Proctor in Action

Generation Now Proctor (GenNowProctor) is a national youth social justice movement, fully committed to expand and sustain its faith-driven advocacy, activism, and education beyond the church. GenNowProctor has built a national network of youth and young adult activist organizations working together to solidify the needed infrastructure and resources to sustain the growing movement and their leadership roles.

The Murray-Rustin Social Justice Institute (MRSJI), named after Pauli Murray, an African American civil rights activist, attorney, women’s rights activist and an Episcopal priest and Bayard Rustin, a Quaker and an American leader in social movements for civil rights, socialism, nonviolence and gay rights, fosters and develops relationships focusing on holistic living for LGBTQ and non-gender conforming persons who have experienced trauma from non-affirming and non-religious communal spaces.

The Institute forges a healthy dialogue and practice around sexuality in black church spaces between the LGBTQ and non-gender conforming community and clergy persons.

Carruthers Innovation Fund

The Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference. Inc. engages the principles of equity, economics. and communal experiences through education. advocacy, and activism centering viable futures for people of African descent.

Pan African Justice Institute

The Pan African Institute is an ecumenical, multi-faith, advocacy, and educational arm of the SDPC which seeks to connect Africans in diaspora to African foreign policy, renaissance ideas, and fellow collaborators across the globe. Global interdependence and the shifting landscape of formal politics calls for a renewed transnational conversation on the relationship between foreign policy and people of African descent.

The purpose of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Pan African Institute is to connect Africans in diaspora to African foreign policy, renaissance ideas, and fellow collaborators across the globe. Global interdependence and the shifting landscape of formal politics calls for a renewed transnational conversation on the relationship between foreign policy and people of African descent on the continent and in diaspora. The United Nations has resolved that 2013-2023 would be the international decade of Africa. Looking to the future, investment in Africa is key to the sustained growth, vitality, education, prosperity, and innovation of African people.