Unsung Stories of Black Women’s Activism in the UK
Springer International Publishing (Verlag)
978-3-031-64200-5 (ISBN)
This book is a long-overdue contribution to the history of Black feminist activism in the UK. It provides unique insights into both historical and contemporary issues that impact Black women, their families and their communities, including immigration, education, policing, domestic violence and poverty. It fills a void in sociological and feminist literature by centring the voices, lived experiences and perspectives of women of the African and Caribbean Diaspora in the UK. Through the use of research, archival materials, narrative interviews, photographs, poems and reflective conversations, the authors explore the social issues which inspired these women's action for change. In drawing on personal and professional testimonies grounded in over two decades of community activism and scholarly analysis, the authors weave together the story of the Abasindi Cooperative, a woman's organisation famed for its progressive and far-reaching social justice programmes. In so doing the authors reveal narratives of political struggle that have their resonance in present-day society. This book is an acknowledgment and celebration of the sociopolitical activism and achievements of Black women in the UK and represents the hope, solidarity and triumph possible when women organise collectively to tackle social and racial injustice.
Adele Jones, OBE, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Social Work at the University of Huddersfield, UK. A Fellow of the British Academy of Social Sciences, she has conducted research in over 23 countries and is the author of numerous publications (including seven books) on topics such as child abuse, adoption, residential care, migration, parental imprisonment, child refugees, gender-based violence, and HIV-AIDS. Notable among these, is a series of three books on child sexual abuse in the Caribbean, published by Palgrave Macmillan and credited as the first published books on the topic in the region. Founder of the None in Three Centre for the Global Prevention of Gender-based Violence (www.noneinthree.org), for which she attracted funding in excess of US$6 million, Adele's most recent projects involved partnerships with local experts to tackle violence against women and children in Barbados, Grenada, St. Lucia, India, Jamaica, Uganda, the UK and Brazil. Describing herself as an academicactivist, Adele was featured in Phenomenal Women: Portraits of UK Black Female Professors, an exhibition at London's South Bank Centre which highlighted gender and race discrimination in academia and drew attention to the fact that out of 19,000 professors in UK universities, at the time only 35 of them were women of African or Caribbean heritage. In 2021, Adele was awarded an OBE (Order of the British Empire) in recogniton of over 40 years work with vulnerable women and children. On accepting the award she said "I recognise that this title is symbolic of what our ancestors railed against but I also recognise that black women should be celebrated for their contributions to society. Accepting the award is a political statement against our exclusion and invisibility".
Diana Watt, PhD, is a former Senior Lecturer in Youth & Community Work studies at Manchester Metropolitan University and Associate Lecturer with the Open University. Her PhD research was on three generation of mothering practices among Jamaican heritage women in the UK. Over the years, Diana's political work with Abasindi Black Women's Co-operative is what inspired her personal and professional development in the field of education and community activism. She was one of the UK researchers on the National Teaching Fellowship Learning and Teaching Research Project entitled 'Diversity and Achievement: How Non-traditional Students Succeed in Higher Education' and, together with colleagues, has completed the research on 'Promoting Cohesion, Challenging Expectations: Educating the Teachers of Tomorrow for Race Equality and Diversity in 21st Century Schools'. Her publications include book chapters and essays on mentoring and the early development of youth work in the Black community and she is also one of the Trustees of the Louise Da-Cocodia Education Trust, a UK-based civil society organisation that provide relevant and accessible education, employment and enterprise services, in particular to people of African and Caribbean heritage.
We are Descendants of the Windrush Generation.- The Legacy of Black Women's Activism.- Cultural Expressions of Resilience.- Ancestral Journeys and Diasporic Connections.- Loving Body, Skin and Hair.- Sowing Seeds of Success.- The Politics of Sisterhood.- Reflections.- References.
Erscheinungsdatum | 29.09.2024 |
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Zusatzinfo | XXI, 236 p. 80 illus., 15 illus. in color. |
Verlagsort | Cham |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 155 x 235 mm |
Themenwelt | Sozialwissenschaften ► Ethnologie |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Soziologie | |
Schlagworte | Black Feminism • Black lives matter • Criminal justice and black youth • Institutional racism in education • Racism in the UK • Social injustice and inequality • Windrush generation • women's activism • Women’s Activism |
ISBN-10 | 3-031-64200-7 / 3031642007 |
ISBN-13 | 978-3-031-64200-5 / 9783031642005 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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