Joanne Smith | |
---|---|
Nationality | Haitian-American |
Education |
Bowie State University (
BA) Hunter College ( MSW) Columbia University ( MA) |
Occupation(s) | Feminist, human rights advocate, social worker |
Joanne Ninive Smith [1] is a first-generation Haitian-American social worker and activist born and raised in New York City. [2] She is the executive director and founder of the Brooklyn-based non-profit organization, Girls for Gender Equity. Smith has organized around the issues of gender equality, racial justice, school pushout, sexual harassment, police brutality, the criminalization of black girls in schools and violence against transgender and gender non-conforming people of color.
In 1997, Smith received a bachelor's degree from Bowie State University [3] and completed Louisiana State University's Pre-Doctoral Academy. She worked as a case manager at Rheedlan and as a Cobra Casework Supervisor at Brooklyn Aids Task Force before returning to school. In 2001, Smith became a Community Fellow for the Open Society Institute, now Open Society Foundations. In 2003, she received a Master of Social Work Degree from Hunter Graduate School of Social Work. In 2007, she received a degree in Non-Profit Management from Columbia Business School. Smith also completed post-graduate training at the Ackerman Institute of Family. [4]
With the support of the Open Society Foundations, in 2001 Smith started Girls for Gender Equity in Sports with the mission to end gender inequality and gender-based violence. The organization changed its name to Girls for Gender Equity in 2003. [5] Girls for Gender Equity works intergenerationally, through a Black feminist lens, to center the leadership of Black girls and gender-expansive young people of color in reshaping culture and policy through advocacy, youth-led programming, and narrative shift to achieve gender and racial justice. [6]
A National Agenda for Black Girls was launched by Girls for Gender Equity and partner organizations in 2019, to build political momentum and center the voices and policy priorities of Black girls and gender expansive youth in the 2020 presidential election and beyond. Youth organizers have since created and distributed a Presidential Candidate Questionnaire, convened political education seminars, hosted culture-shifting events, published op-eds and policy memos, and participated in White House listening sessions to influence national policy. [7] Youth organizers from A National Agenda for Black Girls organizers helped inform the Gender Policy Council's National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality, and are continuing to organize to promote the Protect Black Women and Girls Act and a Black Girl Bill of Rights. [8]
Smith is the co-chair of the Young Women's Initiative (YWI). She felt that it was unfair that women and girls were left out of Mayor Bloomberg's 2011 Young Men's Initiative, so she responded by hosting town-hall meetings in New York City and a holding a National Listening Session on the needs of girls and women of color. [9] These events were held to give women and girls a space to unite and discuss their personal experiences with racial discrimination, violence, and inequality, with the intention to show that their needs are just as pressing as the needs of boys and men of color. Smith's leadership helped facilitate a $35M commitment from government and philanthropy to invest in community-driven recommendations, including an initial $10 million investment from NoVo Foundation and the New York Women's Foundation to match New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito's $10 million contribution. [10] Given its success, as of 2021, YWI has been codified and replicated across 9 localities, and at the White House Summit on the United States of Women in 2016, the National Collaborative of Young Women's Initiatives was launched. [11]
Launched on September 15, 2020, the anniversary of the 1963 Birmingham bombing that killed four little girls, the Black Girl Freedom fund is a 10-year initiative to invest one billion dollars into the advancement of Black girls and gender expansive youth by 2030. [12] Recognizing that Black girls, femmes, and gender-expansive young people are often overlooked, erased, silenced, or simply not invested in, despite their position on the frontlines of fighting for gender and racial equity, a group of activists, educators, organizers and philanthropists came together to call attention to the crisis Black girls face in the US. Joanne N. Smith is a co-founder of the fund alongside Dr. Monique W. Morris (Grantmakers for Girls of Color), LaTosha Brown (Southern Black Women and Girls Consortium), Tarana Burke ( ‘me too.’ Movement), Fatima Goss Graves ( National Women's Law Center), Dr. Salamishah Tillet (A Long Walk Home), Scheherazade Tillet (A Long Walk Home), and Teresa C. Younger ( Ms. Foundation). [13] [14]
Smith spoke out and organized in support of survivors in response to allegations of sexual abuse against rapper and hip hop artist R. Kelly. Smith was featured in Lifetime's documentary series Surviving R. Kelly [15] as well as a panel discussion following the premier, [16] and Girls for Gender Equity published a viewer guide [17] for the show. The show and Smith's activism, alongside others, shifted the conversation about Black survivorship and increased awareness around the prevalence and impact of sexual abuse.
Smith was part of the first cohort of Movement Makers in NoVo Foundations’ Move to End Violence, a 10-year movement building program designed to strengthen the collective capacity to end gender based violence in the United States. [18]
In January 2011, Feminist Press published Smith's first book, Hey, Shorty!: A Guide to Combating Sexual Harassment and Violence in Schools and on the Streets ( ISBN 9781558616691). Smith co-authored this book with Meghan Huppuch and Mandy Van Deven. [19]
In October 2021, Joanne N. Smith was invited to author a book with the new gender-focused Moment of Lift Books publishing house, created by Melinda French Gates in collaboration with Flatiron Books. Expected in 2023, the book will discuss freedom dreaming with Black girls and gender-expansive youth. [20]
In 2007 Smith was inducted in the New York City Hall of Fame. [29] In 2012 she was named to the French American Foundation's Young Leaders Program. [30] In 2013, she was named as one of New York's New Abolitionists. [31] In 2016, Smith was honored at The New York Women's Foundation Celebrating Women Breakfast. [32] In 2018 she was a Woman of Vision honoree at the Ms. Foundation 30th Annual Gloria Awards. [33] In 2021, Smith was named among the Nonprofit Power 100: nonprofit leaders who are serving the most vulnerable New Yorkers. [34]
Other awards include:
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Joanne Smith | |
---|---|
Nationality | Haitian-American |
Education |
Bowie State University (
BA) Hunter College ( MSW) Columbia University ( MA) |
Occupation(s) | Feminist, human rights advocate, social worker |
Joanne Ninive Smith [1] is a first-generation Haitian-American social worker and activist born and raised in New York City. [2] She is the executive director and founder of the Brooklyn-based non-profit organization, Girls for Gender Equity. Smith has organized around the issues of gender equality, racial justice, school pushout, sexual harassment, police brutality, the criminalization of black girls in schools and violence against transgender and gender non-conforming people of color.
In 1997, Smith received a bachelor's degree from Bowie State University [3] and completed Louisiana State University's Pre-Doctoral Academy. She worked as a case manager at Rheedlan and as a Cobra Casework Supervisor at Brooklyn Aids Task Force before returning to school. In 2001, Smith became a Community Fellow for the Open Society Institute, now Open Society Foundations. In 2003, she received a Master of Social Work Degree from Hunter Graduate School of Social Work. In 2007, she received a degree in Non-Profit Management from Columbia Business School. Smith also completed post-graduate training at the Ackerman Institute of Family. [4]
With the support of the Open Society Foundations, in 2001 Smith started Girls for Gender Equity in Sports with the mission to end gender inequality and gender-based violence. The organization changed its name to Girls for Gender Equity in 2003. [5] Girls for Gender Equity works intergenerationally, through a Black feminist lens, to center the leadership of Black girls and gender-expansive young people of color in reshaping culture and policy through advocacy, youth-led programming, and narrative shift to achieve gender and racial justice. [6]
A National Agenda for Black Girls was launched by Girls for Gender Equity and partner organizations in 2019, to build political momentum and center the voices and policy priorities of Black girls and gender expansive youth in the 2020 presidential election and beyond. Youth organizers have since created and distributed a Presidential Candidate Questionnaire, convened political education seminars, hosted culture-shifting events, published op-eds and policy memos, and participated in White House listening sessions to influence national policy. [7] Youth organizers from A National Agenda for Black Girls organizers helped inform the Gender Policy Council's National Strategy on Gender Equity and Equality, and are continuing to organize to promote the Protect Black Women and Girls Act and a Black Girl Bill of Rights. [8]
Smith is the co-chair of the Young Women's Initiative (YWI). She felt that it was unfair that women and girls were left out of Mayor Bloomberg's 2011 Young Men's Initiative, so she responded by hosting town-hall meetings in New York City and a holding a National Listening Session on the needs of girls and women of color. [9] These events were held to give women and girls a space to unite and discuss their personal experiences with racial discrimination, violence, and inequality, with the intention to show that their needs are just as pressing as the needs of boys and men of color. Smith's leadership helped facilitate a $35M commitment from government and philanthropy to invest in community-driven recommendations, including an initial $10 million investment from NoVo Foundation and the New York Women's Foundation to match New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito's $10 million contribution. [10] Given its success, as of 2021, YWI has been codified and replicated across 9 localities, and at the White House Summit on the United States of Women in 2016, the National Collaborative of Young Women's Initiatives was launched. [11]
Launched on September 15, 2020, the anniversary of the 1963 Birmingham bombing that killed four little girls, the Black Girl Freedom fund is a 10-year initiative to invest one billion dollars into the advancement of Black girls and gender expansive youth by 2030. [12] Recognizing that Black girls, femmes, and gender-expansive young people are often overlooked, erased, silenced, or simply not invested in, despite their position on the frontlines of fighting for gender and racial equity, a group of activists, educators, organizers and philanthropists came together to call attention to the crisis Black girls face in the US. Joanne N. Smith is a co-founder of the fund alongside Dr. Monique W. Morris (Grantmakers for Girls of Color), LaTosha Brown (Southern Black Women and Girls Consortium), Tarana Burke ( ‘me too.’ Movement), Fatima Goss Graves ( National Women's Law Center), Dr. Salamishah Tillet (A Long Walk Home), Scheherazade Tillet (A Long Walk Home), and Teresa C. Younger ( Ms. Foundation). [13] [14]
Smith spoke out and organized in support of survivors in response to allegations of sexual abuse against rapper and hip hop artist R. Kelly. Smith was featured in Lifetime's documentary series Surviving R. Kelly [15] as well as a panel discussion following the premier, [16] and Girls for Gender Equity published a viewer guide [17] for the show. The show and Smith's activism, alongside others, shifted the conversation about Black survivorship and increased awareness around the prevalence and impact of sexual abuse.
Smith was part of the first cohort of Movement Makers in NoVo Foundations’ Move to End Violence, a 10-year movement building program designed to strengthen the collective capacity to end gender based violence in the United States. [18]
In January 2011, Feminist Press published Smith's first book, Hey, Shorty!: A Guide to Combating Sexual Harassment and Violence in Schools and on the Streets ( ISBN 9781558616691). Smith co-authored this book with Meghan Huppuch and Mandy Van Deven. [19]
In October 2021, Joanne N. Smith was invited to author a book with the new gender-focused Moment of Lift Books publishing house, created by Melinda French Gates in collaboration with Flatiron Books. Expected in 2023, the book will discuss freedom dreaming with Black girls and gender-expansive youth. [20]
In 2007 Smith was inducted in the New York City Hall of Fame. [29] In 2012 she was named to the French American Foundation's Young Leaders Program. [30] In 2013, she was named as one of New York's New Abolitionists. [31] In 2016, Smith was honored at The New York Women's Foundation Celebrating Women Breakfast. [32] In 2018 she was a Woman of Vision honoree at the Ms. Foundation 30th Annual Gloria Awards. [33] In 2021, Smith was named among the Nonprofit Power 100: nonprofit leaders who are serving the most vulnerable New Yorkers. [34]
Other awards include:
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)