Actions Panel
Racial Equity Framework: Allyship (September 9 & 10)
This workshop is designed to explore how to use individual and collective areas of privilege to advance racial justice.
When and where
Location
Online
Refund Policy
About this event
Join us for the next segment of our recently launched Racial Equity Framework: Allyship.
What does it mean to be effective allies? This intensive, fast-paced virtual training is designed to explore how to use individual and collective areas of privilege to advance racial justice. Using Service Never Sleep’s CLAIM framework (Care, Learn, Act, Influence, Maintain), this workshop will explore what it means to adopt an Allyship lifestyle. If you seek to promote racial equity in your life and work, this workshop will equip you with tools to be an active ally through methods of centering Black, Indigenous, and People of Color with an intersectional lens, influencing others, and continuing your own self-work journey. You’ll leave this workshop committed to the Allyship lifestyle, and prepared to facilitate change in all of your spaces.
Eligibility
Due to limited availability, this set of Allyship workshops are only available to 1) staff, Board members, or volunteers of nonprofit organizations serving Loudoun County, or 2) employees of Loudoun County Government.
Dates and Registration
Participant fee is $45 (plus processing fees) per person.
The Allyship workshops will be delivered via Zoom.
Date and time: September 9 & 10 (9:00-11:30 a.m. both days)
About the Presenter
Whitney Parnell is a Black millennial activist, singer, and the Founder and CEO of Service Never Sleeps, a nonprofit that empowers individuals and communities to catalyze social justice through service and Allyship. Her movement work involves equipping effective allies through truth-telling, bridgebuilding, empathy, and action. She grew up between Latin America and West Africa as a Foreign Service child. At Washington University in St. Louis, Whitney doubled majored in English and Spanish, and minored in Communications and Journalism, during which she also embraced her calling as an activist. Whitney’s passion for service and social justice brought her to Washington, DC after college to serve with City Year, and then work in homeless services, before founding Service Never Sleeps in 2015. Whitney is also a musician, and is releasing a social justice album called "What Will You Do," with the goal of using empathy through song to ignite action.