About the BIPOC Collective Mutual Study

A Message from Sean Robins

The BIPOC Collective Mutual Study is an informal network of planners looking to strengthen the ways we can work together to empower and transform communities of color in the Americas using the tools of planning, community development, design, and geography. We recognize that political organizing and wealth generation must often accompany these four disciplines in practice, and that a host of other disciplines are also closely intertwined, such as health, education, the arts and spiritual/faith based practices.

Because our work and communities are not always properly supported, appreciated, respected or acknowledged by mainstream and other planning institutions, we have convened a Collective that we hope will more authentically support the work that needs to be done with and for our peoples. These include Black (African Diaspora), Indigenous, Latinx, Asian American, Working Class & other communities and peoples that have been marginalized and harmed by the dominant culture, powers, and field of planning.

Planning has a mixed history - we seek to decentralize the approaches and values of “traditional” or mainstream planning, and reclaim it as a process that can be part of freedom work and healing, and that can enhance peoples' movements for social justice, decolonization, and de-incarceration.  Planning is also the distinct work each community does that honors their own heritage, traditions, history and peoples as they take responsibility for planning for their own future.  We recognize that all peoples have ancestors that engaged in planning activity, even if little of this history is honored and taught today.  

We recognize not everyone has the opportunity in their day to day work or current positions to safely or actively discuss and grapple with some of the themes we’ve mentioned are important to the Collective.  To that end, we seek to co-create a space that values, respects, and bolsters each other's work.  We hope to use this space to check in and learn from each other, trade and iterate on ideas, discuss challenges and potential solutions, and nurture each others’ work.  We also aim to foster discussion so that we can critique strategies that are problematic, identify strategies to better resist forces that go against our communities, and develop methods that are in line with alternative planning rooted in advancing racial and social justice.

Opposing Anti-AAPI Violence and Racism

As a Planning Collective in support of Communities of Color, we wish to voice our solidarity for Asian American and Pacific Islander Peoples and Communities in the U.S.. We were appalled and dismayed by the European American Man who took the lives of eight in Atlanta, including six Asian Women. Mia White has been actively speaking out with others since this incident, and we expect to spotlight AAPI communities in a future meeting. This essay by Professor Mia White gives more background on anti-Asian racism and violence, and what you can do about it.

The Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) Collective Mutual Study was co-founded by Sean Robins and Katherine Mella, and later joined by Professor Mia White, Cinthia De La Rosa and Byron Nicholas. The Collective is an informal network of planners looking to strengthen the ways we can work together to empower and transform communities of color in the Americas. We are a new configuration of conversations and alliances that go back many years and have had other names. Past participants include alumni of color and allies from MIT Planning, members of Planners Network, the Black Planner Collective, Indigenous Design and Planning Institute, MASS Design Group, and many more. We have been meeting quarterly on zoom since May of 2020.

 

 

The BIPOC Planning Collective, an affiliate of the Planners Network, is a group committed to supporting planners of color, as well as planning processes that affirm communities of color.  In collaboration with The New School, the Collective is pleased to be hosting an "Infrastructure and Equity" half-day workshop event on Thursday, April 27, 2023.  The workshop will take place at The New School and will run from 3-6pm, with open networking (tapas and beverages) served from 6-7pm.   Please register so we may order enough food and create enough workshop packets. All are welcome.

Our goal is to enable a setting for both “professional” and community-based BIPOC planners to exchange knowledge and deepen learning on infrastructure needs and opportunities in communities of color. Infrastructure remains a matter of concern and interest in our communities but the more than $1 trillion of federal funding currently slated to trickle down into communities as a function of the November 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), presents an important impetus for learning and getting organized.  

Our panel guests include: Adam Paul Susaneck, founder of the Segregation by Design project; Nilka Martell, founder and director of the community-based non-profit organization Loving the Bronx; Alex Levine, co-creator of Bronx One Policy Group; Desiree Powell, founder of Doing Right by the Streets (DRBTS); and Collective Co-conveners Byron A. Nicholas, PP, AICP; Sean I. Robin, MCP; and Mia Charlene White, MIA, PhD.


Come learn about the IIJA and engage with diverse ways of thinking about infrastructure projects (transportation, water & sewage, telecommunications, energy, housing and food)!

We send special appreciation for support from the Tishman Environment & Design Center and the Urban & Environmental Studies Program at the New School.  Please Join Us!

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER


 
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Registration and More Information

Katherine Mella (Director of the Planning and Policy Lab at the Bronx Cooperative Development Initiative) will discuss her work coordinating the Bronx-wide Coalition, a group of community, faith, and labor organizations that have come together to co-create a Bronx-wide municipal platform and a 30-year economic development plan for the borough grounded in advancing racial justice and economic democracy.

The Bronx People's Platform for NYC

More context on the Bronx-wide Platform and Plan

What is economic democracy?

When: May 17, 2021 06:30 PM to 8:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Register in advance for this meeting, here.