Movement For Black Lives - 2016 Policy Platform
Movement For Black Lives - 2016 Policy Platform
Movement For Black Lives - 2016 Policy Platform
ORG
Black humanity and dignity requires Black political will and power.
Despite constant exploitation and perpetual oppression, Black
people have bravely and brilliantly been the driving force pushing
the U.S. towards the ideals it articulates but has never achieved.
In recent years we have taken to the streets, launched massive
campaigns, and impacted elections, but our elected leaders have
failed to address the legitimate demands of our Movement. We
can no longer wait.
In response to the sustained and increasingly visible violence
against Black communities in the U.S. and globally, a collective
of more than 50 organizations representing thousands of Black
people from across the country have come together with renewed
energy and purpose to articulate a common vision and agenda. We
are a collective that centers and is rooted in Black communities, but
we recognize we have a shared struggle with all oppressed people;
collective liberation will be a product of all of our work.
We believe in elevating the experiences and leadership of the
most marginalized Black people, including but not limited to those
who are women, queer, trans, femmes, gender nonconforming,
Muslim, formerly and currently incarcerated, cash poor and
working class, differently-abled, undocumented, and immigrant.
We are intentional about amplifying the particular experience
of state and gendered violence that Black queer, trans, gender
nonconforming, women and intersex people face. There can be
no liberation for all Black people if we do not center and fight for
those who have been marginalized. It is our hope that by working
together to create and amplify a shared agenda, we can continue
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REPARATIONS
We demand reparations for past and
continuing harms. The government,
responsible corporations and other
institutions that have profited off of
the harm they have inflicted on
Black people from colonialism to
slavery through food and housing
redlining, mass incarceration, and
surveillance must repair the
harm done.
This includes:
DIVESTINVEST
We demand investments in the
education, health and safety of
Black people, instead of investments
in the criminalizing, caging, and
harming of Black people. We want
investments in Black communities,
determined by Black communities,
and divestment from exploitative
forces including prisons, fossil fuels,
police, surveillance and exploitative
corporations.
This includes:
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ECONOMIC JUSTICE
We demand economic justice for all
and a reconstruction of the economy
to ensure Black communities have
collective ownership, not merely
access.
This includes:
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COMMUNITY CONTROL
We demand a world where those
most impacted in our communities
control the laws, institutions, and
policies that are meant to serve
us from our schools to our
local budgets, economies, police
departments, and our land while
recognizing that the rights and
histories of our Indigenous family
must also be respected.
This includes:
POLITICAL POWER
We demand independent Black
political power and Black selfdetermination in all areas of society.
We envision a remaking of the current
U.S. political system in order to create
a real democracy where Black people
and all marginalized people can
effectively exercise full political power.
This includes:
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GLOSSARY
A NTI- BL ACK
The Council for Democratizing Education defines antiBlackness as being a two-part formation that both voids
Blackness of value, while systematically marginalizing
Black people and their issues. The first form of antiBlackness is overt racism. Society also associates unpolitically correct comments with the overt nature of
anti-Black racism. Beneath this anti-black racism is the
covert structural and systemic racism which categorically
predetermines the socioeconomic status of Blacks in
this country. The structure is held in place by anti-Black
policies, institutions, and ideologies.
The second form of anti-Blackness is the unethical
disregard for anti-Black institutions and policies. This
disregard is the product of class, race, and/or gender
privilege certain individuals experience due to anti-Black
institutions and policies. This form of anti-Blackness is
protected by the first form of overt racism.
A NTI- BL ACK
RA CISM
BL ACK
CA PITA LI SM/
AN T I- CAPITA LI SM
CAR E ECO NO M Y
CO LO NI ALI SM
CO MMUNITY
CO NTRO L
DE C OL O NI ZA TIO N
FOOD A PA RTHEID
FO O D J USTI CE
FOOD
SO VEREIGNTY
NO N- BL ACK
PEO PLE O F
CO L O R
O THER
INSTITUTIO NS
PATRI ARCHY
PO L I TICA L
A CTI VI TY
PO L I TICA L
PRI SO NERS
REPARA TIO NS
RESPO NSI BL E
BUSI NESS/
AC CO UNTA BL E
BUSI NESS
RESTO RATIVE
J USTI CE
T RAN S FO RM ATIVE
J USTI CE