*** Proof of Product ***
Exploring the Essential Features of “Tashel Bordere – Homicide and Grief Among Black Youth”
Speaker:Tashel Bordere, PhD, CT
Duration:1 Hour 30 Minutes
Format:Audio and Video
Copyright:Jan 25, 2024
Media Type:Digital Seminar
Description
The devastation and profound grief of Black children and families impacted by gun violence can be unrelenting.
These preventable deaths feel senseless, invoking sadness and anger, leaving clients with unanswered questions and horrifying images of the pain and suffering faced by their cared about persons who often die alone.
Join Dr. Tashel Bordere, PhD, certified Thanatologist in death, dying, and bereavement and learn:
- Social Justice Theories and Concepts Â
- Homicide Rates and Patterns of Trauma, Loss, and Grief among Black Children and Adolescents Â
- Common Grief Reactions to Traumatic Loss within Cultural Context Â
- Suffocated Grief and Bereaved Black YouthÂ
- and more!Â
Speaker
Tashel C. Bordere, PhD, CT, is an internationally known scholar, author, speaker and a grant-funded researcher at the Center for Family Policy and Research at the University of Missouri-Columbia. She is certified in thanatology (death, dying and bereavement). Dr. Bordere is vice president of the National Alliance for Children’s Grief (NACG) and serves on the boards of the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC) and the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS). She recently completed a Forward Promise Fellowship through the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) focusing on the promotion of healing, growth and thriving among boys and young men of color. She is a mentor and career coach to developing health equity scholars through Johns Hopkins (RWJF). Dr. Bordere’s research is contextually based focusing on cultural trauma, stigmatized loss (homicide loss, assaultive violence-sexual assault), suffocated grief (a term she coined), and black youth and family bereavement and mourning rituals. She developed the S.H.E.D. Grief Tools Training Program for Early Childhood Professionals and programs and K-12 schools. Dr. Bordere has received numerous awards including the Ronald K. Barrett National Award (ADEC), 2022 Excellence in Engagement in Outreach Award (MU), and the CASE Award for Outstanding Faculty Mentorship to underrepresented college students (MU). She is a Grief Reach grantee funded by the New York Life Foundation. Dr. Bordere has done numerous workshops, keynotes, and published research relating to inequities (social, educational) and culturally relevant practices, including her co-edited book, Handbook of Social Justice in Loss and Grief (Routledge). She is a grief and health expert and advisor on documentary films related to bereavement in multicultural families and disenfranchised losses (child loss, homicide survivorship). Dr. Bordere has been featured in multiple media outlets including USA Today, New York Times, Legacy.com, Psychology Today, Houston Chronicle, Philadelphia Inquirer, and NPR. She is a proud New Orleans native.
Objectives
- Describe patterns of homicide loss and violence, including the disproportionate rates impacting Black youth and families across multiple contexts (developmental, historical, social) from a social justice perspective.
- Outline factors that complicate the grief process for youth and families bereaved by homicide loss.
- Define suffocated grief and examples within various contexts.
- Identify culturally-resonant approaches to outreach and effective clinical practice with youth and families bereaved by homicide.Â
Outline
Social Justice Theories and Concepts
Homicide Rates and Patterns of Trauma, Loss, and Grief among Black Children and Adolescents
Common Grief Reactions to Traumatic Loss within Cultural Context
Factors that Complicate Grief for Youth and Families Bereaved by Homicide
Homicide Loss in Relation to the Covid-19 Pandemic
- systemic inequities, and social unrest Â
Suffocated Grief and Bereaved Black Youth
Limitations in research and practice
Culturally conscientious, grief-informed practices in research, clinical work, and programming with youth and families coping with deaths by homicide (5 A’s, rituals, continuing bonds).
Target Audience
- Counselors
- Social Workers
- Physicians
- Psychologists
- Marriage & Family Therapists
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