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  • Glenn Harris, Michael McAfee and Dorian Warren discuss changing dominant narratives around housing by bringing to light structural racism and classism.<\/li>\r\n \t
  • Why are housing issues often framed as individual rather than systemic? How can you apply a housing justice lens that addresses structural racism in your community?<\/li>\r\n \t
  • Read about changing homelessness narratives<\/a>.<\/li>\r\n<\/ul>","intro":null,"content":"\u201cIf we want a change, we have to be quite intentional. We\u2019ve got to tell the damn truth that the system we currently have is oppressive.\u201d That\u2019s how Michael McAfee, president and CEO of PolicyLink, describes the centrality of narrative change to the cause of housing justice. In 2020, Funders for Housing and Opportunity (FHO) gave\u00a0Community Change,\u00a0PolicyLink, and\u00a0Race Forward\u00a0an $800,000 grant to analyze the dominant housing narrative, design and test new messages, and train housing leaders to use a new narrative centered on racial justice and housing security in their organizing and advocacy efforts. In 2021, FHO gave these organizations a $1 million, three-year grant to encourage broad adoption of the new housing justice narrative, in part by working with artists and creators to shift the cultural landscape. Individual FHO members also gave a total of $7.3 million in aligned funding, over three years, to support this work.More than 1,500 housing leaders have been trained in the\u00a0new narrative, and 24\u00a0fellows\u00a0(most of whom have experienced housing instability) practiced the new narrative in community actions and national forums, spurring concrete policy wins across the country, such as\u00a0changes to restrictive zoning\u00a0in Denver. This unusual collaboration among three very different organizations reflects FHO\u2019s emphasis on silo-spanning efforts that use narrative change, policy advocacy and organizing, and local collaboration to make the housing system more racially equitable and economically just. FHO interviewed the organizations\u2019 leaders, Dorian Warren, Michael McAfee, and Glenn Harris, respectively, about lessons on narrative change from this experience. Their responses have been combined and edited for length and continuity.Funders for Housing and Opportunity (FHO):\u00a0What is narrative, in the context of housing justice?Michael McAfee, president and CEO of PolicyLink:\u00a0Narrative about housing is the dominant logic held by citizens about who belongs in a community and who does not, who is worthy to have places designed for them and who is not.Dorian Warren, president of Community Change:\u00a0Narrative is a dimension of power. It shapes what is seen as normal, or status quo. In terms of housing narratives, the dominant narrative is one of neoliberalism, in the sense of all risks and outcomes being based on individual behaviors and actions. This narrative doesn\u2019t address systems and rules or what we know, from social science, to be the actual causes of housing injustice and housing insecurity, especially for Black and Brown folks. In the dominant narrative, you\u2019re on your own and any failings are your own fault.Read the full article about changing housing narratives by Glenn Harris, Michael McAfee and Dorian Warren at Stanford Social Innovation Review.Read the full article","html_content":"

    \u201cIf we want a change, we have to be quite intentional. We\u2019ve got to tell the damn truth that the system we currently have is oppressive.\u201d That\u2019s how Michael McAfee, president and CEO of PolicyLink, describes the centrality of narrative change to the cause of housing justice. In 2020, Funders for Housing and Opportunity (FHO) gave\u00a0<\/em>Community Change<\/em><\/a>,\u00a0PolicyLink<\/a>, and\u00a0<\/em>Race Forward<\/em><\/a>\u00a0an $800,000 grant to analyze the dominant housing narrative, design and test new messages, and train housing leaders to use a new narrative centered on racial justice and housing security in their organizing and advocacy efforts. In 2021, FHO gave these organizations a $1 million, three-year grant to encourage broad adoption of the new housing justice narrative, in part by working with artists and creators to shift the cultural landscape. Individual FHO members also gave a total of $7.3 million in aligned funding, over three years, to support this work.<\/em><\/p>

    More than 1,500 housing leaders have been trained in the\u00a0<\/em>new narrative<\/em><\/a>, and 24\u00a0<\/em>fellows<\/em><\/a>\u00a0(most of whom have experienced housing instability) practiced the new narrative in community actions and national forums, spurring concrete policy wins across the country, such as\u00a0<\/em>changes to restrictive zoning\u00a0<\/em><\/a>in Denver<\/em>. This unusual collaboration among three very different organizations reflects FHO\u2019s emphasis on silo-spanning efforts that use narrative change, policy advocacy and organizing, and local collaboration to make the housing system more racially equitable and economically just. FHO interviewed the organizations\u2019 leaders, Dorian Warren, Michael McAfee, and Glenn Harris, respectively, about lessons on narrative change from this experience. Their responses have been combined and edited for length and continuity.<\/em><\/p>

    Funders for Housing and Opportunity (FHO):<\/strong>\u00a0What is narrative, in the context of housing justice?<\/p>

    Michael McAfee, president and CEO of PolicyLink:<\/strong>\u00a0Narrative about housing is the dominant logic held by citizens about who belongs in a community and who does not, who is worthy to have places designed for them and who is not.<\/p>

    Dorian Warren, president of Community Change:<\/strong>\u00a0Narrative is a dimension of power. It shapes what is seen as normal, or status quo. In terms of housing narratives, the dominant narrative is one of neoliberalism, in the sense of all risks and outcomes being based on individual behaviors and actions. This narrative doesn\u2019t address systems and rules or what we know, from social science, to be the actual causes of housing injustice and housing insecurity, especially for Black and Brown folks. In the dominant narrative, you\u2019re on your own and any failings are your own fault.<\/p>

    Read the full article about changing housing narratives by Glenn Harris, Michael McAfee and Dorian Warren at Stanford Social Innovation Review.

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