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Steps Toward an Inclusive Community sfdsdf

Content
Title: 
Steps Toward an Inclusive Community
Authors: 
Maggie Potapchuk
Publication Date: 
January 1, 2001
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

Across America, there are examples of towns and cities that have not only united but also created a movement to stand up against hate--like Billings, Montana; Springfield, Illinois; and Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Clarksburg, West Virginia, provides another unique story with lessons to be learned from its response to the Ku Klux Klan. Steps Toward an Inclusive Community is a case study of how Clarksburg, a moderately sized community in West Virginia, responded to a KKK rally by conducting a counter-rally, the Get Real Rally, which in turn led to the Clarksburg Unity Project.

This publication shares Clarksburg's response to hate in the context of the state's and community's history and the town's current state of race relations, an effort to which a local newspaper's editorial board responded,  "If we hope to prosper economically, Clarksburg must show the nation that its people are unified and that this is a great place to live because of it."

 

Available in Hard Copy Only.

To order a hard copy of this publication, download the publication order form.

All prices do NOT include shipping and handling fees. Please see form for more details.

Date Published: 2001

Price: $10.00

Relationships
Institutes: 
Civic Engagement & Governance
Topics: 
Race Relations
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Holding Up the Mirror: Working Interdependently for Just and Inclusive Communities sfdsdf

Content
Title: 
Holding Up the Mirror: Working Interdependently for Just and Inclusive Communities
Authors: 
Maggie Potapchuk
Publication Date: 
March 1, 2002
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

Tug-of-wars over style and strategy have often strained the relationship between groups in the race relations and racial justice movement. Some have been labeled as too confrontational, while others have been accused of working too much within the power structure. Holding Up the Mirror: Working Interdependently for Just and Inclusive Communities, published by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, shows that mutual acceptance of seemingly competing tactics can make the movement stronger and more effective.

"There can never be a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to race relations because race problems appear in different ways and affect people differently," said Joint Center president, Eddie N. Williams. "In Holding Up the Mirror, race relations and racial justice groups from across a wide spectrum are acknowledging that strategic collaborations can help them all reach a wider, more diverse audience more effectively."

Written by Maggie Potapchuk, senior program associate with the Joint Center's Network of Alliances Bridging Race and Ethnicity (NABRE) program, Holding Up the Mirror provides greater insight into nine distinct approaches being used by local and national organizations across the country. It also recommends ways for creating collaborative strategies to address community issues.

 

Available in Hard Copy Only.

To order a hard copy of this publication, download the publication order form.

All prices do NOT include shipping and handling fees. Please see form for more details.

Date Published: March 2002

Price: $20.00

Relationships
Institutes: 
Civic Engagement & Governance
Topics: 
Race Relations
Civic Engagement
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Cultivating Interdependence: A Guide for Race Relations and Racial Justice Organizations sfdsdf

Content
Title: 
Cultivating Interdependence: A Guide for Race Relations and Racial Justice Organizations
Authors: 
Maggie Potapchuk
Publication Date: 
February 1, 2005
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

Throughout the country, grassroots organizations are at work in communities large and small promoting racial justice and improved race relations. While their broad aims are often the same, many of these groups differ in their philosophies and employ widely differing methodologies. Too often, these groups avoid collaboration, foregoing the advantages it would bring because they are unable to see beyond their particular perspectives. Cultivating Interdependence is a guide for changing that dynamic. It builds on the anti-racism and related concepts outlined in Holding Up the Mirror, its predecessor volume. The guide also incorporates practical insights gleaned from the many community groups that attended the Joint Center's four how-to forums (directed by the NABRE program), and offers specific recommendations on working with grantmakers. Includes worksheet and handout material that is easily reproducible. 

 

To order a hard copy of this publication, download the publication order form.

To download a PDF of this publication, click the file icon below.

All prices do NOT include shipping and handling fees. Please see form for more details.

Date Published: February 2005

Price: $20.00
 

Relationships
Institutes: 
Civic Engagement & Governance
Topics: 
Race Relations
Display
Weighting: 
0
Content Type: 
Research
Search Weight: 
1