| Literature DB >> 34093982 |
Wendy Machalicek1, Kathleen Strickland-Cohen1, Christine Drew2, Dana Cohen-Lissman1.
Abstract
One pervasive social issue that has received little attention within the behavior-analytic community is racism and the systemic oppression of Black, Indigenous, and non-Black people of color. The present article offers guidance and examples of how each of us as behavior analysts might build individualized self-management behavior change plans that support initiating and sustaining socially significant antiracism work as we move from allies to accomplices within our own sphere of influence. This article introduces the concept of self-managed antiracism behavior change plans that (a) operationally define antiracist action using measurable outcomes and strategies for data collection on specific antiracist and support actions, (b) provide choices to improve engagement and reduce barriers to adherence, and (c) use effective behavioral interventions to alter the availability of discriminative stimuli or reduce their influence, and increase the availability of reinforcers that are compatible with the goal of the behavior change plan for increasing antiracism behavior and dismantling structures perpetuating racial inequities. © Association for Behavior Analysis International 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Activism; Antiracism; Self-management; Social justice
Year: 2021 PMID: 34093982 PMCID: PMC8171226 DOI: 10.1007/s40617-021-00580-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Anal Pract ISSN: 1998-1929
Example self-management strategies
| Choices & antecedent reminders | Self-education | Contingency management |
|---|---|---|
Identify, follow, join, and contribute to racial justice organizations in your community and nationally to motivate personal change (for a partial map, see Follow @antiracismcalendar on Instagram and complete daily tasks. Engage in mindfulness practice to assist with values-driven action. Set personal calendar reminders to complete specific actions (e.g., schedule a donation to a Black-led activist organization, write a letter to a local official). Tie activism actions to another already-engrained habit to increase automaticity (e.g., weekend household purchases tied to purchases from Black-owned businesses). Post behavioral expectations in the workplace; during online meetings with scripted examples for White employees to speak up about White supremacy, racism, and bias during staff meetings; and during professional development. | Break down antiracism work into discrete, manageable, and measurable steps (e.g., read 15 min each night from a fiction or nonfiction book written by a Black woman every weekday). Pool group finances to pay a Black author or activist to speak to your antiracism book club or organizations. Assign supervisees BIPOC-authored readings that support them in learning about how to work effectively with minoritized clients and their families. Make antiracism and cultural sensitivity a priority topic in supervision. Include reminders on any supervision checklist. | Pair work supporting activism with putative reinforcers (e.g., attend online events with a favorite notebook and beverage). Organize/participate in an antiracist activism accountability group of White colleagues—operationally define long-term goals and meet regularly to encourage forward progress in individual and group activism. Graph, evaluate progress, and self-reward behavior associated with your antiracism activism goals. Examples of goals include total dollars donated, count of Black-led events attended, number of minutes written (e.g., letters to the editor, practitioner publications), or count of protests attended. Plan tangible rewards for adherence to your plan that are compatible with retribution (purchases from Black-owned businesses). |
BIPOC Black, Indigenous, and people of color