Resources

“Racial disparities lead to poor mental health care for Black Americans” (shanon lee, Verywell mind)

Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America

Workforce and Diversity in Psychiatry, An Issue of Child And Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America, ArticlE & E-Book

Psychiatric Clinics of North America 

Building a Diverse Psychiatric Workforce for the Future and Helping Them Thrive: Recommendations for Psychiatry Training Directors, Article & e-book

American psychological association

Multiculturalism in contemporary American psychology (part 1), ARticle

springer nature

Ideological and Political Bias in Psychology, Book

IGI GLOBAL

Changing the Stigma of Mental Health Among African Americans: Moving From Denial to Acceptance, BOOK

“#MeToo Won’t Succeed If We Don’t Listen to Black Women” (shanon lee, healthline)

Wiley

Corporations Compassion Culture: Leading Your Business Toward Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, BOOK

Princeton university press

The Struggle for the People’s King: How Politics Transforms the Memory of the Civil Rights Movement, BOOK

Will the #MeToo Movement Lead to Lasting Social Change? Six Women Weigh In (shanon lee, Washington post)

Lexington Books

resisting rape culture through pop culture: Sex after #MeToo (BOOK)

“Did HBO Do Sandra Bland’s Story Justice? 5 Black Women Filmmakers Respond.” (shanon lee, FOrbes)

routledge – Prose studies

Sandy still speaks: the digital afterlives of Sandra Bland, ARTICLE

An article examining how technology in the Black Lives Matter movement highlights competing narratives of Black life and death. Contrasting institutional videos of Sandra Bland’s last days with her self-produced “Sandy Speaks” videos, it illustrates this conflict. The 2018 documentary Say Her Name: The Life and Death of Sandra Bland is analyzed to show how Bland’s legacy resists containment by a racist state and traditional documentary formats.

“Director David Heilbroner Talks White Appropriation, Sandra Bland’s Legacy and More.” (Shanon lee, Forbes)

Routledge – Prose Studies

Sandy still speaks: the digital afterlives of Sandra Bland, ARTICLE

An article examining how technology in the Black Lives Matter movement highlights competing narratives of Black life and death. Contrasting institutional videos of Sandra Bland’s last days with her self-produced “Sandy Speaks” videos, it illustrates this conflict. The 2018 documentary Say Her Name: The Life and Death of Sandra Bland is analyzed to show how Bland’s legacy resists containment by a racist state and traditional documentary formats.

“Why America cares more about race than sexual assault.”(Shanon Lee, Washington post)

Wiley – Sociology Compass

Black Women’s experiences of sexual assault and disclosure: Insights from the margins, ARticle

Black women experience higher rates of sexual assault than White women, yet only one in fifteen reports the crime. This article reviews literature on how Black women’s disclosure experiences are shaped by systemic oppression based on race, gender, and class, focusing on their delegitimization as victims, their portrayal as excessively strong, and the sanctioning of intraracial disclosure. Despite Angela Davis’s 1985 call for action, these intersectional experiences remain understudied, prompting a call for continued research and activism.

“I’m Focused on Accepting My Daughter’s Autism — Not a Cure.”(Shanon Lee, Healthline)

SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY – RES PhILOSPHICA

Living with Autism: Quus-ing in a Plus-ers World, ARTICLE

“The Women of Black Panther are Empowered not just in Politics and War, But in Love (Shanon Lee, Washington Post)

YORK university libraries – Left HISTORY

Towards an Empathic Human Rights: Applications and Evaluations in Re-Asserting the Human, ARTICLE