Keynote Speaker

 

For More Information

"Challenging the Borders of Civic Engagement: Ethnic Studies and the Meaning of Community Democracy"
1:00 - 1:45 p.m.

George Sanchez , Professor
American Studies and Ethnicity and History
University of Southern California

George Sanchez is the author of Becoming Mexican American: Ethnicity, Culture and Identity in Chicano Los Angeles, 1900- 1945 (Oxford University Press, 1993), co-editor of Los Angeles and the Future of Urban Cultures (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), and recently published “’What’s Good for Boyle Heights is Good for the Jews’: Creating Multiracialism on the Eastside During the 1950s,” American Quarterly 56:3 (September 2004). He is Past President of the American Studies Association (2001-2002), and is one of the co-editors of the book series, American Crossroads: New Works in Ethnic Studies, from the University of California Press. He currently serves as Director of the Center for Diversity and Democracy at USC. He works on both historical and contemporary topics of race, gender, ethnicity, labor, and immigration, and is currently writing a historical study of the ethnic interaction of Mexican Americans, Japanese Americans, African Americans, and Jews in the Boyle Heights area of East Los Angeles, California in the twentieth century. He is also co-editing, with Amy Koritz of Tulane University, Civic Engagement in the Wake of Katrina, to be published by University of Michigan Press in 2008.



KEYNOTE INTRODUCTION: Vicki L. Ruiz, Dean & Professor
School of Humanities & History and Chicano/Latino Studies,
University of California, Irvine

Vicki L. Ruiz is Dean of the School of Humanities and Professor of History and Chicano/Latino Studies at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Cannery Women, Cannery Lives and From Out of the Shadows: Mexican Women in 20th Century America. She and Virginia Sánchez Korrol recently co-edited the three-volume Latinas in the United States: A Historical Encyclopedia. Her most recent collections include the fourth edition of Unequal Sisters in which she is sole editor and Memories and Migrations: Mapping Boricua and Chicana Histories, co-edited with John Chávez. A fellow of the Society of American Historians and past president of the Organization of American Historians, Ruiz is a member of the national advisory board for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. Ruiz is also president of the American Studies Association.


For further program information please contact:

Victor Becerra
Director, Community Outreach
Partnership Center School of Social Ecology, UC Irvine
vbecerra@uci.edu

Linda Vo
Chair, Department of Asian American Studies,
University of California, Irvine
volt@uci.edu

James Parker
Graduate Student First Year Initiative, Coordinator - Division of Student Affairs University of California, Irvine
parkerja@uci.edu

Interested in attending?
click here to register
Free and open to the public
Please note: The symposium is being held at the UCI Student Center, with the main program in the Pacific Ballroom, the Reception in Moss Cove room, and the AAPI Workshop in the Wood Cove A room