Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Week 5 Mind Map - Coggle Diagram
Week 5 Mind Map
- The ideology of racial inferiority permeates interconnected sectors of society, such as healthcare, housing, education, and criminal justice, shaping population-level patterns of health and well-being.
3.2 Recognizing and addressing structural racism facilitates the creation of more equitable and just societies that prioritize the health and well-being of all individuals and communities.
3.2.1 Mobilization of like-minded policymakers, community members, and other stakeholders playing a crucial role in advocating for the enactment of policies focused on racial equity.
3.1 Efforts to achieve health equity have been bolstered by the establishment of policies, organizations, offices, centers, and institutes dedicated to addressing racial inequities in health and social conditions.
3.1.1 Policies, practices and politics should be evaluated to assess their effectiveness in reducing racial disparities and ensuring progress toward eliminating racial inequity.
- An anti-racism approach often incorporates a structural analysis that acknowledges the existence of historical systems favouring some while harming others.
5.1 It involves comprehending the origins of formal and informal power structures and investigating how racism functions within organizations, institutions, or settings.
-
-
-
-
-
- Racism extends beyond individual attitudes or actions, constituting a systemic power structure reflected in decision-making structures, policies, practices, norms, and values.
1.1. Creates underlying social conditions leading to differential outcomes for various population groups.
1.1.1 Highlighting that the world is shaped by systems that advantage some while disadvantaging others.
1.2. Focusing solely on individual behaviour or actions ignores the historical, social, and political aspects of this system of oppression.
1.2.1 Recognizing that racial inequity primarily stems from policies, not people.
- Anti-racism praxis is a dynamic approach aimed at achieving equity, social justice, and peace by eradicating racism.
4.1 Anti-racism praxis is a continuous process, not a static state or isolated event, striving to create a world free from racism or its adverse health effects.
-
4.1.3 Presuming, accepting, and embracing diverse perspectives as essential elements to foster innovative thinking.
-
- Racism poses a genuine problem affecting the health and well-being of individuals and communities.
2.1 Scholars and activists use racism to explain the root cause of health disparities and tackle it with a commitment to creating a better world for everyone, not just themselves, guided by moral and ethical values.
-
-
-