麻豆果冻传媒

In Short

Latinx Economic Resilience During and After COVID

Latinx leaders outline an equity agenda for tumultuous times

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The Latinx community has been and is of its growth over the coming decade. During this pandemic many Latinx workers have been shown to be even more critical in our most-needed sectors; Latinx represent the majority of essential workers, from farm fields to grocery stores to delivery jobs to education and caretaking. While we might applaud their contributions during this crisis, for many, showing up to work was .

The fact that so many essential workers are Latinx is taking a toll during the pandemic. In California, where Latinx represent 39% of the population, they also represent . For those working on the ground on equity issues, the disparities impacting Latinx with respect to occupations, wages, housing, healthcare, immigration, and education are not new. However with COVID-19 the stakes and consequences without intervention are deadlier. So what do we do in times of crisis?

麻豆果冻传媒 CA, Kapor Center, and Google.org recently partnered on a webinar series to deep-dive on what we can do to move forward. Focusing on key issues disproportionately impacting Latinx communities during the pandemic, we curated a space for Latinx to unite, address challenges, and uplift the community with a path-forward agenda. (You can find recordings of the events here and here.)

Many of our panelists expressed the pain of losing family members themselves while still needing to show up to do the needed work at their respective organizations. This same resilience is what the broader Latinx community across the US has been undergoing rather quietly 鈥 . Our panelists came to ring the alarm about the disproportionality of the pandemic鈥檚 impact on Latinx communities, but also stressed the need to uplift the stories of resilience, creativity, and hope that are needed to craft a new path forward. These cross-sector Latinx leaders included:

  • , Chief Executive Officer, Latino Community Foundation
  • , CEO & Co-founder, Bitwise Industries
  • , CEO, Mission Asset Fund
  • , Chief Executive Officer, Code for America
  • , President and CEO of the Hispanic Federation
  • , President and CEO, UnidosUS
  • , Turpanjian Chair in Civil Society and Social Change, University of Southern California

The webinars were moderated by myself (Lili Gangas, Chief Technology Community Officer, Kapor Center), and (Jobs and Skills Lead, Americas, Google.org) in partnership with Cecilia Mu帽oz (Vice President, Local Initiatives, 麻豆果冻传媒 and Former Director of the Domestic Policy Council, Obama White House.)

Our panelists discussed a longer-term agenda for investing in Latinx communities, including:

  1. Empower and invest in Latinx workforce development, Latinx issue-centered nonprofits, and Latinx businesses at significant new levels.
  2. Close the 鈥溾 impacting millions of Latinx, not only by providing high speed broadband and devices but also creating pathways for digital upskilling that will lead to better-paying jobs. We need to rethink the training and jobs of the future.
  3. Be in solidarity with Black and Afro-Latinx communities in uplifting the need to end anti-blackness and multi-generational racism, while also building multicultural alliances.
  4. Lead with values of resilience, creativity, and inclusion knowing that we belong, that we are home and that we need to build forward with the understanding of what our ancestors sacrificed.
  5. Push for public and private sector collaboration centered on solidarity economics, where the key value is mutuality. COVID-19 has shown that without a robust public sector, a robust private sector cannot exist.
  6. Be counted by the without fear.
  7. Show up louder than ever before this .

We have the opportunity to reimagine our systems and reset our social constructs 鈥 in everything from universal healthcare to universal basic income to universal high speed broadband 鈥 to create an inclusive innovation economy. We owe it to our next generation of talent, which is majority Black and Latinx, to help change the current course. Given the cross-cutting role technology has played in this COVID-19, digital-first world, we will do this reimagining together at this year鈥檚 (LTX Fest 2020)鈥 the largest summit of its kind in the U.S. We need Latinx of all generations, skills, and zip codes to be at the forefront of this discussion. We need to show up and build forward, mas unidos than ever.

To learn more about some of the resources discussed in our series, including work being done by our panelists, check out the following:

  • Bitwise Industries:
  • Code for America:
  • Code for America:
  • Hispanic Federation:
  • Hispanics in Philanthropy and Ureeka:
  • Kapor Capital:
  • Latinas in Tech:
  • Latino Community Foundation (LCF):
  • LCF:
  • LCF:
  • Mission Asset Fund:
  • Prospera Co-op:
  • Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship Initiative:
  • Techqueria:
  • The Unity Council:
  • UnidosUS:
  • 鲍厂颁鈥檚

More 麻豆果冻传媒 the Authors

Lili-Gangas
Lili Gangas

Fellow, 麻豆果冻传媒 CA

Programs/Projects/Initiatives

Latinx Economic Resilience During and After COVID