Sign up for my weekly newsletter on Substack here!

Steve Brigham

Steve Brigham, a founding principal of Public Engagement Associates, is a leader in the public engagement field who, for the past 24 years, has known great success as a facilitator, consultant, and designer of complex public meetings and community-building processes on critical public policy issues.

He has facilitated numerous national and international forums. Since 2010, his bread-and-butter consulting has focused primarily on local and metro D.C. like land use policy, affordable housing, transportation, support for BIPOC business owners in jeopardy of displacement, economic development, public school redistricting, and community college issues, to name a few.

Over time, Steve’s work has increasingly tackled racial equity and equitable development issues in his work and volunteer time.

Read More

blogpage

____________________

    A Blog: Leveling the Playing Field

Myth 2 - Any segregation in housing that Blacks may experience is strictly individual choice

Myth 2 - Any segregation in housing that Blacks may experience is strictly individual choice
Jul 29, 2024 by Steve Brigham

Did you ever wonder—as I did for several decades—why so many African Americans throughout our nation live in neighborhoods lacking in amenities, opportunity, and investment? As a young adult, I would say to myself, “It’s so bad; why don’t they just leave?” If it were only that simple.

I didn’t realize until I was much older the historical context and systemic policies that have perpetuated residential segregation and marginalized Black communities for well more than 100 years.

Residential segregation by race had no legal framework immediately after the Civil War. Obviously, though, Whites had no desire to live with Blacks in the South, where well over 90% of Blacks lived until the early 20th century—unless they were sharecropping on White farms. However, even in the North in the late 1800s, both formal and informal policies ensured that Blacks could not live near Whites. Read the history ofsundown’ towns throughout the nation that would ensure in many places that Blacks could not even stay within town boundaries after dark.

The Long History of White Affirmative Action: The (Not-So) “Secret” Too Few Americans Accept

The Long History of White Affirmative Action: The (Not-So) “Secret” Too Few Americans Accept
Jul 26, 2024 by Steve Brigham

In 2005, Ira Katznelson published a provocative book, When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Century America. It told the unvarnished truth about a period in America—from the New Deal in the 1930s to the G.I. Bill in the 1950s—when federal politics and policy dictated that Whites would comprehensively accrue benefits while Blacks would essentially sit on the sidelines.

The book was an eye-opener for me during my four years of research writing It’s Never Been a Level Playing Field. It simply hadn’t occurred to me how strategic and methodical White leaders had been throughout our history to preserve White advantage intentionally.

It goes without saying how Whites’ wholesale enslaving of Black people for the first 75+ years of our nation’s history (not to mention the even more extended period of slavery that accompanied the British colonization of the 13 colonies starting in 1619) was the foundation of White advantage.

The Myths We Tell Ourselves

The Myths We Tell Ourselves
Jul 16, 2024 by Steve Brigham

“A myth is something that explains the world; it is, mysteriously, bigger than itself.” (Charles Eisenstein from “The Conspiracy Myth,” May 2020)

In the introduction to my new book, I write that to interrogate the history of race and racism as a White person in America “requires reexamining how growing up in an America that’s been so White-oriented, White-dominant, and White-pervasive undoubtedly has influenced so many of our assumptions, presumptions, and systems of belief in profound ways.”

Not true, you might think—or even argue—until you realize how countless systems that White leaders set up and predominantly White communities bought into for more than two centuries benefited Whites near-exclusively. And disadvantaged, damaged, and harmed Black people. Yes, not just the 18th and 19th centuries, but for all intents and purposes, the twentieth century too.

Much of White America Clings to the Myth of a Level Playing Field

Much of White America Clings to the Myth of a Level Playing Field
Jul 12, 2024 by Steve Brigham

“The American Negro has the great advantage of never having believed that collection of myths to which white America clings.” (from James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time)

The preface of my book opens with this incisive quote from Baldwin. In a single sentence, he calls out the White people who believe a wide-ranging set of myths about Black people, our national origin story, and why race does or doesn’t continue to matter in America.

The opening paragraphs of my Preface continue, in which I write:

“As a White man, I am embarrassed to say that it has taken me nearly six decades to understand fully the legacy of our nation’s White supremacist founding and the consequences of our ongoing, systemic racism. My initial awakening occurred upon meeting and marrying an African American woman twenty-plus years ago and parenting two biracial kids in a time of increased White racist threats, yet even that awakening was insufficient.

My Whiteness … and the Unwarranted Advantage of Whiteness

My Whiteness … and the Unwarranted Advantage of Whiteness
Jul 05, 2024 by Steve Brigham

Let me share a little bit more of my personal history.

As you may know from earlier Substack posts, I was born in 1961. In 1962, my family moved to Simsbury, Connecticut, which was 99.5% white (maybe 100% when we first moved in). At that time, it was quite easy for working- and middle-class Whites to move to the suburbs; for Blacks, it was nearly impossible.

On my street, all my neighbors were White. By the time I reached elementary school, every family in my neighborhood (of a couple hundred homes) but two were White. Every kid in my kindergarten through 9th grade classes and every teacher I had were White except for my kindergarten friend, Larry, who rode the bus from Hartford every day.