Varying Viewpoints
The mental health system is still falling short for many people. Despite years of diversity efforts, too many communities of color continue to be underserved, misunderstood, and overlooked. Outdated assumptions about what "normal" or "objective" care looks like have gone unchallenged for too long and the gap between what institutions promise and what people actually experience has never been clearer. In this episode, we spoke with Norman H. Kim about his recent anthology, Anti Blackness and the Stories of Authentic Allies (Oxford University Press, 2024), which examines how the myth of clinical "neutrality" and so-called color-blind practice can reinforce anti-Blackness and other structural inequities in mental health. As the inaugural DEI Officer at Columbia University's Center for Practice Innovations, Kim brings together research and lived experience to illuminate what liberation-informed, culturally responsive care looks like in real clinical and institutional settings. Listen for a candid examination of what authentic allyship looks like in practice, tools for shifting clinical language and decision-making toward justice-rooted approaches.
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