Doing Our Work - Guilford Anti-Racism Alliance

Guilford Anti-Racism Alliance

Doing Our Work is a monthly series sponsored by the Greensboro Community City Working Group and Guilford Anti-Racism Alliance that brings in local experts to present and lead dialogue on concepts to help residents develop a firmer understanding of the roots and nature of racial inequity, and what we can do about it together.

  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    Session #15 - Implicit, Unintentional Bias

    June 6th, 2017 - Walking us through different brain tests, Dr. Claire Morse digs deeper into the subject of implicit and unintentional bias.

    6 April 2018, 3:18 am
  • 1 hour 21 minutes
    Session #14 - A History of the International Civil Rights Center and Museum

    May 2nd, 2017 - GARA Member, Diane McFarland details the tumultuous history the International Civil Rights Center and Museum located in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    6 April 2018, 3:18 am
  • 1 hour 12 minutes
    Session #13 - Racial Disparities in Greensboro Housing

    April 4th, 2017 - On the 49th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., residents of Greensboro, North Carolina gather to listen to retired economics professor Larry Morse as he gives a brief history of the city's racial disparities in housing.

    6 April 2018, 3:16 am
  • 1 hour 40 minutes
    Session #12 - Race & Education in Guilford County

    March 7th, 2017 - The Guilford Anti-Racism Alliance (GARA) series, Doing Our Work continues with scholar and activist, Gary Kenton giving a brief introduction on Race and Education in Guilford County, followed by an in-depth presentation by John Batchelor, author of Race and Education in North Carolina: From Segregation to Desegregation.

    6 April 2018, 3:15 am
  • 1 hour 17 minutes
    Session #11 - Whites' Memories of School Integration in Greensboro

    February 7th, 2017 - Author and Professor of Sociology, Kristen M. Lavelle comes back to Greensboro, North Carolina to discuss her book "Whitewashing the South: White Memories of Segregation and Civil Rights".

    6 April 2018, 2:30 am
  • 1 hour 20 minutes
    Session #10 - David Billings - One Person's Anti-Racism Journey

    January 24th, 2017 - Author David Billings discusses his book "Deep Denial: The Persistence of White Supremacy" and his very personal fifty year battle with racism.

    6 April 2018, 2:29 am
  • 1 hour 6 minutes
    Session #9 - Moving the Institutions We Are A Part of Towards Anti-Racism Work

    December 6th, 2016 - The "Doing Our Work" Series continues in Greensboro, North Carolina as multiple presenters discuss the task of moving the institutions we are a part of towards anti-racism work.  Presenters include Audra Apt of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina; Cindy Dillard of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Greensboro; John de Beer, a Former Rector in the Episcopal Church; Bob Williams, a professor at Guilford College; and Catherine Johnson of the Guilford County Family Justice Center.

    6 April 2018, 2:27 am
  • 1 hour 16 minutes
    Session #8 - What White People Gain from Doing Anti-Racism Work

    October 4th, 2016 - The "Doing Our Work" series continues for it's second season with a presentation by Guilford Anti-Racism Alliance member Kari Thatcher on what white people gain from doing anti-racism work.  

    6 April 2018, 2:26 am
  • 1 hour 22 minutes
    Session #7 - Colorblind Racism

    May 2nd, 2016 - Dr. Lisa McLeod, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Guilford College in Greensboro, North Carolina gives a presentation on colorblind racism and how and why it exists.

    6 April 2018, 2:25 am
  • 1 hour 28 minutes
    Session #6 - Race & The Judicial System

    April 4th, 2016 -  Tye Hunter, a veteran Civil Rights attorney and former director of the Center for Death Penalty Litigation, Inc. in Durham, North Carolina discusses how race has operated in our court systems throughout our history and how it continues to distort justice in the present.

    6 April 2018, 2:23 am
  • 1 hour 30 minutes
    Session #5 - Race & Law Enforcement

    March 7th, 2016 - Lewis Pitts, a Greensboro resident with 43 years of experience as a civil rights lawyer, provides an overview of the role of law enforcement to maintain White Supremacy from Slavery to the New Jim Crow right up to today’s police killings. Using examples from Greensboro, the importance of building resistance through a popular united front centered on the simple imperative of Truth Telling. 

    6 April 2018, 1:19 am
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