Our annual Top Social Justice Memes considers memes used or created by our movements to challenge the status quo and shape politics and pop culture.
Read MoreI have had the opportunity to work and share in various spaces and with wonderful people who have helped me grow politically, spiritually, and in movement work. Friends and family introduced me to questions, thoughts, and actions that made me more politically conscious growing up. I was part of anti-corruption/violence, land rights, and gender rights campaigns in Mexico…
Read MoreIt's an annual Center for Story-based Strategy tradition to create a list of the Top Social Justice Memes for the year!
Read MoreI'm a Southern Black queer writer and editor, youth advocate, and communications strategist who believes in the transformative power of storytelling to uproot racist systems and change culture. My journalistic practice is a love of language, a pirouette with Black Queer Feminist (BQF) praxis, and a forever connection to Black womxn and girls who channel generational struggle into generational healing, wisdom, and truth…
Read MoreWe find that fitting the right warm-ups, ice breakers and check-in questions to the topics of meetings can help frame and inspire the coming conversation and help get everyone in the mood and mindset for the group work ahead in the agenda.
Read MoreParticipants in the 2019 Advanced Practitioner’s Training closed the week together by composing a “This is the Year” poem together.
Read MoreLearning a new language means rediscovering how your mouth and your voice work together. Earlier that year, I felt cut off from both. I had always considered myself an activist and a writer. But I noticed a shift. I had stopped writing, and focused solely on activism work. I was leading campaigns against corporations and corrupt politicians – and some of them were even working – but I was burning out.
Read More“When you’re trying to do organising work, if you don’t address those underlying narratives and work to both shift them – shift away towards more liberation – but also to create alternative narratives that are really about liberation, then it’s going to be really difficult to do that work. That’s really why we got started.“
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