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Sharing Practice: People-ing-the-room: Solidarity Teams

Mon 17 Aug 2026 4:00 PM - 7:00 PM PDT Online, Zoom

Sharing Practice: People-ing-the-room: Solidarity Teams

Mon 17 Aug 2026 4:00 PM - 7:00 PM PDT Online, Zoom

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August 17
4pm - 7pm PDT Vancouver

August 18
9am - 12pm AEST Sydney

$110 Canadian per Participant includes Ticket Tailor & PayPal fees

The intention behind Sharing Practice sessions is to create spaces to share our practice in dialogues within community that holds a collective ethic of justice-doing in community work, counselling and therapy. Each session focuses on specific practice explored in an article, and will have provocations to foster emergent, meaningful dialogues and assist us to explore our practices and witness others in connected struggles.

A Justice-doing approach situates supervision as community organizing. “Supervision of Solidarity practices: Solidarity teams and people-ing-the-room”, explores practices that move the ethics of solidarity into action. The article includes an expansive set of questions framing the practice.

People-ing-the-room is a strategy co-created alongside refugees and asylum seekers who had no one from their community and former life available to them in person to bear witness to the meaning of their acts of resistance.

These practices are useful to resist isolation of all people who are targeted and oppressed.

Resources:

Reynolds, V. (2011). Supervision of solidarity practices: Solidarity teams and people-ing-the-room. Context. August 2011. Association for Family and Systemic Therapy, UK, 4-7.


Scholarships available: contact reynolds.vikki@gmail.com

Vikki Reynolds (PhD RCC) is an activist/ therapist who works to bridge the worlds of social justice activism with community work and therapy. Vikki is a white settler on the territories of the Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh and Musqueam nations. Vikki's people are Irish and English folks, and she is a heterosexual woman with cisgender privilege. Her experience includes supervision and therapy with people-with-lived/living-experience and other workers responding to the opioid catastrophe, refugees and survivors of torture - including Indigenous people who have survived residential schools and other state violence, sexualized violence counsellors, mental health and substance misuse counsellors, housing and shelter workers, activists and working alongside gender and sexually diverse communities. Vikki is an Adjunct Professor and has written and presented internationally.  Articles & speaks free at: www.vikkireynolds.ca

10% of proceeds will be donated to

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Moms Stop the Harm