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Glossary›Equity

Glossary

Equity

The principle of fairness and justice through recognizing different needs and circumstances, ensuring everyone has access to the resources and opportunities required to thrive.

What is Equity?

Equity is the principle and practice of fairness achieved by recognizing that individuals begin from different circumstances and therefore require differentiated access to resources, opportunities, and support systems to reach comparable outcomes. Unlike equality—which distributes identical resources to everyone—equity adjusts distribution based on need, structural barriers, and historical context. In spiritual and consciousness communities, equity extends beyond material redistribution to encompass access to healing modalities, representation in teaching lineages, acknowledgment of indigenous wisdom traditions, and the dismantling of power structures that determine whose voices are centered and whose experiences are marginalized.

Origins & Lineage

The conceptual distinction between equity and equality traces to ancient legal and philosophical traditions. Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics (circa 350 BCE) introduced the concept of epieikeia (equity), arguing that justice sometimes requires departure from strict legal equality to account for particular circumstances the law cannot anticipate. Roman jurist Cicero (106–43 BCE) further developed aequitas as a corrective principle within legal frameworks.

In spiritual contexts, equity principles appear across traditions without using the term explicitly. Buddhist teachings on upaya (skillful means) recognize that different beings require different teachings according to capacity—a form of pedagogical equity. Islamic zakat and sadaqah systems (formalized in the 7th century CE) incorporate needs-based redistribution. The Hebrew concept of tzedakah (often translated as ‘charity’ but literally meaning ‘justice’ or ‘righteousness’) embeds equity within religious obligation.

The contemporary framing of equity as distinct from equality emerged prominently in 20th-century civil rights discourse, particularly through the work of legal scholar John Rawls (A Theory of Justice, 1971), who argued for distributive justice based on differential need. Kimberlé Crenshaw’s articulation of intersectionality (1989) deepened equity frameworks by demonstrating how overlapping identities create compounded disadvantage requiring nuanced, equity-based responses.

How It’s Practiced

In conscious and spiritual communities, equity manifests through several concrete practices:

Sliding-scale pricing and scholarships adjust event costs based on income, ensuring economic barriers don’t exclude seekers. Organizations offer work-trade opportunities, allowing participants to contribute labor in exchange for access to teachings.

Representation in leadership involves intentionally centering teachers, facilitators, and organizers from historically marginalized communities—particularly Indigenous practitioners, teachers of color, LGBTQ+ leaders, and disabled facilitators—recognizing that homogeneous leadership perpetuates exclusion.

Accessibility accommodations provide ASL interpretation, wheelchair access, scent-free environments, gender-neutral facilities, childcare, and content warnings, acknowledging that different bodies and nervous systems require different supports to participate fully.

Land acknowledgments paired with material reparations—such as revenue-sharing with Indigenous nations or returning land to original stewards—move beyond performative gesture toward redistribution.

Lineage attribution and compensation ensure that when teachings originate from specific cultural or spiritual traditions, credit and financial benefit flow back to those communities rather than being extracted by dominant-culture teachers.

Equity Today

Seekers encounter equity principles in retreat centers offering tiered pricing structures, teacher training programs with diversity scholarships, and conferences featuring panels on decolonizing wellness spaces. Organizations like the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond and Equity in the Center provide anti-racism and equity training for nonprofit spiritual organizations. The Accessible Yoga movement (founded 2007) specifically addresses equity in yoga spaces through training and advocacy.

Online platforms increasingly offer pay-what-you-can meditation courses and trauma-informed frameworks acknowledging that standard practices may not serve all nervous systems equally. Some sanghas and spiritual communities conduct equity audits examining who attends, who teaches, whose ancestry is honored, and how resources are distributed.

Debates continue around commodification versus accessibility, with tensions between teachers needing sustainable income and students requiring affordable access—equity frameworks attempt to navigate this by differentiating pricing based on capacity to pay rather than charging uniformly high or low rates.

Common Misconceptions

Equity does not mean everyone receives identical treatment—this conflation with equality obscures equity’s core function of differentiated support based on need.

Equity is not “giving handouts” or “lowering standards”—it removes structural barriers that prevent demonstration of existing capacity and merit.

Equity does not automatically occur through good intentions or “colorblind” approaches—research demonstrates that ignoring difference often perpetuates existing disparities.

Equity is not exclusively about race—while racial equity receives significant focus due to systemic racism’s pervasive effects, equity frameworks address class, disability, gender, sexuality, neurotype, age, and intersecting identities.

Equity does not complete itself through policy alone—it requires ongoing attention, resource allocation, and willingness to redistribute power, not merely opportunity.

How to Begin

Seekers can start by examining their own communities: Who is present? Who is absent? What barriers might explain these patterns? Request or organize equity training for spiritual communities through organizations like Dismantling Racism Works or the Center for Equity and Inclusion.

Practitioners hosting events can implement sliding-scale pricing, explicitly invite accessibility requests, and diversify teacher lineups. Study intersectionality through Crenshaw’s writings or Resmaa Menakem’s My Grandmother’s Hands (2017), which integrates equity with somatic healing. Indigenous scholars like Robin Wall Kimmerer (Braiding Sweetgrass, 2013) model equity in relating to land and knowledge.

Participants can support equity by paying at higher sliding-scale tiers when able, advocating for accessibility in spaces they join, and choosing to study with teachers from traditions being shared rather than dominant-culture interpreters. Equity begins with honest assessment of current reality followed by concrete redistribution of resources, access, and power.

Related terms

social justiceaccessibilityintersectionalitydecolonizationinclusive practiceright livelihood
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