

Each team member on this project has YEARS of experience working professionally in their field of expertise. RISKS AND CHALLENGES WITH KICKSTARTER PROJECTS SMALL TEAM, SIGNIFICANT EXPERIENCE. I invite you to play the game, share your experience, and to join the conversation.

How are we supposed to find a solution as a nation, when we can't even agree on the problem? If we don't talk about it now, then when? If not us, then who? The objective of this game is to open a path toward conversation about the systemic impact of racism. Our country is in crisis, and I believe the biggest obstacle is our inability to TALK about the issue. Seeing how racism has manifested into a spectrum of disguises in today’s society has made me realize I couldn't shelve this game any longer.

With the murders and attacks on those who identify as Black, Brown, Indigenous, or People of Color (BIPOC) as they live their everyday lives at work, in the park, or simply walking down the street, it's hard to stand idle or be complacent. And because of that detour, the light of injustice has shined far brighter than ever before. However, with the two pandemics, COVID-19 and racism, over the past year, the world has been forced to stop in its tracks. Now, I know what you might be thinking, "Who wants to play a board game about systemic oppression?" To be honest, when I first conceived this idea back in 2019, I thought the same thing. The game's sole purpose is to encourage participants to work together in order to understand systemic inequity more clearly. Debra (Debi) Jenkinsĭisparity Trap is a board game that focuses the conversation on the systems and institutions established to create inequity within the United States and how we as individuals have the ability to alter those systems for the better.
Game of life credit card professional#
Disparity Trap can encourage a step towards the work of dismantling oppression and can bring conversations about race to effective levels whether played at home with friends and family, in professional settings, or in junior high through college- level classrooms." - Dr. The Disparity Trap board game is fun, educational, and insightful! Youth (ages 14) up to adults can learn how race as a system impacts those of us who live within the United States. The language SD and SND are used in Disparity Trap to provide language which can promote forward movement and help participants understand inequity as the intended outcome of systemic oppression. The paradigm and language prevent misunderstandings about who holds systemic power and privilege which is at the root of inequity. I created the language systemically dominant (SD) - those a system was created to benefit and systemically non-dominant (SND) - those a system was not created to benefit for my IST of an ISM paradigm. Systemic racism, as a system of oppression, has beneficiaries and nonbeneficiaries. Disparity Trap brilliantly provides a learning opportunity to acquire a deeper understanding of inequity and to begin conversations about racism in an innovative yet poignantly strategic way! Links to statistics give players a relevant connection to how racism continues to impact on systemic, institutional, and interpersonal levels. "Racism is a system created before anyone today was born and remains one of the most unfinished conversations within the United States. The following are her words about the Disparity Trap board game.

Debra (Debi) Jenkins, a professor in Education and Psychology, and consultant in Justice, Equity, Diversity & Inclusion for academic, non-profit, and corporate institutions. The Disparity Trap board game leans on the research and work of Dr.
