Home » Resource Hub

White Dominant Culture & Something Different

In our society, the dominant culture that shapes our institutions, our media, the way we see ourselves and each other is that of the white, middle class. Racial equity trainer Tema Okun suggests that the characteristics of white dominant culture can be harmful not in and of themselves but ‘when they are used as norms and standards without being proactively named or chosen by the group…. These attitudes and behaviors can show up in any group or organization, whether it is white led or predominantly white or people of color led or predominantly people of color.’ In the table below, Okun calls the attitudes and behaviors in the left column aspects of white supremacist culture. The definition of white supremacist culture, or, white dominant culture, that we like to use is simple and expansive: The explicit to subtle ways that the norms, preferences and fears of white European descended people overwhelmingly shape how we organize our work and institutions, see ourselves and others, interact with one another and with time, and make decisions

Resource Details

Author(s): Tema Okun
Organization: ChangeWork
Date: 2/9/23
Resource Type: Guide
Topic: DEI & Anti-Oppression

Related resources (by topic)

Beyond Diversity: A Roadmap to Building an Inclusive Organization

This paper assesses the diversity of staff and boards of directors among large non-profit organizations and foundations working in the environmental sector. The paper argues that diversity is increasingly important within this sector to broaden the base of constituents, increase…

BIPOC Ed Coalition

Three month sabbaticals for BIPOC individuals in leadership positions for at least 5 years related to social justice and community engagement. Individuals must reside in Washington State.

Birthmark Doulas

Birthmark Doula Collective is a birth justice organization dedicated to supporting, informing and advocating for pregnant and parenting people and their families in New Orleans.

Black Doula Project

The Black Doula Project was created to fund the doula experience for expecting Black families in D.C. and Baltimore.

Help us expand the Resource Hub

Share resources that you think would be a good addition to this tool and our team will review them for inclusion in future updates.