This week’s newsletter features articles that encourage health justice advocates to shift their perspectives.
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** Health Justice
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This week’s newsletter features articles that encourage health justice advocates to shift their perspectives. First, the US Census Bureau is using new demographic questions to redefine race ([link removed]) . Next, the benefits of an intentional identity-based approach to health justice ([link removed]) . Then, new guidance on applying social and behavioral science perspectives to federal policies and programs ([link removed]) . Finally, how climate and health justice advocates can advance conversations that simultaneously address climate change, health, and equity ([link removed]) .
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Shifting Identities, Shifting Data: How the Census is Redefining Race ([link removed])
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For the first time in 27 years, the US Census is changing how it categorizes people by race and ethnicity. But will the changes more appropriately capture the country’s diverse tapestry of people? Read more... ([link removed])
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Identity Should Not Take a Backseat in Health Justice ([link removed])
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A community scholar-activist argues that “the broader fields that contribute to health justice—research, evaluation, service delivery, advocacy, and more—would be strengthened by an intentional identity-based approach that aims to liberate communities from the structural inequities embedded in more traditional practices.” Read more... ([link removed])
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Centering Behavioral and Social Science in US Policymaking ([link removed])
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New guidance from the White House, “Applying Social and Behavioral Science to Federal Policies and Programs to Deliver Better Outcomes,” makes the case for including social and behavioral science perspectives in evidence-based policymaking. Read more… ([link removed])
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How to Center Justice in Climate and Health Advocacy ([link removed])
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[T]here are certain ways to approach messaging that aligns values across the ideological and political spectrum to increase the chance of making ground toward progress for equitable climate and health solutions—and benefit anyone seeking to advance justice through policy and practice change. Read more… ([link removed])
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