About

Wednesday, 25 June 2025

Anti-Racism 2.0: Beyond Hashtags Toward Systemic Equity

Anti-racism

 

Welcome to Anti-Racism 2.0: a movement focused on dismantling performative allyship, embedding equity in institutions, and creating long-term structural change.

From Performative Allyship to Structural Accountability

Many institutions responded to 2020’s protests with statements of solidarity and one-time donations. But activists quickly pointed out the limits of such gestures. Anti-Racism 2.0 is about going beyond surface-level actions. It means auditing hiring practices, reevaluating leadership diversity, and tying executive compensation to equity outcomes. Resource: https://www.raceforward.org/

Equity in AI and Data Justice

AI systems increasingly shape access to housing, education, and jobs—but many are built on biased data. Anti-racist tech advocates are calling for diverse datasets, transparent model design, and racial impact assessments before deployment. Organizations like Data for Black Lives are leading the charge. Learn more: https://www.d4bl.org/

Anti-Racism in Housing and Urban Policy

From redlining to gentrification, racism has long been baked into housing systems. Today’s racial justice movements are advocating for rent stabilization, community land trusts, and zoning reforms that reverse decades of exclusion. See policy guides from: https://ncrc.org/

Pushing Institutions to Repair, Not Just Apologize

Real anti-racism work requires confronting historical harm and investing in repair. This includes funding for Black-led initiatives, scholarship programs, and land return projects. Colleges, museums, and nonprofits are being challenged to reimagine their roles not as neutral observers, but as agents of justice and repair. One example: https://universitiesstudying slavery.org/

Take Action Toward Anti-Racism 2.0

1. Move from words to metrics—evaluate equity progress with data.
2. Support grassroots organizations and racial justice campaigns.
3. Learn from thought leaders advancing anti-racist futures.
4. Share tools, policies, and stories that move the conversation forward.

Anti-Racism 2.0 reminds us that justice is a practice—not a performance. Systemic change takes courage, persistence, and collective action.

Wednesday, 18 June 2025

Digital Privacy and Tech Dissent: Reclaiming Our Rights in the Surveillance Age

 

Digital privacy

Digital privacy is no longer a luxury—it’s a necessity. As governments and tech giants normalize surveillance, biometric tracking, and data harvesting, a growing movement is rising to demand transparency, accountability, and digital rights for all.

The Age of Surveillance: What’s at Stake?

From facial recognition in public spaces to mobile apps quietly collecting location data, surveillance has become ubiquitous. These technologies are often introduced under the guise of security or convenience—but they come at the cost of autonomy and freedom. Organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have been at the forefront of resisting digital overreach. Learn more: https://www.eff.org/

Biometric Data and the Illusion of Consent

Biometric identifiers—like fingerprints, facial features, and iris scans—are being collected without meaningful consent. Once collected, this data is often stored indefinitely, vulnerable to breaches and misuse. The concept of ‘informed consent’ is being challenged by default opt-ins, opaque policies, and coercive design.

Encryption: The Last Line of Defense

End-to-end encryption remains one of the most effective tools for protecting privacy online. However, it is under attack. Lawmakers in various countries are attempting to weaken encryption under the pretext of public safety. Privacy advocates argue that weakening encryption puts everyone at risk—especially activists, journalists, and marginalized communities. Support encryption advocacy: https://www.privacyinternational.org/

Demanding Accountability from Big Tech

Tech companies often prioritize profit over privacy. From selling user data to resisting regulation, these corporations wield enormous influence over our digital lives. Accountability means enforcing regulations like the EU’s GDPR and pushing for similar standards elsewhere. It also means supporting ethical alternatives and open-source tools.

The Rise of Digital Dissent

Movements for digital rights are expanding, from privacy protests in India and the EU to advocacy campaigns on college campuses in the U.S. Tech workers themselves are increasingly speaking out against unethical practices within their own companies—part of a growing wave of whistleblowing and employee activism.

What You Can Do

1. Use privacy-focused tools like Signal, DuckDuckGo, and ProtonMail.
2. Read privacy policies before consenting to data sharing.
3. Support organizations fighting for digital rights.
4. Push for stronger privacy laws in your region.
5. Share articles and tools to help others protect their data.

Digital privacy is a human right. In a time of mass data collection and tech overreach, dissent is not just necessary—it’s essential.


Wednesday, 11 June 2025

The New Labor Movement: How Workers Are Fighting for Economic Equity in the Age of AI

 

Labor movement

From picket lines at Amazon warehouses to walkouts by software engineers and delivery riders, a new wave of labor movements is rising. 

Workers across industries are demanding not only fair pay, but a complete rethinking of economic structures—especially in the face of automation and corporate consolidation.

A Surge in Labor Organizing Across Sectors

In recent years, strikes have surged in industries long viewed as disconnected: tech, education, and the gig economy. Educators are protesting budget cuts and understaffing, while app-based workers are demanding minimum pay standards and protections. Even white-collar tech professionals are forming unions, particularly as layoffs and AI outsourcing threaten job stability.

AI Displacement and the Push for Worker Protections

As artificial intelligence automates everything from content creation to logistics, workers are facing a new kind of threat: silent replacement. Rather than creating opportunities, AI often leads to job cuts and labor devaluation. Labor advocates are calling for regulations that ensure human oversight, retraining programs, and ethical AI deployment. More on AI and labor: https://www.brookings.edu/research/how-ai-is-changing-work/

From Wage Equity to Universal Basic Income

Traditional demands for fair wages are now paired with broader calls for economic justice. Workers and economists alike are advocating for Universal Basic Income (UBI) as a safety net in an increasingly automated and unequal economy. Cities like Stockton, California, have already piloted UBI with promising results. Learn more: https://www.basicincome.org/news/stockton-ubi/

Challenging Monopolies and Big Tech Power

Corporate consolidation, particularly in the tech and delivery sectors, has concentrated power in the hands of a few companies. Labor movements are joining forces with antitrust advocates to demand structural reforms and a break from exploitative business models. Explore the policy side: https://www.epi.org/publication/big-tech-monopoly-power/

A Global Movement for Economic Fairness

This isn’t just a U.S. issue. In Europe, Asia, and Latin America, gig workers are suing for labor rights, while unionization efforts in multinational companies gain traction. The labor movement of the 2020s is international, intersectional, and increasingly tech-savvy.

What You Can Do

1. Support strikes and union efforts in your community or industry.
2. Educate yourself on how AI impacts jobs and income inequality.
3. Vote for policies and leaders that champion labor rights and economic fairness.
4. Share resources, petitions, and worker-led initiatives online.

Labor isn’t disappearing—it’s transforming. And the fight for economic equity is more vital than ever in the digital age.


Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Decolonizing Education and Culture: Reclaiming Knowledge, Elevating Voices

 

Decolonizing education

Across the globe, a movement is growing—a movement to question who writes history, who holds knowledge, and whose voices have been silenced. 

From museum collections to school curriculums, calls to decolonize education and culture are gaining momentum as communities seek to dismantle Eurocentric narratives and uplift Indigenous and marginalized perspectives.

What Does It Mean to Decolonize?

To decolonize is to challenge the dominance of Western worldviews and values in systems of knowledge. It means recognizing that colonization didn’t just steal land and labor—it reshaped how we understand history, science, art, and identity. Decolonization is about restoring balance and centering the perspectives of those who have been historically excluded.

The Push to Return Stolen Artifacts

Museums around the world are under pressure to return looted artifacts taken during colonial conquests. Institutions like the British Museum have long resisted repatriation, but activists and nations are pushing back. Learn more about current repatriation efforts here: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jul/01/benin-bronzes-repatriation

Decolonizing the Curriculum

In schools and universities, educators are revisiting outdated syllabi that prioritize European thinkers and frameworks. From literature to history to environmental science, the goal is to include a wider range of voices and knowledge systems. Resources like the Zinn Education Project (https://www.zinnedproject.org/) offer tools to teach history from a people’s perspective.

Uplifting Indigenous Knowledge Systems

Indigenous communities have long held complex understandings of land stewardship, medicine, astronomy, and governance. Decolonization involves respecting and integrating these wisdoms into mainstream discourse—not as folklore, but as legitimate, valuable systems of knowledge. A great starting point: https://www.teachingforchange.org/indigenous-peoples-curriculum

Why Decolonization Is Essential

Decolonizing education and culture isn’t about erasing the past—it’s about expanding it. It’s about creating space for stories, identities, and truths that have been denied visibility. In doing so, we empower future generations with a fuller, more honest worldview—one that values justice, complexity, and inclusion.

Take Action

1. Audit your bookshelf, classroom, or curriculum for diversity.
2. Support cultural institutions returning artifacts and elevating underrepresented voices.
3. Engage with Indigenous educators and creators.
4. Share articles, tools, and resources that support decolonial frameworks.

Decolonization is not a trend—it’s a responsibility. The more we question the systems that shaped us, the closer we get to equity, truth, and liberation.


Feminism & Body Autonomy: The Ongoing Fight for Reproductive Justice and Consent Culture

  In 2025, the battle for body autonomy is far from over. From attacks on abortion access to the rise of misogynistic online movements, femi...