On Saturday 1st July, we collaborated with the Runnymede Trust to host Building Bridges: connecting stories and championing racial justice, a dynamic and inspiring day of knowledge exchange and collective action. The day was a resounding success, leaving us with budding collaborations, renewed vigour, and practical strategies to fight racial inequalities in the UK and beyond. Representatives from grassroots organisations, academic institutions, and international NGOs hosted a variety of panel discussions and workshop-style sessions focussed on three core themes:
- The social and economic cost of racial injustice
- Hostile Environment and migrants’ rights in the time of ‘stopping small boats
- Reimaging policing and ‘criminal’ justice
Watch the highlights video
This event was co-sponsored by LSE Department of Sociology, LSE Equity, Diversity and Inclusion and Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity.
Race & Health Organisation
Young Foundation
Human Rights Watch
Liberty
Debt Justice
Nanny Solidarity Network
Voice of Domestic Workers
Just Fair
University of Leeds
Netpol
No More Exlusions
Mentivity
Coffee Afrik
Heads2Gether Housing Cooperative
East European Resource Centre
Black Protest Legal Support
Hackney Cop Watch
Howard League for Penal Reform
Theme 1: The social and economic cost of racial injustice
- Falling faster: putting the cost of living crisis in its place (panel discussion)
- Imaginative practice towards racial health justice (workshop)
- Exposing the gravity of the racial wealth divide (panel discussion)
Theme 2: Hostile Environment and migrants’ rights in the time of ‘stopping small boats’
- Unveiling the Forgotten: exploring economic, social, and cultural rights of asylum seekers in the UK (workshop)
- Remembering Windrush (workshop)
- Migrant domestic worker rights (panel discussion)
Theme 3: Reimaging policing and ‘criminal’ justice
- What the policing of protest means for our communities (panel discussion)
- The Baroness Casey Review: where next for the UK's police forces? (panel discussion)
- How policing is harming young people (workshop)