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Glossary›Anti Racism

Glossary

Anti Racism

A proactive framework for identifying and dismantling racist systems, policies, and beliefs, requiring continuous action rather than passive non-participation in racism.

What is Anti Racism?

Anti racism is an active, conscious practice of identifying, challenging, and working to dismantle racist structures, policies, behaviors, and beliefs in individuals, institutions, and society. Unlike non-racism—which suggests passive abstention from racist acts—anti racism demands intentional intervention and ongoing commitment to equity. It operates from the premise that racism is embedded systemically in social, economic, political, and cultural institutions, and that neutrality in the face of injustice functionally supports the status quo.

The framework recognizes racism as both individual prejudice and structural power imbalances that advantage certain groups while marginalizing others based on racial categorization. Anti racist practice involves examining one’s own conditioning, interrogating institutional policies, redistributing resources and power, and actively opposing racist harm when encountered. It is process-oriented rather than identity-based: one engages in anti racist work rather than claiming to “be” anti racist as a fixed state.

Origins & Lineage

The term “anti racism” emerged from mid-20th century civil rights and decolonization movements, though resistance to racial oppression predates the terminology by centuries. Abolitionist movements in the 18th and 19th centuries—led by figures including Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, and Sojourner Truth—embodied anti racist action before the conceptual framework was formalized.

The modern articulation gained prominence through scholars and activists in the 1960s-1980s. Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture) and Charles V. Hamilton’s 1967 book Black Power: The Politics of Liberation distinguished between individual racist acts and institutional racism, laying groundwork for systemic analysis. Critical Race Theory, developed in legal scholarship during the 1970s by Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Crenshaw, and others, provided analytical tools for understanding how racism functions through law and policy rather than solely through individual animus.

Ibram X. Kendi’s 2019 book How to Be an Antiracist brought the term into mainstream consciousness, defining anti racism as the active choice to support policies and express ideas that treat racial groups as equals, in opposition to racist and assimilationist positions. Robin DiAngelo’s White Fragility (2018) examined defensive responses that inhibit anti racist dialogue among white-identified people. Earlier works include Beverly Daniel Tatum’s Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria? (1997) and Peggy McIntosh’s 1988 essay on white privilege.

How It’s Practiced

Anti racist practice manifests across multiple domains simultaneously. At the personal level, it involves examining internalized beliefs, studying histories of racial oppression and resistance, listening to marginalized voices without centering one’s own comfort, and developing literacy in how racism operates. This includes acknowledging when one has caused harm and making accountability-oriented repair.

Institutionally, anti racism appears as policy review and reform—examining hiring practices, resource allocation, decision-making power structures, and accessibility barriers. Organizations conduct equity audits, implement diverse representation in leadership, establish accountability mechanisms, and shift from diversity statements to measurable outcomes. This work often surfaces tension between stated values and operational realities.

Interpersonally, anti racist practice includes interrupting racist jokes or stereotypes, questioning assumptions about criminality or competence tied to racial identity, amplifying marginalized perspectives, and accepting discomfort as part of growth. In spiritual and consciousness communities specifically, it means examining how universalist language (“we are all one”) can bypass material inequities, addressing accessibility barriers in pricing and spaces, and acknowledging Indigenous land relationships.

Anti Racism Today

Contemporary seekers encounter anti racism through workshops, book groups, organizational trainings, and online courses. Many spiritual centers and retreat spaces now incorporate anti racism components into teacher training programs, recognizing that consciousness work without social analysis can replicate harm. Organizations like the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond offer Undoing Racism® workshops; White Awake and Spiritual Activism provide contemplative approaches.

The convergence of contemplative practice and anti racist work has generated both generative dialogue and legitimate critique. Some practitioners integrate somatic and mindfulness approaches to work with racial trauma and defensive patterns. Others caution that centering white comfort or treating anti racism as individual healing work rather than collective liberation struggle dilutes political power and recenters privilege.

Social media has accelerated both education and commodification, with anti racism resources proliferating alongside concerns about performative allyship—public displays of solidarity without substantive action or risk. The 2020 uprising following George Floyd’s murder created a surge of engagement that revealed both genuine commitment and the challenge of sustaining attention beyond crisis moments.

Common Misconceptions

Anti racism is not equivalent to being “nice” to people of different races or claiming color-blindness. The assertion “I don’t see race” typically functions to avoid examining how race shapes material conditions and lived experiences. Anti racism explicitly names race and racism rather than minimizing their significance.

It is not reverse racism or discrimination against white people. Anti racism seeks to dismantle systems that concentrate power and resources rather than simply inverting hierarchies. Discomfort experienced when privilege is named differs categorically from systemic oppression.

Anti racism is not a fixed achievement or identity badge. There is no graduation point; rather, it describes ongoing practice within ever-shifting contexts. Reading books or attending workshops, while valuable, does not complete the work or insulate one from causing harm.

It is not a monolithic ideology with uniform tactics. Practitioners hold varied strategic approaches—from reform to abolition, from dialogue-centered to policy-focused—and these differences generate substantive debate within anti racist communities.

How to Begin

For those new to anti racist practice, start with study and self-examination before centering your voice in public discourse. Read How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi or Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad. Engage with Stamped from the Beginning by Ibram X. Kendi for historical context, or The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander for understanding contemporary systemic racism.

Seek teachers and facilitators who have sustained practice rather than recent converts. Look for accountability structures in educational offerings—who is teaching, to whom are they accountable, where do proceeds go? The People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond offers foundational Undoing Racism® workshops across the United States.

Examine where you currently hold power—in workplace hiring, community organization leadership, resource distribution, or everyday interactions—and identify one concrete practice to shift outcomes toward equity. Join an ongoing affinity group (same-race spaces for processing and skill-building) or multiracial accountability group. Expect discomfort, mistakes, and the long-term nature of this work. Anti racism is measured in changed conditions, not changed feelings.

Related terms

decolonizationsocial justiceequityintersectionalityliberation theologycultural appropriation
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