English citations of BIPOC

  • 2015, Alyssa Teekah, This is What a Feminist Slut Looks Like[1], Demeter Press, →ISBN:
    While BIPOC come disproportionately from immigrant, lower income social experiences, this cannot account for all people. [] The idea that all BIPOC know “what whiteness is about” presumes that all of us go through institutions in the same way and are aware in the same way.
  • 2017, Libby Chamberlain, Pantsuit Nation[2], page 149:
    Keep yourself educated on the issues, follow BIPOC, LGBTQIA, and other marginalized groups' pages.
  • 2019, Maisie Hill, quoting Layla Saad, "Highway to hell (Autumn)", in Period Power: Harness Your Hormones and Get Your Cycle Working For You, Bloomsbury Publishing (→ISBN), page 154:
    Tone policing is a tactic used by those with privilege to silence those who don't by focusing on the ‘tone’ of what is being said, rather than the actual content. It is when white people ask BIPOC to say what we're saying in a “nicer” way. []
  • 2020, Mary-Frances Winters, Black Fatigue: How Racism Erodes the Mind, Body, and Spirit, Berrett-Koehler Publishers (→ISBN):
    Black women shared these observations: They are more apt to be supported by other BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and other people of color) women than white women; []
  • 2020, Farzana Nayani, Raising Multiracial Children: Tools for Nurturing Identity in a Racialized World (→ISBN), page 200:
    BIPOC: Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color / A term emphasizing authentic and lasting solidarity among Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color that exists to highlight the unique relationship that Indigenous and Black (African American people have to Whiteness and White supremacy, in order to undo Native invisibility and anti-Blackness.
  • 2021, Francisco Rios, A. Longoria, “The Kitchen (and the Closet): Getting Real About Schooling”, in Creating a Home in Schools: Sustaining Identities for Black, Indigenous, and Teachers of Color (James A. Banks, editor, Multicultural Education Series), New York, N.Y., London: Teachers College Press, →ISBN, page 110:
    The prominence of theorizing and detailing racial microaggressions was instrumental in demonstrating—tangibly and concretely—acts of marginalization and oppression of BIPOCs (see, for example, microaggressions.com for an extended description of these). This theorizing also was intended to show how power and privilege were often at the core of microaggressive statements. What is central is that a single one of these, by itself, often is thought of as “no big deal” by the person committing them. Indeed, it is in the collective where they become instruments of dehumanization for BIPOCs; collectively, they create a hostile work or home climate.
  • 2021, Prisca Dorcas Mojica Rodríguez, For Brown Girls with Sharp Edges and Tender Hearts: A Love Letter to Women of Color, Seal Press, published 2022, →ISBN:
    Whenever I have explained respectability and its performance to anyone who is not a BIPOC, they have consistently perceived this act of self-preservation as disingenuous. Specifically, when I have told white men about respectability politics, the word “tease” has come into the conversation.
  • 2021, Claire A. Simmers, “The Role of Top Management Team Cognitive Diversity in a Global Sample of Innovative Firms: A Review”, in Adela McMurray, Nuttawuth Muenjohn, Chamindika Weerakoon, editors, The Palgrave Handbook of Workplace Innovation, Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, page 499:
    The Expansion/Growth phase has 70% (seven of ten) of the organizations with at least one person who is a BIPOC, and in the Start-up phase, 62% (ten of sixteen) of the organizations have at least one person who is a BIPOC.
  • 2021 October 27, Gene Demby et al., quoting Von Garcia Balanon, “Ask Code Switch: Parents Just Don't Understand”, in NPR[3]:
    I've always felt an inner conflict of how other non-BIPOC students interact with their parents and are able to set boundaries. I feel like I have the inability to do this, even though they don't support me going through college, financially or even terms of mental health. How do you set boundaries with immigrant parents that think it's disrespectful to set boundaries?
  • 2022, James Allen Davis Jr., “The Western Librarian: Community and Collective Individualism”, in Shauntee Burns-Simpson, Nichelle M. Hayes, Ana Ndumu, Shaundra Walker, editors, The Black Librarian in America: Reflections, Resistance, and Reawakening, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 100:
    In 2015 before we started our EDI work, a few of my colleagues and I started a social book group called RADA, which stands for read, awareness, dialogue, and action. This was in response to a hurting community that was affected by ongoing police brutality and the murder of BIPOCs.
  • 2022, Jay Pearson, “American Dream into Nightmare: Immigration, Systemic Structural Racism, and Health Inequity in the United States”, in Tyrell Connor, Daphne M. Penn, editors, The Dark Side of Reform: Exploring the Impact of Public Policy on Racial Equity, Lexington Books, →ISBN, page 93:
    This history establishes that race is an externally constructed and imposed minoritizing process reflecting how Whites viewed and humanized themselves, then viewed, oppressed, and dehumanized BIPOCs. This dehumanization compromises the social well-being, and by extension health, of BIPOCs in a range of ways.
  • 2023, KaRae’ NMK Powers-Carey, LoriAnn Sykes Stretch, editors, National Counselor Exam (NCE) and Counselor Preparation Comprehensive Exam (CPCE): Your Study Guide for Success, Springer Publishing, →ISBN, page 292, column 1:
    The social and political reality for BIPOC is racism. The other answer options assume the client is indigent. The stem does not give any information about the client’s income level and therefore one cannot assume that poverty is of concern just because the client is a BIPOC.