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Race + Power Weekly

This week’s Race + Power newsletter looks at the ways to cultivate a long-term plan for communities to thrive. First, the growing movement seeks to address immigrant wage theft at the national and state levels. Next, examining the pandemic’s start for ways to support BIPOC small businesses in the future. Then, from NPQ’s series “Owning the Economy: Stories from Latinx Communities,” how residents and businesses are organizing to preserve their community and culture. Finally, on Thursday, September 21st, four authors from NPQ’s summer economic justice magazine come together to explore the concept of movement economies.


How to End Wage Theft—and Advance Immigrant Justice

 
“While there has been some national media coverage of wage theft in recent years, the wage theft problem remains largely unknown to most Americans.” Read more... 
 
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Getting Capital to BIPOC Entrepreneurs: Some Pandemic Lessons

 
“Nine percent of the new businesses launched in 2021 were started by Black entrepreneurs, three times more than in 2019.” Read more... 
 
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Public Land for Public Good: Preserving Miami’s Dominican Neighborhood

 
“It is one thing to fight back, but the community needs a long-term plan to thrive. It also needs to be able to own land.” Read more…
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Remaking the Economy: Movement Economies

 
How do people not only develop a vision of a democratic economy rooted in values of solidarity but also come together to make that vision a collective reality? To address this question and discuss their contributions, four authors from NPQ’s summer economic justice magazine will explore the concept of movement economies and how movements can be effective systemic economic change agents. Learn more…
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