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What is Reziliency

Black and Brown Leadership and the Promotion of Change in an Era of Social Unrest
A specific type of resiliency Native people possess related to specific types of oppressions experienced by Native people (e.g., boarding schools; stolen colonized land base; reservations; forced removal).
Published in Chapter:
The Transformational Change Agent Equation: Reziliency of Native American Women in Leadership Roles in Higher Education
Tamara C. Cheshire (Folsom Lake College, USA), Crystal D. Martinez-Alire (Folsom Lake College, USA), Vanessa Esquivido (California State University, Chico, USA), and Molly Springer (California State University, San Bernardino, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-7235-1.ch009
Abstract
As Native women professors, counselors, and administrators within higher education, the four authors will focus on transformational change within oppressive environments, addressing institutionalized racism stemming from a colonial history of education. The authors will discuss identified barriers including operating in an oppressive work environment which can sometimes render us invisible and silent for self-preservation, threats to our positions from taking a stand against racial or cultural inequity, and resisting assimilation strategies created by structural racism. It is important to share experiences with working in systematically oppressive environments and the covert ways in which Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) are transformational change agents, leaders against racial and cultural oppression.
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