Jessica Ostrov suggests how we can become agents of change to alter the narrative, and to help outdoor spaces become more inclusive.
• Awareness is the first step. Learn all you can. Teach others what you are learning about the barriers that underrepresented communities face when getting outdoors.
• Do what you can to dismantle the systems that have been created for the benefit of the dominant group at the expense of others.
• Be a trusted individual. If you are already comfortable in nature, invite someone who isn’t, and start new threads of word-of-mouth.
• Encourage parks to share the stories of the non-dominant group, even if it’s painful. Fort Snelling State Park, for example, exhibits the history of the Indigenous, African and white experiences.
• Ask retailers, camps, and groups to seek talent of
color. Encourage them to mentor someone who shows interest.
• Use your own influence in outdoor fields to encourage change. Swimming, skating, biking, golf, running, tennis, hockey, conservation, skiing, and nature writing are overwhelmingly white fields.
• Support organizations doing this work, such as Outdoor Afro of MN and Major Taylor Bicycle Club.
Resources
• Jessica Ostrov is giving a talk about this topic at Midwest Mountaineering in Minneapolis on July 10, 6:30 8pm. She manages the Facebook Group: Equity and Inclusion in Green Spaces.
• Article: “Playground of the People? Mapping Racial Covenants in Twentieth-century Minneapolis,” by Kirsten Delegard and Kevin Ehrman-Solberg. tinyurl.com/y84ycyy8
• Book: “Black Faces, White Spaces: Reimagining the Relationship of African Americans to the Great Outdoors”
• Book: “The Adventure Gap: Changing the Face of the Outdoors”
• Study: “Regional Park Use Among Select Communities of Color :A Qualitative Investigation,”MetropolitanCouncil, 2014 (metrocouncil.org/Parks/Publications-Resources-NEW.aspx)