Abstract

Disproportionately negative pandemic outcomes, lack of race-based data collection and poor engagement of Black communities in policy decision making have been widely documented for Black Canadians. We examine this to understand how formal public engagement processes might be more inclusive of Black peoples to inform more responsive policies. The study employed an asset-based lens to examine how Black communities have engaged in health policy and advocacy in Ontario. In-depth interviews were conducted with eight participants who self-identify as Black, recruited using purposive and intensity sampling to (1) identify information-rich cases, including people who have been at the forefront of high-impact work in this space and (2) participants whose mission and mandates represented diverse approaches and sub-populations. Our findings suggest that while Black community advocates face systemic and contextual barriers, they also embody deep and multifaceted knowledge, training and experience, which inform the rich ways that they approach advocacy. Despite its Ontario focus, this study adds breadth and depth to the existing literature on health policy and historically marginalized populations, offering broader lessons for policy makers across jurisdictions. Our findings encourage policy makers to better recognize, make space for and cultivate fertile advocacy foundations, cultural knowledge and community-driven systems already present in Black communities.

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