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'Block, unfollow, delete': the impacts of the #BlackLivesMatter movement on interracial relationships in Australia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

'Block, unfollow, delete': the impacts of the #BlackLivesMatter movement on interracial relationships in Australia

Kathomi Gatwiri and Marcelle Townsend-Cross
The British Journal of Social Work, Vol.52(6), pp.3721-3739
09/2022

Metrics

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#10 Reduced Inequalities

Source: InCites

Abstract

AboriginalLivesMatter Australia BlackLivesMatter race and racism relationships: social work
Interracial relationships are situated historically within a complex racial discourse. At the height of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement in 2020, interracial relationships were tested, broken and repaired, whilst others were unable to withstand the racial destabilisation summoned by the Movement. In this article, we theorise how Blac/k bodies are organised and structured within systems of racial hierachialisation and the impact of this within relational contexts. Probing concepts of silence, fragility and allyship, which underpin the white racial frame, we provide critical argumentations of how processes of racialisation impact personal relationships where variables of blackness and whiteness are produced as sites of racial contestation. We argue that the political significance of race enters interracial relationships and theoretically transforms them into racial battlegrounds.

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