Kindred Southern Healing Justice Collective
Kindred Southern Healing Justice Collective is a project that was “conceived by healers and organizers of color in the Southern United States in 2007, as a response to the crisis of trauma, violence and social conditions in that region”. Their work has been seminal in creating the healing justice framework used yy the Black Lives Matter movement today. Members of the collective have also created Good Medicine, a resource that contains interviews with healers and activists from the Southern United States.
RELATED RESOURCES

Human Rights Leadership: Towards a Research and Practice Agenda for Challenging Times, Eric Hoddy and John Gray, Human Rights Defender Hub Working Paper No. 9, University of York (May 2020)
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Identifying Your Role and Practicing Self-Care as a Young Black Activist, Genisha Metcalf, DoSomething.org (October 2020)
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“Racism, Whiteness, and Burnout in Antiracism Movements: How White Racial Justice Activists Elevate Burnout in Racial Justice Activists of Color in the United States”, Paul C Gorski and Noura Erakat, Ethnicities (March 2019)
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Healing Justice: Holistic Self-Care for Change Makers, Loretta Pyles, Oxford University Press (2018)
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