Reckoning with Race & Racism in Academic Medicine Conference

May 6, 2022
10am - 4:30pm EDT
Additional dates
Room 105W (also online), Armstrong Building Armstrong Building
East Baltimore Campus
Registration is required
This event is free

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Description

The legacies of race and racism cast a long shadow on academic medical institutions today: ongoing scientific racism in medicine, unequal access to health care, the segregation of medical facilities, and the exclusion of African Americans and other racialized groups from medical education. Medical research and medical practice have not merely been incidentally affected by racism in broader society but rather have been key sites for the production and reproduction of biological understandings of race. In order to develop more effective anti-racist responses to endemic health inequalities made so visible in the COVID-19 epidemic, medicine needs to fully confront these painful histories of structural violence.

This conference includes historians, sociologists, medical educators, medical trainees, advocates and activists from around the U.S. to work towards a more inclusive version of historical reckoning. Over two days, attendees will examine the centrality of history as a tool and as a method to understand the intersections of structural racism and health past and present, aim to build anti-racist curricula and commit to engaging with structural racism as a key aspect of medical training and policy change.

All in-person events at Johns Hopkins must follow university COVID-19 policies. See current guidelines online. This is a hybrid event.

Learn more about the conference online.

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Registration

Registration is required

Please register in advance