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Glossary: embodied justice

Justice, fairness and liberation are linked to practices of freedom that engage our agency and capacities to change perspectives and worlds.

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Inner-Led Change Programme

Our training programmes aim to support at least 10 ambassadors per region.

For youth aged 18-35

Glossary: embodied justice

Justice, fairness and liberation are linked to practices of freedom that engage our agency and capacities to change perspectives and worlds. Due to structural and systemic injustices such as violations of human rights, discriminations against identity- groups based on race, class, gender, sexuality, age, faith etc. we may never experience social justice. However, embodied justice steps outside the frames of oppression to shape societies and worlds according to our own notions of freedom. Is it possible to embody a sense of liberation? What are the conditions that support this? Can I help create more of these conditions? Embodied justice or embodied freedom is a felt sense of liberation. It de-centres systems of discrimination, and centres instead communal values and practices of freedom. Such practices may start in defiance of the status quo, but they usually evolve to give expression to values, beliefs, traditions, rituals, and cultures that function and thrive regardless of dominant narratives and norms.

Think political freedoms, LGBT rights, and queer expressions of freedom.

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Glossary: embodied justice

Justice, fairness and liberation are linked to practices of freedom that engage our agency and capacities to change perspectives and worlds. Due to structural and systemic injustices such as violations of human rights, discriminations against identity- groups based on race, class, gender, sexuality, age, faith etc. we may never experience social justice. However, embodied justice steps outside the frames of oppression to shape societies and worlds according to our own notions of freedom. Is it possible to embody a sense of liberation? What are the conditions that support this? Can I help create more of these conditions? Embodied justice or embodied freedom is a felt sense of liberation. It de-centres systems of discrimination, and centres instead communal values and practices of freedom. Such practices may start in defiance of the status quo, but they usually evolve to give expression to values, beliefs, traditions, rituals, and cultures that function and thrive regardless of dominant narratives and norms.

Think political freedoms, LGBT rights, and queer expressions of freedom.

Justice, fairness and liberation are linked to practices of freedom that engage our agency and capacities to change perspectives and worlds. Due to structural and systemic injustices such as violations of human rights, discriminations against identity- groups based on race, class, gender, sexuality, age, faith etc. we may never experience social justice. However, embodied justice steps outside the frames of oppression to shape societies and worlds according to our own notions of freedom. Is it possible to embody a sense of liberation? What are the conditions that support this? Can I help create more of these conditions? Embodied justice or embodied freedom is a felt sense of liberation. It de-centres systems of discrimination, and centres instead communal values and practices of freedom. Such practices may start in defiance of the status quo, but they usually evolve to give expression to values, beliefs, traditions, rituals, and cultures that function and thrive regardless of dominant narratives and norms.

Think political freedoms, LGBT rights, and queer expressions of freedom.