Breaking Barriers, Building Community, 2014

Breaking Barriers, Building Community: 35 Years of Training Social Change Scholars

 35 Years of Training Social Change Scholars

Friday, May 2, 2014

What is the relevance of the academy to achieving social justice? What does it mean to be a social change scholar? How can the academy be (re-)made to reflect the diversity and complexity of society, where students and communities have active voices and roles in shaping the pedagogy, research approaches, and policy production of the research university?

2014 marks the 35th anniversary of graduate training at the Institute for the Study of Social Change (now the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues). For more than three decades, ISSC/I has provided mentorship, training and support to numerous doctoral students, who have gone on to produce social change scholarship that transforms the world and the academy. The training program grew out of the recognition, in the period after the civil rights and women’s rights movements, that the academy did not reflect the diversity of American society. It was designed to expand the inclusiveness of the university by nurturing in under-represented students the skills and social capital necessary to learn and work in the academy. Its focus on providing both financial and social support for graduate students, through learning by doing research and training in a collective context, helped to increase the demographic diversity of Berkeley PhDs. In the process it helped transform the professoriate in research universities and colleges across the nation, contributing to new ideas of inclusiveness, membership, and citizenship in the academy and to fundamental change in the connections between researchers and the communities they studied.

In recognition of this anniversary, this one-day conference features presentations by alumni of the graduate training program, now distinguished academics, whose groundbreaking work on stratification and social change in US cities challenges the presumptions of power and the powerful. Panelists draw on research that 1) examines the erasure of history and memory that occurs around race and gender; 2) explores the processes and contexts in which the definitions and enforcement of (il)legality are undergoing change in schools and community settings, on the streets and in workplaces, and around the use and design of the built environment; and 3) engages with the efforts of community organizations and activists to challenge the policies and control of dominant interests.

Read an article published in the Berkeleyan reporting on this conference here. Video of the conference is available here or by clicking on the links below.

Sponsors: Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, Center for Research on Social Change

Co-sponsors: Division of Equity and Inclusion; Departments of Sociology, Anthropology, and Ethnic Studies; College of Environmental Design; School of Social Welfare; Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program; Center for the Study of Law and Society; Center for Race and Gender; American Cultures; Graduate School of Education

"Breaking Barriers, Building Community: 35 Years of Training Social Change Scholars"

Conference Welcome and Keynote

Jane Mauldon, Interim Director, Institute for the Study of Societal Issues

Claude Steele, Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost, UC Berkeley

Troy Duster, Chancellor's Professor, UC Berkeley

Engaging Communities As Partners For Change: Race, Space, Place

Panel 1: “Engaging Communities as Partners for Change: Race, Space, Place”

Moderator: Michael Omi, Associate Professor, Ethnic Studies, UC Berkeley         

Speakers:

Teresa Córdova, Professor, Urban Planning and Policy, and Director, Great Cities Institute, University of Illinois at Chicago

Hector Fernando Burga, Lecturer, Urban Studies and Planning, San Francisco State University; Visiting Scholar, ISSI

Eleanor Ramsey, President, Mason Tillman Associates

2014 Foundations for Change: Thomas I. Yamashita Prize Award Ceremony

The 2014 Yamashita Prize was awarded during the conference

David Montejano, Chair, Center for Research on Social Change

Robert Yamashita, Assoc. Prof. of Science and Society Studies, CSU San Marcos

2014 Honorable Mention, Mimi Kim, Founder, Creative Interventions, and PhD Candidate in Social Welfare, UC Berkeley, introduced by Veena Dubal, PhD Candidate in Jurisprudence and Social Policy, UC Berkeley

2014 Prize Winner, Sarah Ramirez, Health Educator, Pixley Medical Clinic, introduced by Cristina Mora, Assistant Professor of Sociology, UC Berkeley

"Race and the Material World: Bodies and Buildings"

Moderator: David Montejano, Professor, Ethnic Studies and History, UC Berkeley

Speakers:

Willow Lung-Amam, Assistant Professor, Architecture Planning and Preservation, University of Maryland

Maxine Craig, Associate Professor, Women and Gender Studies, UC Davis

Stephen Small, Associate Professor, African American Studies, UC Berkeley

"Street, School, Work: Sites of Organizing and (Il)legality"

Moderator and Closing Remarks: Rachel Moran, Dean and Michael J. Connell Distinguished Professor of Law, School of Law, UCLA

Speakers:

Genevieve Negrón-Gonzales, Assistant Professor, Education, University of San Francisco

Victor Rios, Associate Professor, Sociology, UC Santa Barbara

Jennifer Chun, Associate Professor, Sociology, University of Toronto