GenEngland's profile picture. PhD Candidate in Anthropology. Researching on the economy, work and labour in South Asia | Regional Editor @TheMetric_ | MSc @LSEAnthropology, BA @SOAS. She/her

Gen England

@GenEngland

PhD Candidate in Anthropology. Researching on the economy, work and labour in South Asia | Regional Editor @TheMetric_ | MSc @LSEAnthropology, BA @SOAS. She/her

Pinned

"Surface level activism or ‘slacktivism’ not only normalises, sanctions, and legitimises.. institutionalised racism but it also plays into a wider discourse of the supposed ‘subtlety’ of racism in the UK."

@GenEngland and I wrote an article about LSE's response to #BlackLivesMatter we need action!! Unpaid students and staff are tired of leading on anti-racism at universities beaveronline.co.uk/commentslackti… @beaveronline @decolonisingLSE @LSEnews



Gen England reposted

Slacktivism: Do #BlackLivesMatter to LSE? - The Beaver Online a brilliant article by ⁦@AlmasTalib⁩ ⁦⁦@GenEnglandbeaveronline.co.uk/commentslackti…


Gen England reposted

me and the crew before and after December 12th


💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻

✔️ Extend paid maternity leave to one year ✔️ Stronger rights to flexible working for all workers ✔️ Fines for bosses who fail to tackle the gender pay gap ✔️ Menopause workplace policy Real change for rights of women at work.



Gen England reposted

If someone is angry, it is often because they have been silenced - as individuals and structurally. It is incumbent on those with power not to pathologise the anger. But, rather, to think how they might have produced it, and what could be done to remedy the rift.


RIP @ursulakleguin, thank you for all the hope & tools to transport us to a new utopic reality💫

“We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art, the art of words.” -Ursula Le Guin

ChicagoDSA's tweet image. “We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art, the art of words.” -Ursula Le Guin


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