Learning from the MST

By Riki Lorenzo Valdez

Movemento Dos Trabalhadores Rurias sem Terra - Brasil

Brazil is one of the most racially diverse nations in Latin America and perhaps the world. Yet, there are a lot of racial inequalities and other forms of injustice in the country. As a result, groups such as Brazil’s Landless Workers Movements (MST) have started to fight those inequalities. Cristina Stumers, an activist and researcher, discussed in the “Black Futures, Black Ecologies” symposium what the movement is about, intergenerational struggles, ecological projects they have developed, and their Black Feminist social justice vision. I also learned how their ideas and actions could inspire and empower Afro-Latinxs in the US.

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Hook, Line, & Sinker: The Food is Poisoned, The Overlap Between Environmental Racism and SCD

By Aissata Sow and Maya Samuel

In their podcast Black Futures Scholars, Aissata Sow and Maya Samuel, evaluate Black Futures and Ecologies in connection with their research for Race, Inequality, and Public Policy (PAF 3010). They discuss climate change and environmental racism, the impact on people who suffer from sickle cell disease, and the intersection with factory farming.

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Black Futures Project: Education and Advocacy – Toward Equity

By Jacquelyn Ortiz

Jacquelyn Ortiz links education as a fundamental right and key to unlocking full human potential to Black futures in this final paper for Race, Inequality, and Public Policy with Professor Angie Beeman. This paper addresses the history and continuing legacy of racial inequity in education and how to better engage in efforts to create change through social justice advocacy. The paper takes a critical look at the role color-blind and post-racial ideologies play in maintaining structural inequities. Using works by Lindsay Perez Huber, Susana Muñoz, Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Curtis Ivery, Joshua Bassett, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva and Paolo Freire, this paper explores the disconnect between ideologies of equality and implementation of equity-based policies and practices.

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Breaking Down Harmful Structures Through Ecological Relationships

By Alexandra Acevedo

The foundations of Brazilian society are racist, anti-LGBTQ, patriarchal, and capitalistic. The same could be said about all the Americas and the United States. The colonizer European powers built these societal structures in Latin America. As a result, many indigenous and enslaved people (and their descendants) lost their relationship with the land and their ancestral communities. They partially lost the knowledge they held and their culture. Now, these belief systems of racism and so on are embedded in the way we view the world. However, we can repair these relationships through reconnection between people and the land. Through both the Landless Workers Movement (MST) in Brazil and Khalil Haywood’s essay “Paraíso Negro” we can see how reconnection to the land is crucial for the Afro-Latinx diaspora. We must unlearn these harmful belief systems and gain new knowledge to deconstruct these systems through reconnection to nature; in doing so, we can become closer to ourselves, our culture, and our families and communities.

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Black Futures and Environmental Racism

By Peter Balluffi-Fry

In spring semester 2023, Black Futures Scholar Peter Balluffi-Fry developed a research paper for PAF 3010 in response to Dr. Nisrin Elamin’s talk on land dispossession and corporate investment in Sudan. His paper, Environmental Racism: The Centuries-Long Exploitation of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, examines policies to address climate justice on a global scale. Click on the link below to read Peter’s research.

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Alexis Pauline Gumbs UNDROWNED:  Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals

Afro-Indigenous Lives, Water, and the Histories of Colonization

By Emily Pacheco

Alexis Pauline Gumbs

Nature was there to witness the tragedies that came along with colonization. Ocean creatures, plants, ecosystems, and even the rain from the sky can teach us about our history, as poet and independent scholar Alexis Pauline Gumbs proposes. In Dub: Finding Ceremony, Gumbs gives insight into how colonization has affected natives and nature alike and how they are the same in many ways. She recently sat down with students from Baruch College’s Department of Black and Latinx Studies and Black Futures Student Scholars to further discuss nature and its connection to Indigenous and Black history.

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An Indestructible Life: Reflections on Marronage Pedro Lebrón Ortiz

Afro-Indigenous Past Lives and Futures

By Jacquelyn Ortiz

The following is an overview of some of the topics I addressed in my podcast series “Afro-Indigenous Past Lives and Futures.” In these episodes, I reflect on readings and audiovisual works discussed in the course LTS 3110 Debates in Latin American Social Theory taught by Professor Rojo Robles. I also incorporated ideas presented by the Black Studies Colloquium and guests in the ongoing project “Black Futures.”

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A Select Screening of Quilombo (1984) & A Discussion of Racial Capitalism, Radical Black Feminism, & Imaging the Archive

A Haven in Nature: Indigenous and Maroon Communities in South America

By Diego Gonzalez

Quilombo
Quilombo

The movie Quilombo (Carlos Diegues, 1984) and the discussion of the movie on the topics of “Racial Capitalism, Radical Black Feminism, and Imagining the Archive” by Black Studies Colloquium (BSC) members Dr. Erica Richardson, Dr. Tshombe Miles, and Dr. Rojo Robles raises conversations on how the maroon communities in Brazil during the 17 and 18 centuries prepared for the constant threat of colonizers. The BSC also looked at how the film builds historical fiction based on methods of speculations. They highlighted the significance of the silences in the archive. This panel was part of their ongoing series Black Futures that looks to answer questions like what kind of Black futures might we imagine through cultivating conversation and producing scholarship across sites of Black studies in North America, the Caribbean, South America, and Africa?

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