Workbook

For Ugandan Families Abroad

Faith, Family, and Building a Life Between Two Definitions of Success

Uganda shaped what success means to your family. This is where you name what it means from here.

This is for:

For the Ugandan family abroad working through faith, collective obligation, and the question of what success means across two very different cultural guides.

You'll produce:your The Ugandan Family Diaspora Accord

The Name It First Experience

Your family carries Uganda. Its faith, its community values, its specific idea of what a family is responsible for, and its definition of success that includes everyone who helped you get here. This workbook gives your family a space to name what Ugandan identity means in your household, what you are carrying deliberately, and what each generation contributes. Grounded in Cross, Helms, Berry, Brah, Hall, and Ugandan diaspora scholarship, you leave holding The Ugandan Family Diaspora Accord. The output is not a conversation. It is a signed document.

You can opt into 30-, 60-, and 90-day check-ins from your account. We recommend you do — the point is to see what changed.

Sample questions

  1. What word describes what Uganda means to your family from abroad — and how often do you say that word out loud to each other?
  2. When you look at what your family is carrying from Uganda — faith, community values, obligation to family back home — what do you notice you want the next generation to receive, and what do you want to renegotiate?
  3. What would your family's identity document look like if it named what Ugandan identity means in your specific household — as a living thing, not just a place you're from?

Research basis

Cross (1971, 1991) Nigrescence Model / Helms (1990) racial identity statuses / Berry (1997) acculturation strategies / Crenshaw (1989, 1991) intersectionality / Brah (1996) Cartographies of Diaspora / Hall (1990) Cultural Identity and Diaspora / cultural frameworks of Ugandan ethnic identity diversity, Christian faith community (Protestant, Catholic, Pentecostal), and collective success values / African diaspora identity (Okpewho & Nzegwu, 2009) / Ugandan diaspora community dynamics.

Choose your format.

Every format asks the same questions and produces the same document.

Print Paperbackpersonalize

A real book and a pen. Write in the margins. The most permanent version of you on a page.

$22.99

eBook + journal

The full guide on any screen, with a companion journal to write your answers by hand.

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Audiobook

We read every question and every scenario aloud. For the commute, the walk, the dishes.

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Hardcoverpersonalize

The keepsake edition — sewn, ribboned, made to sit on a shelf and be returned to.

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Digital Fill + membership+membership

Answer on screen. Your responses save as you go and assemble into your finished document.

$12.99

Hands-Free Interactive + membership+membership

Listen to each question and speak your answer. We capture it. You never touch a keyboard.

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The Premium Hardcover Everything Package

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Choose your pace.

The Essential path takes you to your finished document by the questions that matter most. The Full-depth path walks every question, every scenario, every angle. Both produce the same signed document — one just goes deeper on the way there.

Essential path

Shorter sessions. The questions that go directly to the document.

Full depth

Every question. Every scenario, every angle.

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