Nipsey Hussle exemplified how Black people, globally, use cooperative economics and a politics of ownership to create necessary services and local economies in our communities / neighborhoods. These are usually the same neighborhoods cities often neglect until there is potential for gentrification. Our environment is much more than the air we breathe, it is also the health and vibrancy, or lack thereof, in our neighborhoods.
Read moreA Just Transition Isn't About Equity: it's about human survival
“System Change Not Climate Change” is a slogan we’ve seen at many protests over the past few years... now appearing primarily on instagram and twitter (mostly in the form of hashtags) advocating for immediate climate action. This slogan is usually a way to callout governments from the United States to Sweden to India to Kenya, to do more about climate change and ensure our future.
Read moreThe Benefit of Erasing Black People from European History
Over the past two years I have heard more than ever that “immigration to Europe is new.” What people are actually saying is that immigration of non-White Christian Europeans is new. However, neither of those statements are true. Europe, as a continent, as always been multicultural and has always had visitors (or “immigrants”) from non-European countries. Europeans went to Asia, Africa, and the Americas, why should we believe that the reverse did not happen? What is the benefit for Europe ignoring the history of Blacks, and other non-Whites more generally, coming to Europe before the 20th century?
Read moreGaslighting Blackness: Recollecting our identity through cultural geographies
When you’re told what’s Black is White, and that your experiences don’t exist–it’s easy to feel crazy in our society.
Reading these articles, in addition to my own research on Black geographies, made me think about the experiences of Black people in Europe and North America–but also Black people everywhere. It made me think about how often Black people have to wait for articles that are shared on Facebook to learn about the historical geographies of our culture, and cultural production more generally. It made me think about how in Europe and Brazil (and many other places), anti-Black racism is often brushed off as an American construction and non-existent.
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