Racism in America and Black Mental Health

by Katherine Grossman & Walter Palmer


Formats

Softcover
$14.99
E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$14.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/25/2021

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 8.25x11
Page Count : 48
ISBN : 9781665536509
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 48
ISBN : 9781665536554

About the Book

From doctors' experimentation on slaves to the Black Lives Matter movement, mental healthcare for Black Americans requires an in-depth investigation into how we got to where we are today. Racism in America: Black Mental Health provides an overview of the historical and modern development of mental health among Black Americans. Issues such as the criminalization of mental health issues, distrust in healthcare systems, and the effects of racial discrimination are explored to offer insights into the future of Black mental health.


About the Author

Katherine Grossman graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2021 with a bachelor of arts in Criminology. At the W.D. Palmer Foundation, Katherine has collaborated in the efforts to distribute anti-racism publications worldwide. She currently lives in New York City. Currently W. D. Palmer is the founder and director of the W. D. Palmer Foundation (est. 1955), a repository of information-gathering on racism in health, education, employment, housing, courts, prisons, higher education, military, government, politics, law, banking, insurance, etc. He is also the founder of the Black People’s University of Philadelphia (1955) Freedom School, which was the grassroots organizing and training center for grassroots community and political leadership in Philadelphia and nationally. These organizations were run as nonprofit unincorporated associations from 1955 until 1980, when the Palmer Foundation received its 501(c)(3) federal tax exemption status. W. D. Palmer has also been a professor, teaching American Racism at the University of Pennsylvania since the 1960’s and today he is a member of the Presidents Commission on 1619, the 400-year anniversary of African slavery in America. Professor Palmer has been a social activist leading the fight against racial injustice for over seventy years in Philadelphia and around the nation. In 2018, Philadelphia honored him for the organizing work he did to reform the Philadelphia school system in 1967.