description: an acronym for Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour, used to describe individuals from non-white racial and ethnic groups
29 results
by Greta Thunberg · 14 Feb 2023 · 651pp · 162,060 words
modus operandi. In the United States, beyond the profound suffering of Black people at the hands of the police forces and the prison industrial complex, BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Colour) communities are considered disposable in service to moneyed interests across the country. Sacrifice zones – areas that border environmental threats or dangerous pollution – are overwhelmingly populated
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; habitat loss, 102, 250; migratory, 113–15; songbirds, 415–17 black-and-white issues, 2, 20 black carbon, 53, 55, 99, 119, 121, 190–91 Black, Indigenous and People of Colour (BIPOC) communities, 163 Black Panther Party, 413 body size, reductions in species, 114 Bondo, Switzerland, 91 border controls, 168 boreal forest, 38, 91, 93, 102–4
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, 296, 297, 308, 315, 397, 413 Indigenous peoples: agriculture and traditional knowledge, 172, 420; Amazon rainforest and, 176–7; ‘biodiversity hot spots’ and, 417–18; Black, Indigenous and People of Colour (BIPOC) communities, 163, 392; Chad pastoralists advocate for ancestral agroecological practices, 177, 178–9; climate justice leadership, elevating voices in, 418–19; colonialism and, 162, 387
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, 146, 291, 292, 341 United States of America: aerosol emissions in, 58; African Americans, 163, 164, 412; American Clean Energy and Security Act (2009), 30; Black, Indigenous and People of Colour (BIPOC) communities, 163; car use in, 220–21; carbon dioxide emissions fall in, 224; carbon dioxide emissions from territorial and consumption-based accounting perspectives 258; carbon
by Madeleine Olivia · 9 Jan 2020 · 306pp · 71,100 words
, and if we want slow and ethical fashion to become the norm, we have the power to make a shift with our wallets. Support BIPOC Furthermore, buy from BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Colour) creators, makers and fashion designers to support their long-standing work in the ethical and slow fashion community. Diversity is key to ethical
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cream/light foundation 130 beach clean 65, 266 beauty see health and beauty bicarbonate of soda 149, 154, 156, 176, 236, 237, 238, 241, 242 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Colour) 114 black bean burger 185, 208–9 bleach, hair and 145 body hair 121, 155 body scan 285 body scrub 153 bokashi system 251 books
by Nicole Lepera · 9 Mar 2021
not evolved past that reactive state in which everything unfamiliar or slightly uncomfortable is viewed as a threat. There is also the reality that Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) living in even the developed world face daily threats from our oppressive systems. Because of these instinctually driven reactions, when we try to change
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, 108–10 origin of, 110–12 power of, 33–34 as practiced thoughts, 110, 119 beta state, 116 Betrayal Bond, The (Carnes), 160–61 Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), 30, 45, 70, 71 blood sugar, 95 body connection meditation, 238–39 bottom-up processes, 89–91 boundaries, 179–205, 212, 275 Do the
by Jamie Fiore Higgins · 29 Aug 2022 · 263pp · 86,709 words
inside. As an employee active in recruiting, I knew the firm recruited from historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) to find new hires. Hiring Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) candidates, especially at the entry level, was a priority from the executive office. In fact, in 2019, after I’d left, Goldman set a
by W. David Marx · 18 Nov 2025 · 642pp · 142,332 words
intersectionality, provided a framework for understanding how overlapping minority identities compound oppression. This theory also influenced the left’s evolving language. Advocates introduced the term BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) to reflect the perceived acuity of racial oppression. Similarly, LGBTQ+ expanded its scope to ensure equal visibility for lesbians, bisexuals, transgender individuals, queer
by Julie Battilana and Tiziana Casciaro · 30 Aug 2021 · 345pp · 92,063 words
also introduce bias into the algorithms they build. Only a small percentage of the technical employees at companies like Apple and Facebook are women and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color).29 Yet diverse perspectives are critical to identifying biases and applying critical lenses to testing and tweaking algorithms. Also, for the most part
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, 157 bias algorithmic, 150–51 fundamental attribution error, 16 negativity bias, 19 status quo bias, 74 confirmation bias, 88 See also stereotypes, racism, gender inequality BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color), 88, 117, 151, 196 Björkman, Tomas, 187, 188, 258n83 Black Lives Matter movement, 117, 139, 141, 147–48 Black Voters Matter Fund, 190
by Susan Linn · 12 Sep 2022 · 415pp · 102,982 words
is an organization that combines art and research to illuminate the social implications and harms of artificial intelligence. Backyard Basecamp backyardbasecamp.org (Re)connecting Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) to land and nature in Baltimore City. Center for Digital Democracy democraticmedia.org CDD works to protect and expand digital rights and data justice
by Mark R. Levin · 12 Jul 2021 · 314pp · 88,524 words
fields for an indefinite period. This is required even where whites are a local minority and power structures are controlled by non-whites or Blacks, Indigenous, and People of Color—’BIPOCs’ in the current terminology.”11 In his book Intellectuals and Society, Dr. Thomas Sowell, author, scholar, and professor, denounces the entire multicultural/ identity politics
by Chris Bruntlett and Melissa Bruntlett · 28 Jun 2021 · 225pp · 70,590 words
is important to recognize that good infrastructure and access to nature alone won’t mitigate the stress of the city for everyone. He highlights that Black, Indigenous, and people of color also have to contend with police surveillance and racism in these spaces, which can cancel out the restorative effects. Psychologist Dr. Rodney Clark
by Elandria Williams, Eli Feghali, Rachel Plattus and Nathan Schneider · 15 Dec 2024 · 346pp · 84,111 words
culture that makes this harm imaginable, to hold the individual perpetrator accountable, to support their transformation, or to meet the needs of the survivors. A Black, Indigenous, and people of color survivor-led transformative justice movement has emerged in the past two decades to offer a different vision for ending violence and transforming our
by Fredrik Deboer · 4 Sep 2023 · 211pp · 78,547 words
by Garrett Neiman · 19 Jun 2023 · 386pp · 112,064 words
by Adam Aleksic · 15 Jul 2025 · 278pp · 71,701 words
by George Packer · 14 Jun 2021 · 173pp · 55,328 words
by Nellie Bowles · 13 May 2024 · 207pp · 62,397 words
by Cate Sevilla · 14 Jan 2021
by Vivek Ramaswamy · 16 Aug 2021 · 344pp · 104,522 words
by Amanda Montell · 14 Jun 2021 · 244pp · 73,700 words
by Thomas Chatterton Williams · 4 Aug 2025 · 242pp · 76,315 words
by Dk Eyewitness · 170pp · 32,491 words
by Fodor's Travel Guides · 13 Jun 2023 · 590pp · 156,001 words
by Holly Glenn Whitaker · 9 Jan 2020 · 334pp · 109,882 words
by Yascha Mounk · 26 Sep 2023
by Rebecca Walker · 15 Mar 2022 · 322pp · 106,663 words
by Tao Leigh. Goffe · 14 Mar 2025 · 441pp · 122,013 words
by AA.VV. · 23 May 2022 · 192pp · 59,615 words
by DK · 167pp · 33,334 words
by Bregman, Rutger · 9 Mar 2025 · 181pp · 72,663 words
by Dk Eyewitness · 166pp · 33,248 words