PathPath
  • About StreetsblogMASS
  • Street Design
  • Transit
  • Vision Zero
  • Support Our Journalism
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Streetsblog Logo
    • HOME
    • USA
    • NYC
    • MASS
    • LA
    • CHI
    • SF
    • CAL
    • STREETFILMS
    • DONATE
image/svg+xmlStreetsblog MASS LogoStreetsblog MASS Logo
  • Advocacy Opportunities
  • Street Design
  • Transit
  • EspaƱol
  • Support Our Journalism
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Dr. Destiny Thomas

Dr. Destiny Thomas is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Thrivance Group. An Anthropologist Planner from Oakland, CA, Dr. Thomas, has a combined 6 years of experience working in a Project Manager capacity within government agencies. These roles include 3.5 years as a Caltrans Environmental Planner (based in Fresno, CA) and 2.5 years as a Transportation Planner with the City of Los Angeles. In addition to this, Dr. Thomas has 7 years of experience leading key advancements in racial equity initiatives across the state by way of community organizing, policy writing, and non-profit management in communities that have been most impacted by racial inequities. Areas of interest include: racial equity, implementing the "dignity-infused community engagement" methodology, anti-displacement studies, healing environmental and infrastructural trauma, and bolstering agency and voice in marginalized communities within municipal planning processes. In 2020, Dr. Thomas launched a culturally rooted, trauma-informed enterprise geared toward building capacity for these values within municipal agencies, direct service providers, and advocacy organizations. Dr. Thomas earned a BA in Political Science from Fisk University in 2006, an MPA with an emphasis in Public Health and Non Profit Management from Tennessee State University in 2008, and a PhD in Social and Cultural Anthropology from the California Institute of Integral Studies in 2016. She is also a proud member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated.

Recent Posts

Aerial imagery of Boston's Chinatown neighborhood in 1952, before urban renewal, and in 1969, after the construction of the Central Artery. Imagery by USGS, courtesy of MapJunction.com

Guest Column: A Call for Reparations in the Built Environment of Cities

By Dr. Destiny Thomas | Jul 27, 2020 | No Comments
      • About StreetsblogMASS
      • Support Our Journalism
      • Staff and Board
      • Contact us
      • Comment moderation policy
        Follow Us:
      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      image/svg+xmlStreetsblog MASS LogoStreetsblog MASS Logo