Skip to content

Collective Healing, Social Justice, Global Well-being

  • Home
  • About
    • Advisory Board
    • Partners
  • Contexts
  • Activities
    • Symposium 2018
    • Symposium 2019
    • Mapping Healing Research
    • Collective Healing Programme Launch
  • Resources
  • Get Involved
  • Contact
February 8, 2019March 5, 2019 SchertoGill Uncategorized

Overcoming structural racism requires more of people, but also healing

Louis Menand writes in New Yorker February 4th 2019 issue:

“institutional racism” or “structural racism”—is much harder to address. It requires more of people than just striking down a law.

Read the full article entitled: “The Supreme Court Case That Enshrined White Supremacy in Law How Plessy v. Ferguson shaped the history of racial discrimination in America.”

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • WhatsApp
  • LinkedIn
  • Pocket
  • Email

Published by SchertoGill

View all posts by SchertoGill

Post navigation

UNGA: Commemorating the abolition of slavery and the transatlantic slave trade
1st Int’l Symposium on Healing the Wounds of Slavery Oct 2018: Report

Recent Posts

  • UNESCO Webinar Series: Opening Session 3rd APRIL 2023 16.00 Paris Time / 15.00 London Time
  • Collective Healing
  • Int’l Webinar on Public Health Policy-Making in Africa: What Lessons to be Learnt from the COVID-19 Pandemic? 28 October 2022, 08:00 – 11:00 GMT (UTC)
  • 11-12 May 2022 Int’l Symposium on African Endogenous Governance
  • Journal of Genocide Studies and Prevention Special Issue: Mass Atrocity and Collective Healing
  • Global Humanity for Peace Institute
  • Challenges for White Liberals – Rob Corcoran’s blog
  • 26th May 2021 UNESCO Webinar: The Legacy of Slavery, Transgenerational Trauma & Collective Healing
  • Panel Dialogue: “Owning Slavery, Pursuing Justice, Seeking Reconciliation: Lessons from Georgetown and the U.S. Jesuits”
  • Dr Joy DeGruy on How to Address the Legacy of trans-Atlantic slavery