Buchzusammenfassung
Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman is an award-winning Ghanaian-American researcher, entrepreneur, and author. She cofounded the Sadie Collective, a nonprofit highlighting the underrepresentation of Black women in economics, finance, and policy. She’s also the youngest recipient of the CEDAW Women’s Human Rights Award.
The interconnected struggles of racial justice, climate change, and technological equity reveal systemic inequities that disproportionately harm Black communities. From the wrongful arrests of Robert Williams and Nijeer Parks due to flawed facial recognition software to the dismissal of Black women researchers like Timnit Gebru, the tech industry exemplifies how bias and exclusion perpetuate harm. Similarly, climate change exacerbates existing vulnerabilities, disproportionately impacting marginalized groups while being mischaracterized as an equalizer. Activists like Mary Annaïse Heglar emphasize the necessity of addressing these intertwined issues through an intersectional lens, rejecting the false dichotomy between environmental and racial justice. Despite their critical contributions, Black experts in both fields face systemic barriers, including exclusion from decision-making spaces and inadequate resources. The COVID-19 pandemic further highlighted these disparities, as Black researchers foresaw its disproportionate impact on their communities but were sidelined. Addressing these challenges requires centering the Black Agenda, fostering inclusive solutions, and holding institutions accountable to dismantle the systems that perpetuate inequality.
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