Academics to stage Strike for Black Lives, ShutDownSTEM on 10 June
More than 1700 physicists, astronomers, and other academics have pledged to forgo research, classes, meetings, and other normal business on Wednesday, 10 June, to pursue a day of action dedicated to protecting the lives of Black people. The Strike for Black Lives is needed “to hit pause, to give Black academics a break and to give others an opportunity to reflect on their own complicity in anti-Black racism in academia and their local and global communities,” a group of 15 physicists write on the website Particles for Justice
“I want non-Black people to respond as if lives depend on it because they do,” says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
The idea for the strike came from discussions between Prescod-Weinstein and Brian Nord
Image courtesy of Particles for Justice; Original graphic by Eighth Generation
The strike comes as people across the US and abroad protest systemic racism and police violence in the wake of the killings of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Tony McDade, and many others. Among the numerous Black voices speaking out are scientists who are sharing their personal experiences of police brutality and racism, including racism in the ivory tower. Using the hashtag #BlackInTheIvory
The Particles for Justice organizers call out the lack of Black physics faculty and an atmosphere in physics departments that make “Black students often feel unwelcome, unsupported, and even unsafe.” And they emphasize that seminars on implicit bias or on diversity and inclusion aren’t going to solve the problem: “To steward a new generation of students, research staff, and faculty in physics means to acknowledge our collective responsibility to combat anti-Blackness, not just on campus, but also in the streets, in governance, and society at large.”
Non-Black academics should use 10 June “to educate themselves and advocate for change in their communities,” the Particles for Justice organizers write. They provide a list of suggested actions
Image courtesy of #ShutDownSTEM and #ShutDownAcademia
Scientists who are conducting time-sensitive research on COVID-19 should not feel obligated to participate in the strike, the organizers write, nor should students, faculty, and others who fear that their standing at their institution would be threatened by participating.
On Twitter, academics are using the hashtags #Strike4BlackLives
Nord emphasizes the importance of action in an open letter
More about the authors
Andrew Grant, agrant@aip.org