Indigenous Authors Panel moderated by Brian Young

Virtual AZ, United States

Kick off Native American Heritage Month with a discussion on Indigenous literature and literacy! This FREE virtual webinar will feature a panel discussion between four Indigenous authors moderated by author and filmmaker Brian Young. All attendees have a chance to win Indigenous authored books! This program is cohosted by the Arizona Department of Education - […]

Representation Matters – The Native Vote in Arizona

Virtual AZ, United States

Join us for a conversation about the Native vote in Arizona with Brian Garcia, voting advocate and attorney, and Angela Willeford, community outreach, voter engagement, and youth leadership advocate. This event will explore modern obstacles to voting and resources within Arizona tribal communities. This program is part of the Representation Matters series hosted by Arizona […]

Representation Matters – Right to Vote: The Struggle for Native American Voting Rights

Virtual AZ, United States

  Register Here! Join us for a deep dive into the history of Native American voting rights with Cora Tso, Senior Research Fellow at ASU's Kyl Center for Water Policy, and Brian Garcia, voting advocate and attorney. This event will explore the struggles, triumphs, and ongoing efforts surrounding Native American voting rights, shedding light on […]

American-born: The Story of Scholar, Leader, and Advocate Rose Hum Lee with Dr. Li Yang

Virtual AZ, United States

Rose Hum Lee (1904-1964) was a renowned twentieth-century sociologist known for her studies of the Chinese in the United States. As an American-born daughter of Chinese immigrant parents, she offered a unique insider’s view of social structure and family life in American Chinatowns. Lee earned her doctorate at the University of Chicago in 1947 when […]

Climate Conversations – Science Dance: Can Dance Move Us Toward Sustainability?

Virtual AZ, United States

Talking about the climate crisis and its impact on the planet and our communities is challenging. Is there a way to bring joy into the conversation? Can art and movement inspire hope and action? One innovative approach is science dance, a program that uses dance to express science concepts. Join marine sustainability scientist and dance […]

Maria Urquides: Mother of Bilingual Education with Jan Cleere

Virtual AZ, United States

Maria Urquides’ Hispanic background made her the ideal teacher for Arizona’s bilingual schools, although she readily admitted she might go to hell for being ordered to punish students for speaking Spanish in the classroom. She stepped on more than a few administrative toes to attain her goal of promoting bilingual/bicultural education to children of all […]

Climate Conversations – Food Sovereignty in the Desert: Reclaiming Traditional O’odham Foodways

Virtual AZ, United States

Traditional foodways of the Tohono O’odham are inextricably linked to their ancestral lands in the Sonoran Desert. O’odham knowledge of hunting, farming, and harvesting wild foods has evolved over generations and continues to adapt to the land. How are communities sharing contemporary cultivation methods? How is climate change affecting traditional foodways? What can we learn […]

Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality with Tanya Katerí Hernández

Virtual AZ, United States

What happens when there is racial diversity within an ethnic community? Can people who experience systemic discrimination also perpetuate discrimination? Race relations in marginalized communities are complex. Join us for a program with law professor and anti-discrimination expert, Tanya Katerí Hernández, author of Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality. Hernández will […]

Climate Conversations – Aldo Leopold Listens to the Southwest with Dan Shilling

Virtual AZ, United States

Forester Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) is considered one of the founding voices of environmental ethics. In 1909, as a new ranger in the recently established Apache National Forest, Leopold shot a wolf in northeastern Arizona. At the time, he sensed something was wrong, but it would take 35 years for him to express his unease in […]

The Jews of Sosua: An Inspirational Story of Holocaust Survival with Dan Fellner

Virtual AZ, United States

It is one of the most uplifting – yet often forgotten – stories of Jewish survival during the Holocaust. In the early 1940s, the Dominican Republic was the only sovereign country to accept large numbers of Jewish refugees. About 750 German and Austrian Jews found a safe haven on an abandoned banana plantation in a […]

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