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Anti-Oppression
Principles
of Anti-Oppression
(from
Los Angeles Direct Action Network)
- Power
and privilege play out in our group dynamics and we
must continually struggle with how we challenge
power and privilege in our practice.
- We
can only identify how power and privilege play out
when we are conscious and committed to understanding
how racism, sexism, homophobia, and all other forms
of oppression affect each one of us.
- Until
we are clearly committed to anti-oppression practice
all forms of oppression will continue to divide our
movements and weaken our power.
- Developing
a anti-oppression practice is life long work and
requires a life long commitment. No single workshop
is sufficient for learning to change one�s
behaviors. We are all vulnerable to being oppressive
and we need to continuously struggle with these
issues.
- Dialogue
and discussion are necessary and we need to learn
how to listen non defensively and communicate
respectfully if we are going to have effective
anti-oppression practice. Challenge yourself to be
honest and open and take risks to address oppression
head on.
Anti-Oppression
Practice
(from
Los Angeles Direct Action Network)
These
practices are based on a series on conversations on the
issue of racism. We recognize that there are many other
forms of oppression that must be addressed. We have
taken these practices and attempted to generalize them
to other forms of oppression. This list is a beginning
and it needs to be expanded upon. In the future we will
continue discussions on all forms of oppression.
- When
witnessing or experiencing racism, sexism, etc
interrupt the behavior and address it on the spot or
later; either one on one, or with a few allies.
- Give
people the benefit of the doubt. Think about ways to
address behavior that will encourage change and try
to encourage dialogue, not debate.
- Keep
space open for anti-oppression discussions; try
focusing on one form of oppression at a time -
sexism, racism, classism, etc.
- Respect
different styles of leadership and communication.
- White
people need to take responsibility for holding other
white people accountable.
- Try
not to call people out because they are not
speaking.
- Be
conscious of how much space you take up or how much
you speak.
- Be
conscious of how your language may perpetuate
oppression.
- Don't
push people to do things just because of their race
and gender, base it on their word and experience and
skills.
- Promote
anti-oppression in everything you do, in and outside
of activist space.
- Avoid
generalizing feelings, thoughts, behaviors etc. to a
whole group
- Set
anti-oppression goals and continually evaluate
whether or not you are meeting them.
- Don't
feel guilty, feel motivated. Realizing that you are
part of the problem doesn't mean you can't be an
active part of the solution!
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