
Drawing on a culture-centered approach to resisting racist structures across global contexts, this project spans five countries, putting forth a framework for conceptualising racism and developing anti-racist interventions. Based on the concepts of solidarity and connecting across anti-oppressive struggles that have been theorized by CARE activists-in-residence Teanau Tuiono, Marise Lant, and Byron Clark, the projects explore the intersections among diverse anti-racist struggles.
They attend to the communicative infrastructures of hate that are catalysed by digital capital, and organized by populist authoritarian forces across the globe, seeking to build transformative communicative infrastructures that are rooted in the participation of communities at the “margins of the margins” experiencing hate. The participation of those at the margins forms the basis for anti-racist campaigns and anti-racist policies, building a material framework for intervening into the global flows of racism across contexts.
A decolonizing register for resisting racism foregrounds community voices, conceptualizing peace and social cohesion in the lived experiences and struggles for social justice among communities at the margins. This programme of research is complemented by activist-on-residence series that has hosted leading anti-racist activists Sangeetha Thanapal, Teanau Tuiono, Marise Lant, and Andrew Judd.
Drawing on a culture-centered approach to resisting racist structures across global contexts, this project spans five countries, putting forth a framework for conceptualising racism and developing anti-racist interventions. Based on the concepts of solidarity and connecting across anti-oppressive struggles that have been theorized by CARE activists-in-residence Teanau Tuiono, Marise Lant, and Byron Clark, the projects explore the intersections among diverse anti-racist struggles.
They attend to the communicative infrastructures of hate that are catalysed by digital capital, and organized by populist authoritarian forces across the globe, seeking to build transformative communicative infrastructures that are rooted in the participation of communities at the “margins of the margins” experiencing hate. The participation of those at the margins forms the basis for anti-racist campaigns and anti-racist policies, building a material framework for intervening into the global flows of racism across contexts.
A decolonizing register for resisting racism foregrounds community voices, conceptualizing peace and social cohesion in the lived experiences and struggles for social justice among communities at the margins. This programme of research is complemented by activist-on-residence series that has hosted leading anti-racist activists Sangeetha Thanapal, Teanau Tuiono, Marise Lant, and Andrew Judd.
Links to the Media Stories
Muslim identity and experiences in New Zealand – Expert Reaction, Science Media Centre
Article Source: sciencemediacentre.co.nz
Expert Reactions | Published: 19 March 2019
Image Source: Science Media Centre (New Zealand)Temple event ‘celebration of Islamophobia’ – academic, RNZ
Source: From 5:08 am on 5 August 2020
Image Source: RNZWhy did New Zealand intelligence fail to catch attack suspect?
Massacre of 50 Muslims prompts conversations about alt-right, spies and Islamophobia in New Zealand and elsewhere.
By David Child
Published On 25 Mar 2019
Article and Image Source: Al Jazeera Media NetworkMuslim identity and experiences in New Zealand
Tuesday, 19 March 2019, 12:05 pm
Press Release: Science Media Centre
Article Source: Scoop MediaThree Minutes Max: Professor Mohan Dutta
From Sunday Morning, 11:35 am on 24 March 2019
Article source: rnz.co.nz ; Image Source: AFPWhy did a Hindu who attacked Sikhs in Australia receive a hero’s welcome in Modi’s India?
Sonia Sarkar
Published: 7:30pm, 22 Oct, 2021
Article source: South China Morning Post’s website: scmp.com
Photo source: TwitterMisinformation isn’t new, so how can we control it?
The Spinoff | Staff writers
Partner content
(PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES)Islamophobia in New Zealand: where does it come from?
22 Mar, 2019 05:00 AM
Christchurch’s Masjid Al Noor mosque has been closed since Friday’s terror attack.
Article source: nzherald.co.nz
Photo / Michael Craig
Civil Society
Videos
#EndTheHate – Muslim Experiences Following the Christchurch Attack
An account of the concerns the Muslim Community in Palmerston North had following the #Christchurch attacks of 2019
Critically Interrogating Lecture The Hinduphobia Narrative
Watch on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rdu6O-H_heI
White Papers
- Digital Hate and the infrastructures of communicative capital
- A Culture-centered Approach to Hate Speech Regulation
- Relocating the Health of Transgender Sex Workers in Singapore from the Margins: A Culture-Centered Approach
- Structural constraints, voice infrastructures, and mental health among low-wage migrant workers in Singapore: Solutions for addressing COVID19
- Solidarity in anti-racist struggles: A culture-centered intervention
- Ihumātao protest, colonization, and cultural voice
- Strengthening Refugee Voices in New Zealand
Op-Ed
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