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The Roundtable serves as a clearinghouse for resources on structural racism. We present research on structural racism, case studies on emerging practices in the racial equity field, syllabi for our Racial Equity Seminars, information on how to discuss structural racism, organizations with a core focus on racial equity, and documentaries that address issues of race and racism.
Publications on Structural Racism from the Roundtable Dismantling Structural Racism: A Racial Equity Theory of Change (Revised 2008) provides a method for designing initiatives that promote racial equity. It combines a "theory of change" logic with the structural racism analysis to help practitioners define their racial equity goals and map out a strategy to achieve that outcome. The Roundtable also offers a worksheet for developing a Racial Equity Theory of Change, and an accompanying powerpoint presentation. Structural Racism and Youth Development: Issues, Challenges, and Implications (2005) describes the problem of structural racism with a particular emphasis on racial disparity in education and juvenile justice. It suggests the implications of structural racism for the youth development field, including an explicit emphasis on racial disparity in education and juvenile justice and an engagement with the wider policies, practices, and institutions that impact youth. Structural Racism and Community Building (2004) describes the problem of structural racism and shows its manifestations across policy domains, including poverty, education, health, and criminal justice. It suggests implications for the community building field, including an increased emphasis on building civic capacity to challenge public policies and institutional practices that reproduce racial disparity. Structural Racism Annotated Bibliography lists and summarizes key works in understanding structural racism in political cultural and civic life; social policy; neighborhood conditions, housing and education; employment and labor market opportunities; economic development and urban revitalization; as well as through broad analytical perspectives. Recent Research on Emerging Practices in the Racial Equity Field Community Change Processes and Progress in Addressing Racial Inequities (2007): A report by Maggie Potapchuk, in partnership with the Roundtable, examining emerging practices in racial equity with case studies of four "leadership sites": Long Island, New York; Charlotte, North Carolina; St. Cloud, Minnesota; and Seattle, Washington. The Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder's December 13, 2007 article "St Cloud's Create CommUNITY Fights Systemic Racism" cited this report as well as the Roundtable's structural racism framework. Community Change Initiatives to Address Racial Inequities: Building a Field of Practice (2007): A report by Maggie Potapchuk, in consultation with the Roundtable and the National League of Cities Institute, outlining the growth of the field addressing racial disparity and improving race relations within community change initiatives. "Why We Can't Wait" (2007): A Ford Foundation report which reviews programs, policies, services, and research that address and impact outcomes for African American males. The report provides a comprehensive review of the problems, opportunities, structure, and dynamics of research and activism in this field. Promising Practices to Address Racial Disproportionality (2006): This report, from the Center for the Study of Social Policy, offers case studies of ten sites where government, non-profit organizations, and communities collaborated on extensive programs to address racial disproportionality in the child welfare system: San Francisco, California; Connecticut; Illinois; Sioux City, Iowa; Michigan; Ramsey County, Minnesota; Guilford County, North Carolina; Wake County, North Carolina. Syllabi and Selected Readings from the Racial Equity Seminars Lists of all readings for racial equity seminars can be found in the January 2005 Racial Equity and Society Curriculum and the July 2006 Racial Equity and Youth Development Curriculum. In addition, the full texts of several readings from the seminar are available. Structural Racism "refers to a system in which public policies, institutional practices, cultural representations, and other norms work in various, often reinforcing ways to perpetuate racial group inequity" (Aspen: 2004). Given the complexity and scale of structural racism, its particular manifestations are often difficult to grasp and confront. To help racial equity practitioners parse, comprehend, and dismantle structural racism, we have organized research and journalism on racism into different "domains" of law, culture, and institutions. These domains, such as criminal justice, health, and finance, are not altogether separate or unrelated. Rather they form a network of practices, traditions, policies, and discourses that mutually inform one another, and together produce symptomatic, racially disparate outcomes. Here we present the latest research and journalism on the manifestations of racism and racial disparity in the context of these multiple domains. The resources we present do not necessarily take a structural perspective, but nonetheless contribute to a sharp and adequate understanding of the material, institutional, and cultural manifestations of structural racism. Resources for Talking About Structural Racism and Advocating Racial Equity
Organizations Working Towards Racial Equity This section features descriptions and links to organizations with a core focus on racial disparity research and/or racial equity advocacy:
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© 2009 Aspen Institute