21-Day Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge
21-Day Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge
At the start of the spring 2022 semester and during the next twenty-one (21) days, as a community, the Delaware Law School participated in the 21-Day Racial Equity Habit-Building Challenge.
Thanks to all students, faculty and staff who participated in the challenge and encouraged others to do so!
Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge Content:
- Day 1: Nikole Hannah-Jones, America Wasn’t a Democracy, Until Black Americans Made It One, The New York Times (Aug. 14, 2019), PDF access here
- Day 2: How to Not (Accidentally) Raise a Racist, Longest Shortest Time Podcast
- Day 3: Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations, The Atlantic (May 21, 2014)
- Day 4:
- Day 5: Megan Ming Francis, Let’s get to the root of racial injustice, TEDTalks (March 21, 2016)
- Day 6: Janice Gassam, Your Unconscious Bias Trainings Keep Failing Because You’re Not Addressing Systemic Bias (Forbes, Dec. 29, 2019)
- Day 7: James McWilliams, Bryan Stevenson On What Well Meaning White People Need To Know About Race: An interview with Harvard University-trained public defense lawyer Bryan Stevenson on racial trauma, segregation, and listening to marginalized voices, Pacific Standard (updated Feb 18, 2019)
- Day 8:
- Day 9:
- Jolie A. Doggett, 4 Questions About Hair that Black Girls Are Tired of Answering, HuffPost (Feb. 14, 2020)
- Jessica Moulite, Exclusive: Rep. Ayanna Pressley Reveals Beautiful Bald Head and Discusses Alopecia for the First Time, The Root (Jan. 16, 2020)
- Hair Love, Oscar-Winning Short Film (Full), Sony Pictures Animation, YouTube (Dec. 5, 2019)
- Day 10: Chana Joffe-Walt, Talking While Black, This American Life (January 7, 2022)
- Day 11:
- Day 12:
- John Biewen, Seeing White (14-part series podcast, 2017), S2 E14: Transformation (44 minutes, 10 seconds) or,
- if pressed for time: John Biewen, Seeing White (14-part series podcast, 2017), S2 E2: How Race Was Made
- Day 13:
- The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture launched Talking About Race, an “online portal designed to help individuals, families, and communities talk about racism, racial identity and the way these forces shape every aspect of society, from the economy and politics to the broader American culture.”
- Day 14:
- Day 15:
- Bryan Stevenson ’85, “We can’t recover from this history until we deal with it.” legacy of slavery and the vision for creating the National Memorial for Peace and Justice and The Legacy Museum, Harvard Law School YouTube (Jan 30, 2019)
- Hannah Giorgis, Black Art is dangerous because it marries the personal and the political, The Guardian (Feb. 22, 2015)
- Reggie Ugwu, Lena Waitheʼs Art of Protest: The “Queen & Slim” writer on mixing art and politics, the key to collaboration and those infamous comments about Will Smith and Denzel Washington, The New York Times (Dec. 2, 2019)