends on.

Bayo Adelaja shares our position

 Books about Race 


 Education on Systemic Racism 

  • People of Color are at Greater Risk of COVID-19. Systemic Racism in the Food System Plays a Role. “Outside of being Black, obesity, diabetes, and hypertension have been identified as the comorbidities that make coronavirus more deadly amongst anyone worldwide,” said Daphene Altema-Johnson the food communities and public health program officer at John Hopkins University’s Center for a Liveable Future. “When you look at the United States, Black people have higher rates of these chronic conditions and the reasons they have those comorbidities are…driven by poverty and by food insecurity.” 

  • Genetics is not why more BAME people die of coronavirus: structural racism is.
    There is no clear evidence that higher levels of conditions such as type-2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and weakened immune systems in disadvantaged communities are because of inherent genetic predispositions, but there is evidence they are the result of structural racism.

  • Farm subsidies in the United States go predominantly to white farmers, which has led a group of black farmers to sue the U.S. government for discrimination.​ Food apartheid: the root of the problem with America's groceries: The Guardian interviewed Kerry Washington, co-founder of Black Urban Growers—an organization committed to building networks and community support for Black farmers in both urban and rural settings.

  • Want to Eradicate Hunger in America? Take on Racism“You cannot take on poverty and hunger without taking on historical and contemporary discrimination,” Dr. Mariana Chilton, a professor of public health at Drexel University, told The Nation. “If we are just fighting to strengthen SNAP [formerly food stamps], or for better jobs and higher wages—we’ll make little progress. We have to go deeper to the root causes.”

  • Determined to be Nourished: Food insecurity frequently occurs as less healthy foods—calorie-rich, and nutrient-deficient—are often more affordable and easier to get. The cumulative effect of this can be catastrophic—high blood pressure and cholesterol, diabetes, obesity—all of which occurs at disproportionately higher rates in Black communities, and all of which leaves people with weakened immune systems and more vulnerable to other illnesses and diseases, such as COVID-19.


 Online Resources 


 Investors & BLM 

Previous
Previous

A recommitment to our work in the UK

Next
Next

This is why we centre Black people