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1 Introduction
Pages 1-4

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From page 1...
... The virtual workshop took place on June 16–17, 2021, and was webcast live. Video and other materials related to the workshop have been archived on the event page.2 Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo of the University of California, San Francisco, welcomed viewers of the workshop and began her remarks with an acknowledgment of the Nacotchtank and Piscataway elders and people who lived in the areas around the home of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and their descendants who live in the region.
From page 2...
... the ethical considerations relevant to civic engagement efforts. she continued, "In their memory, we seek to help build a just future by centering health equity as the prerequisite to improving population health." As is customary for the roundtable's public events, Bibbins-Domingo described its vision and mission.
From page 3...
... Familiar constructs such as voting and attending public meetings are included. Johnson remarked that membership in groups that emerged in the context of systematic exclusion, such as Black Greek Lettered Organizations and the National Council of Negro Women, also represents powerful forms of civic engagement.
From page 4...
... • Good outcomes for democracy and for health equity require • authentic community organizing by local people; • civic engagement that brings together and lifts up diverse voices, which is crucial for a healthy democracy; • community media; and • research, such as community-based participatory research and participant driven interviews, that treats participants with dignity and respect (e.g., ex plaining to community members how data will be used) (Abrams McLean, Carr, Gastil, Grusky, Hunter, Ramakrishnan)


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