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Anti-racism and Health Promotion - Coggle Diagram
Anti-racism and Health Promotion
Understanding the definition of racism is crucial for the further work on anti-racism.
1.1 Race and racism is different.
1.2 Racism treat people differently based on their look.
1.3 Racism helped to reify the notion of race and obscure the underlying role of raciem.
1.4 Racism is a system of power which ignores the historical, social, and political aspects of the system of oppression.
Anti-racism approaches need to be well-designed and well-organized.
3.1 Anti-racism is defined as the art and science of devising and implementing strategies to address racism and racialization.
3.2 Anti-racism praxis seeks to help individuals and communities create a vision of the goals and objectives, not just the behaviours.
3.3 An anti-racism approach recognizes the systems that control and impact human health, then uses a structural analysis to seek solutions.
3.4 It is important to realize that the most important result of anti-racism approaches is to change human's behaviours, not their thoughts.
3.5 It is crucial to recognize that racism is a problem of policy, not people.
Health promotion for anti-racism and decolonization aims at improving social justice to achieve health equality.
5.1 Reflection, planning, and action are the three domains of the applied decolonial framework for health promotion.
5.2 Identifying existing power patterns and roots of health inequity is essential for health promotion.
5.3 Due to the racism and colonization, resource-laden and resource-poor peoples and nations have very different portions of resources, which further impact their health.
Racism has various formats and we should recognize them in order to solve the issues cased by them.
2.1 Structural racism is a frame that reflects the totality of ways that ideologies of inherent racial inferiority of socially defined groups.
2.1 Structural racism causes unfair allocation of societal resources and advantage.
2.3 Structural racism is an example of intersectionality and explains why some population groups have worse health.
Tools and methods for anti-racism and decolonization have mutual components.
4.1 The key five elements of anti-racism praxis are the following: reflective relational practice, structural power analysis, systems change theory, sociopolitical education, and monitoring progress.
4.2 Decolonization aims at eliminating the systems or patterns that contribute to health inequities.
4.3 Colonization and racism are both ongoing facts, not historical events.
4.4 Both colonization and racism keep damaging the live quality and health status of vulnerable people.