Archive for year: 2021
The UCLA Center for Community Engagement Announces Tenure & Promotion Report
/in spotlight /by megan lebreProfessor aims to put the history of Mexicans in Los Angeles at your fingertips
/in spotlight /by megan lebreUCLA Congo Basin Institute receives W.K. Kellogg Foundation Community Engagement Scholarship Award
/in spotlight /by megan lebreJune 22, 2021
Dear UCLA Faculty and Staff: It gives me great pleasure to announce that the UCLA Congo Basin Institute (CBI) has received one of four W.K. Kellogg Foundation Community Engagement Scholarship Awards , given annually by the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities and the Engagement Scholarship Consortium in collaboration with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. This prestigious national award recognizes programs that have an exemplary record of productively engaging with communities through their teaching, research and service activities, putting knowledge and skills to work on today’s most critical problems. This award is particularly significant as it acknowledges UCLA’s commitment to community-engaged scholarship both in the region of Los Angeles and beyond, extending to sustained and reciprocal relationships with global communities and institutions. Founded in 2015 as a partnership between UCLA and the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, CBI focuses on finding solutions to some of Central Africa’s most urgent challenges, including food and water security, climate change, human health and the loss of biodiversity. CBI is a campus-wide resource that currently engages 12 academic units across seven divisions and schools at UCLA. In Africa, CBI co-creates programs that bring together community practitioners and researchers from Central Africa, the U.S., Europe and Asia to solve problems, while creating opportunities for African scholars to pursue meaningful research careers in their home countries. Our campus community can take pride in this recognition and UCLA’s positive impact on the world. Sincerely, Roger Wakimoto Vice Chancellor for Research and Creative Activities |
Presenting The Zine: A Bridge Called Solidarity – Un Puente Llamado Solidaridad
/in spotlight /by megan lebreSeptember 9, 2021
Saludos UCLA friends, colleagues, and partners,
On behalf of the 2021 UCLA Community Scholars Program, Narrative Team Cohort, it is my great pleasure to introduce the Zine (English and Spanish versions); A Bridge Called Solidarity and Un Puente Llamado Solidaridad. (As the title implies, this zine was inspired by Gloria Anzalua and Cherie Moraga’s classic masterpiece, This Bridge Called My Back.)
After almost a year of collaborating with a wide range of Tijuana and San Diego organizers, artists, activists, organizations, collectives within the migrant justice movement, we have completed our final class project for the Cross-Border Solidarity For TransBorder Migrant Justice course.
The zine is available for viewing, printing and downloading for free at these links. (We recommend reading it digitally, as we did not have time to create a printer friendly version.)
This Bridge Called Solidarity – English Zine Final Version Folder: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1i-zHyQP43ylMgHDGc2rCKW7MLg7hhO_M?usp=sharing
Un Puente Llamado Solidaridad – Spanish Zine Final Version Folder: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1dgbgOqmO3Mp84ApWH1qlqXF9Yb4wAyqh?usp=sharing
Please share both the English and Spanish versions of the zine widely with all your friends, family, colleagues, partners, accomplices and allies. We hope the zine will serve you and your networks as a beautiful, inspiring but also practical guide. It is meant to uplift the black, indigenous and trans migrant communities in particular, but is relevant for all forcibly displaced peoples living within our transborder communities.
The zine includes several pages of original artwork made by migrants/refugees/asylum seekers, low-cost/free health care and free food resource lists for both San Diego and Tijuana, in addition to a historical timeline of recent immigration events in the US and Mexico border regions.
Although this zine may not be absolutely perfect, given the time constraints, complete lack of funding for printing and other resources, it was produced with so much love, hard work, passion and dedication. With this zine, we have begun to build a world where there are no borders, no nations, no more deportations; a world where migration is not a crime; a world where everyone, no matter their immigration status, has their human dignity ensured.
In the near future, we would like to translate this zine into Haitian Creole. Given the increased numbers of Haitian migrants/refugees coming to the border right now, we believe it is urgent to translate it. If you or someone in your network can support this process, please contact us through our email address.
In closing, our entire Narrative Team cohort would like to recognize and give a special thanks to those of us who worked on the zine within the last three months, especially after the course officially ended, and who personally ensured the zine was finished; Nanzi, Sebastian, Kevin and Devi. We couldn’t have done it without you.
Solidarity Forever!
2021 UCLA Community Scholars Program, Narrative Team Cohort
uclanarrativecollectiveteam@gmail.com
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El 9 de Septiembre, 2021
Saludos amigos, y colegas de la UCLA,
De parte del equipo de Narrativa, del Programa de Sabios Comunitarios de la UCLA 2021, es un gran placer presentar el Zine (versiones en Inglés y Español); A Bridge Called Solidarity – Un Puente Llamado Solidaridad. (Como implica el título, este zine fue inspirado por la obra maestra clásica de Gloria Anzaldua y Cherie Moraga, This Bridge Called My Back – Este Puente Llamado Mi Espalda.)
Después de casi un año de colaborar con un amplio círculo de organizadores, artistas, activistas, organizaciones, y colectivos que forman parte del movimiento de justicia para los migrantes en Tijuana y San Diego, hemos completado nuestro proyecto final para la clase Solidaridad TransFronteriza Para La Justicia Migrante TransFronteriza.
El zine está disponible para ver, imprimir y bajar gratis en estos enlaces: (Recomendamos que lo lean digitalmente, porque no tuvimos tiempo para crear una versión fácil de imprimir.)
This Bridge Called Solidarity – English Zine Final Version Folder: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1i-zHyQP43ylMgHDGc2rCKW7MLg7hhO_M?usp=sharing
Un Puente Llamado Solidaridad – Spanish Zine Final Version Folder: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1dgbgOqmO3Mp84ApWH1qlqXF9Yb4wAyqh?usp=sharing
Por favor compartan las dos versiones del zine, en Inglés y Español, con todos sus amigos, familia, colegas, parejas, cómplices y aliados. Esperamos que el zine te sirva a ti y a todos tus contactos como una obra hermosa e inspiradora pero también como una guía práctica. Es dirigida para alentar a los migrantes Afrodescendientes, indígenas y trans en particular pero es relevante para toda la gente desplazada forzosamente que vive en nuestras comunidades transfronterizas.
El zine incluye varias páginas de obras de arte originales hechas por migrantes/refugiados/solicitantes de asilo, listas de recursos para salud médica gratis/de bajo costo y de comida gratis en San Diego y Tijuana, además de una línea cronológica marcando recientes eventos de migración en las regiones fronterizas de Estados Unidos y México.
Aunque este zine no es absolutamente perfecto, dado la falta de tiempo, total ausencia de fondos para imprimirlo y otros recursos, fue producido con mucho amor, trabajo duro, pasión y dedicación. Con este zine, hemos comenzado a crear un mundo donde no hay fronteras, naciones, ni deportaciones; un mundo donde la migración no es un crimen; un mundo donde todos, sin importar su estatus migratorio, tienen su dignidad humana garantizada.
En un futuro cercano, queremos traducir el zine al lenguaje Criollo Haitiano. Dado el incrementado número de migrantes/refugiados Haitianos que van llegando a la frontera ahorita, creemos que es urgente poder traducirlo. Si tu o alguien en tu círculo de contactos puede apoyarnos con este proceso, favor de contactarnos por correo electronico.
Para concluir, nuestro equipo de Narrativa quiere reconocer y darle muchas gracias a nuestros compañeros que trabajaron en el zine los últimos tres meses, especialmente desde que se terminó el curso oficialmente, y que personalmente aseguraron que se completara el trabajo; Nanzi, Sebastian, Kevin y Devi. No hubiéramos podido hacer esto sin ustedes.
Solidaridad Para Siempre!
2021 UCLA Community Scholars Program, Narrative Team Cohort
uclanarrativecollectiveteam@gmail.com
2021 Pritzker finalists: David Diaz, Farwiza Farhan, Chook-Chook Hillman
/in spotlight /by megan lebreIn the wake of the sobering findings of the Sixth Assessment Report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the community-focused work of three emerging leaders reminds us that local solutions must be part of our response to the global crisis.
UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability is proud to announce the 2021 finalists for the Pritzker Emerging Environmental Genius Award, as chosen by a committee of 12 faculty members.
David Diaz, Farwiza Farhan and Chook-Chook Hillman were selected from a pool of 18 candidates to move on to the final round of judging. Each of them takes a community-focused approach to improve not just the environment, but people’s lives.
To view the whole story, please visit: https://www.ioes.ucla.edu/article/2021-pritzker-finalists-david-diaz-farwiza-farhan-chook-chook-hillman/?mc_cid=07a8c897c8&mc_eid=f6503f755f
5 professors receive 2021 Chancellor’s Award for Community-Engaged Research
/in spotlight /by nancy ohiaFive UCLA faculty members will create dynamic new courses for undergraduates thanks to the third annual Chancellor’s Award for Community-Engaged Research. The awards program, supported by the UCLA Center for Community Engagement and the Chancellor’s Office, provides recipients with individual grants of $10,000 for their projects.
The professors’ classes — in which students will conduct research addressing questions and needs identified in collaboration with community partners — will span a diverse range of subjects, from web accessibility and urban ecology to human rights violations and community wellness.
The 2021 award winners and their courses are:
Michelle Caswell | associate professor of information studies
“Digital Archives, Communities and Memory”
Working closely with community archives, students in Caswell’s course will learn the importance of communities shaping their own narratives about the past to better envision a collective future. (Caswell is also an affiliated member of the Asian American Studies department.) “I hope students gain a deeper appreciation for memory work, particularly the creation and maintenance of digital archives, as a form of activism against ongoing oppressions.”
Lauren Lee McCarthy | associate professor of design media arts
“Design, Disability and the Web”
In this studio-based course, students will engage in collaborative research with the disability community, with a focus on universal design, assistive technology and disability justice. “What I’ve learned from the disability community is the way questions of accessibility can open interesting, creative conversations around what it means to be present, to be accountable and to build online spaces with care.”
Nick Shapiro | assistant professor of human biology and society
“Biomedicine, Mass Incarceration and Accountability”
Students in Shapiro’s class will work alongside human rights organizations, analyzing medical data on the deaths of incarcerated individuals for the purpose of identifying human rights violations. “I hope a takeaway from this class is that the students can both better account for the missteps of science and have a grasp on more equitable methods to engage with, support and advance communities as they identify their most pressing questions.”
David Shorter | professor of world arts and cultures/dance
“Healing, Ritual and Transformation”
As part of Shorter’s course, students will collaborate with healing practitioners and community-based wellness organizations, researching aspects of community wellness and cross-cultural perceptions of health, including structural inequalities in health care and the history of medicinal development. “One of my central aims remains having students be in service to those on the front line of health care outside of allopathic and pharmaceutical approaches. There, students learn about health and healing beyond textbooks and classrooms.”
Pamela Yeh | associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology
“Urban Ecology and Evolution”
Yeh’s class will allow students to explore cities as ecosystems and to study how plants and animals have survived — and in some cases thrived — in urban areas. They will work together with nonprofits in low-income communities of color to create opportunities for long-term avian population monitoring and scientific research. “We live and work in one of the world’s major metropolitan areas, so right in our backyard, we have a fantastic place to do this teaching and research. I hope our students will come to view the community they live in as both a rich resource for advice, help and support in their work, as well as an important obligation and opportunity to give back.”
The faculty members will spend the 2021–22 academic year developing their courses and will begin offering them to undergraduates in 2022–23 or 2023–24.
Although they span many disciplines, the courses are united by a common thread, according to Shalom Staub, director of the UCLA Center for Community Engagement.
“Rooted in impeccable scholarship, each of these courses will empower our students and faculty to take active roles in making the world a better, more just, more inclusive place,” Staub said. “It is deeply inspiring to see UCLA partnering in such creative ways with such a variety of community groups and organizations. Our students will learn tremendously from the expertise residing in these communities and will be able to bring rigorous research to address community-driven questions.”
5 professors receive 2021 Chancellor’s Award for Community-Engaged Research
/in Uncategorized /by megan lebreThrough UCLA course, students deliver funding to L.A. nonprofits
/in spotlight /by nancy ohiaThanks to an unusual undergraduate course at UCLA, students have distributed hundreds of thousands of dollars over the past decade to Los Angeles nonprofits.
The latest edition of the class, Philanthropy as Civic Engagement, concluded in June. Students distributed funds to three beneficiaries: Open Paths Counseling Center, which received $40,000 toward training clinicians to support the mental health needs of underserved communities; School on Wheels, which received $25,000 to provide laptops for homeless K-12 students; and Jazz Hands for Autism, which received $15,000 to provide musical training, career support and advocacy for musicians who have autism.
And since 2012, when the course was first offered, students have distributed a total of $780,000 to 27 local organizations.
The course enables students to explore their sense of responsibility to care for and improve their communities. While many of the students are already engaged in volunteerism, the experience provides a different perspective, introducing them to the process that individuals and grantmaking organizations go through when deciding how to allocate their charitable giving.
“People sometimes assume that to be philanthropic, you must be abundantly wealthy,” said Jennifer Lindholm, UCLA’s assistant dean of undergraduate education, who has led the course’s teaching team for the past five years. “That mindset can disempower us from engaging actively to strengthen our communities.
“Through this course, we aim to help students understand the work of nonprofit organizations, consider different perspectives on philanthropic giving, and challenge themselves to consider the myriad ways they can contribute — both now and in the future — to enhancing the common good.”
The money the students give away is provided by UCLA donors who have chosen to invest in cultivating a new generation of philanthropists. Since 2019, the course has been supported by Women & Philanthropy at UCLA, which continues to raise funds toward the class endowment.
In the 2021 class, students were divided into eight-person groups, each of which researched a pool of 14 potential nonprofit beneficiaries. Based on what they learned, each group chose eight semifinalists and held meetings with those organizations’ leaders.
One of those meetings was especially meaningful for Adriana Perez, a psychology major from Chatsworth, California, who is studying how to make mental health resources more accessible. During an online interview with representatives from Open Paths, Perez said, she connected deeply with the counseling center’s mission. But she had never before seen herself as a philanthropist.
“The ability to grant a real monetary award was incredibly empowering in that, as a class, we were able to decide what issues were most important to us, and the ability to encourage change was within our hands,” she said. “Philanthropy was not an area I thought I would ever be involved in, but this course definitely changed my perspective.”
Following those meetings, each group zeroed in one nonprofit as its chosen beneficiary, and presented a funding proposal for that organization to the other students in the class. A class-wide vote determined how much of the class’s total funds should go to each of the three organizations.
Students are free to consider and debate which criteria are most important to their funding decisions. In the latest iteration of the course, which ended in June, some students prioritized pandemic emergency relief, while others were more concerned with programs’ long-term viability or organizations’ prospects for sustained growth. Most were focused on social justice and equity.
Johnny Perez, a psychology major from Whittier, California, was a member of this year’s class. One of his long-term goals is to open a drug treatment center, and he took the course to better understand how funding decisions are made, which could come in handy when he seeks financial backers for his own nonprofit.
Course discussions helped him realize that all of his classmates had their own perspectives and priorities.
“We all had different views, and one was not necessarily better than the other,” Perez said. “I wanted to listen to other people’s views, to have the ability to want to learn and expand, and learn about other people’s values.”
Michael Lima-Sabatani is a public affairs major from Yorba Linda, California, with an interest in organizational governance. He said the course provided real opportunities to evaluate how his and his classmates’ skill sets could determine who was best equipped to serve certain roles on the team.
“I had done a lot of research on one organization and was passionate about it, but from listening to the other presentations, I knew one particular classmate would be the best advocate and presenter,” he said. “She had the most poise and was the best storyteller. And I took on an editorial position, which I know was a good fit for my writing skills.”
Lima-Sabatini said he also appreciated the opportunity to meet with leaders of the nonprofits he researched. “Gaining the first-hand experience in a setting where you are being supported was super valuable,” he said.
For other students, the course highlighted the importance of diversity in philanthropy.
“Being in this position gave me a lot of insight into philanthropy, and how diversity in board rooms is a hugely important issue,” said Aaron Tann, a communications major from Baldwin Park, California. “Different communities have different needs, perspectives and diverse opinions. We also need that diversity at the highest level of power where money is being distributed.
“A lot of us think we know what a community needs, but the organizations that are hands on with the community have a much better idea about the best use of the money.”
Armed with insights like that, those who completed the 2021 edition of the course have already laid the groundwork for the UCLA students who will take the class after them. Damola Adeyemo, a physiological science major from Rancho Cucamonga, California, shared her thoughts in an open letter that will be shared with students who might enroll in the 2022 class.
“This UCLA class is very different and you will be astonished by how much you will grow in 10 weeks. I do not think I will ever have another class as unique and exciting as this one in my time as an undergraduate.”
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