Paul Kivel
Born
January 01, 1948
Website
Genre
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Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice
by
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published
1995
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16 editions
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Men's Work: How to Stop the Violence That Tears Our Lives Apart
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published
1992
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15 editions
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Living in the Shadow of the Cross: Understanding and Resisting the Power and Privilege of Christian Hegemony
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published
2013
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5 editions
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You Call This a Democracy? Who Benefits, Who Pays, and Who Really Decides
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published
2004
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6 editions
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Boys Will Be Men
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published
1999
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Making the Peace: A 15-Session Violence Prevention Curriculum for Young People
by
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published
2002
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4 editions
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I Can Make My World a Safer Place: A Kid's Book About Stopping Violence
by
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published
2001
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Men's Work: Facilitator's Guide/a Complete Counseling Plan for Breaking the Cycle of Male Violence (A Hazelden Worlbook)
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published
1992
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Unlearning Violence
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Growing Up Male: Identifying Violence in My Life Taking a Stand Against Violence
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published
1988
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“I look around and see many shelters and services for survivors of domestic violence, but no large-scale movement to end male violence. I see many batterer intervention programs, but few men involved in challenging sexism. The loss of vision that narrowed the focus of men's work reflects a change that occurred in other parts of the movement to end violence, as activists who set out to change the institutions perpetrating violence settled into service jobs helping people cope.
[...]
Social service work addresses the needs of individuals reeling from the personal and devastating impact of institutional systems of exploitation and violence. Social change work challenges the root causes of the exploitation and violence. In my travels throughout the United States, I talk with many service providers, more and more of whom are saying to me, "We could continue doing what we are doing for another hundred years and the levels of violence would not change. I meet more and more people who are running programs for batterers who say ,"We are only dealing with a minute number of the men who are violent and are having little impact on the systems which perpetuate male violence."
[...]
While there is some overlap between social service provision and social change work, the two do not necessarily go readily together. In our violent world, the needs and numbers of survivors are never ending, and the tasks of funding, staffing, and developing resources for our organizations to meet those needs are difficult, poorly supported, and even actively undermined by those with power and wealth in our society. Although some groups are both working for social change and providing social services, there are many more groups providing social services that are not working for social change. In fact, many social service agencies may be intentionally or inadvertently working to maintain the status quo. After all, the non-profit industrial complex (NPIC) wouldn't exist without a lot of people in desperate straits. The NPIC provides jobs; it provides opportunities for professional development. It enables those who do the work to feel good about what we do and about our ability to help individuals survive in the system. It gives a patina of caring and concern to the ruling class which funds the work.”
― The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex
[...]
Social service work addresses the needs of individuals reeling from the personal and devastating impact of institutional systems of exploitation and violence. Social change work challenges the root causes of the exploitation and violence. In my travels throughout the United States, I talk with many service providers, more and more of whom are saying to me, "We could continue doing what we are doing for another hundred years and the levels of violence would not change. I meet more and more people who are running programs for batterers who say ,"We are only dealing with a minute number of the men who are violent and are having little impact on the systems which perpetuate male violence."
[...]
While there is some overlap between social service provision and social change work, the two do not necessarily go readily together. In our violent world, the needs and numbers of survivors are never ending, and the tasks of funding, staffing, and developing resources for our organizations to meet those needs are difficult, poorly supported, and even actively undermined by those with power and wealth in our society. Although some groups are both working for social change and providing social services, there are many more groups providing social services that are not working for social change. In fact, many social service agencies may be intentionally or inadvertently working to maintain the status quo. After all, the non-profit industrial complex (NPIC) wouldn't exist without a lot of people in desperate straits. The NPIC provides jobs; it provides opportunities for professional development. It enables those who do the work to feel good about what we do and about our ability to help individuals survive in the system. It gives a patina of caring and concern to the ruling class which funds the work.”
― The Revolution Will Not Be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex
“African Americans, Latinx, immigrants, other people of color, and their allies are frequently out in the streets protesting police brutality, cutbacks in human services, racial profiling, attacks on immigrants, and other forms of racism. The only way to break this cycle of rage is for white people to join in seriously addressing the sources of the anger, the causes of the problems. And in order to do that, we need to talk about racism directly with one another.”
― Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice
― Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice
“When confronting the reality of racism, white people become sad, angry, overwhelmed, numb, anxious, and passive.”
― Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice
― Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
The Seasonal Read...:
Winter 2014 Completed Tasks: Do Not Delete Posts
|
4134 | 772 | Mar 11, 2015 04:43AM | |
| All About Books: Favorite Books of 2019 | 120 | 141 | Jan 05, 2020 05:46PM | |
| The History Book ...: RACISM | 14 | 63 | Jun 11, 2020 02:44PM |
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