We believe that Black girls are expanders of knowledge. We elevate the voices of black girls.

mission

 

The mission of Justice for Black Girls is to expand global knowledge of US-based systems of power that harm Black girls while co-creating liberated spaces to disrupt that harm.

Justice for Black Girls is a social justice education space that serves Black girls ’ needs for protection, safety, and belonging through a holistic culture of care coupled with Black feminist curriculum, grassroots collaborations, and academic partnerships.

Justice for Black Girls positions Black girls to see themselves as civic, education & justice leaders who have the power to transform layered systems of oppression that impede their access to the liberatory spaces they deserve.

 

vision

 

Justice for Black Girls (JBG) endeavors to elevate the voices of Black girls as the experts and cultivate student activism through our Justice Ambassadors Program. Here we engage Black girls ages 13-18 from all over the country in the academic and policy work that centers Black girlhood. The JBG Ambassadors Program also provides opportunities for Ambassadors to partner with grassroots organizations, higher learning institutions and leading activists, authors, and theorists whose work centers Black girls.

JBG recognizes education as liberation, and endeavors to combat the miseducation of Black girlhood, and the universal suppression of Black girls’ experience, through our Black Girlhood Curriculum. Entitled 4LittleGirls, this curriculum is in honor the 4 Black girls who lost their lives in the bombing of 16th Street Baptist Church on September 15th 1963. Our curriculum unapologetically centers Black girlhood and offers learning materials and resources for all tasked with the privilege of safekeeping Black girls.

The Freedom Fighters Fund is designed to provide monetary relief for Black girl activists, like Toyin, who are on the frontlines. This fund allows Black girls to request grants up to $750 for overnight housing, rent relief, food or other life-sustaining supports.

 Established in honor of 19 year old activist Oluwatoyin Salua, we recognize that many Black girl activists are fighting for the protection of everyone else without having protection themselves. What we know about oppression and marginalization, is that there is never just one victim. Conversely, there are systems that worked together to ensure that Toyin was rendered powerless to all of the systems she was fighting against. Not anymore- we can’t allow Black girls to put their bodies and minds on the frontlines without protection.

Finally our JBG National Conference elevates Black girls as the experts and centers their voice & advocacy. Here, our ambassadors share original presentations to virtual attendees as we center the academic, activist & policy work that centers Black girls. This conference seeks to highlight the critical importance of intersectional efforts that protect Black girlhood. This work is a charge to all who have the privilege of protecting Black girls, may we show up for them in ways that the world has never shown up before. This conference is about pushing folks to actively disrespect the systems that disrespect Black girls. This conference is about recognizing that Black girls are worthy subjects, central to our understanding of girlhood, childhood, and humanity. This conference is about communal pledges to Black girl liberation.


Ultimately, JBG is focused on equipping Black girls with tools not authorized by empowerment- focused on developing self-help in the midst of structural degradation, but power- the agency to alter the systems that actively marginalize Black girlhood. We are committed to creating space that enables Black girls to imagine a life beyond the confining structures in which they currently live.

justice for black girls means full access to the pillars of our vision.

Follow our journey.