May
27

Beyond Solidarity: Bridging the Black-Asian Divide

Beyond Solidarity: Bridging the Black-Asian Divide Thursday, May 27, 2021 2:00 - 3:30 pm PDT / 4:00 - 5:30 CDT / 5:00 - 6:30 pm EDT The disturbing rise in anti-Asian violence during the Covid-19 pandemic as well as ongoing...

Decoding Zoning

As part of our racial segregation report series, we mapped exclusionary zoning, analyzed its association with racial segregation in the Bay Area, and offered recommendations for exclusionary zoning reform.
Tera Johnson

Tera Johnson (she/her) is a dual degree Master’s student in City Planning and Landscape Architecture. Using her background as an artist and environmental scientist, Tera seeks to amplify the strengths of people of color, while advocating for healthy and just connections between social and ecological systems. Tera is also co-founder of Two Photon, which uses art to communicate science, raise money and awareness about social issues, and support fellow minorities interested in STEM.

Rahma R. Mahdi

Rahma R. Mahdi is set to graduate in Fall 2021 as a Regent’s and Chancellor’s Scholar from the University of California, Berkeley, where she majors in Interdisciplinary Studies with minors in Public Policy and Education. As a student researcher, Rahma aims to better situate computer science within the realm of global education and policy, with a specialized emphasis on developing countries in the East African region.

Sabrina Ali Jamal-Eddine

Sabrina Ali Jamal-Eddine (she/her/hers) is an Arab disabled Spoken Word Poet, Registered Nurse, and University Fellow currently pursuing her PhD in Nursing with a focus on Disability Studies at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Sabrina’s research focuses on the use of Spoken Word Poetry as an innovative form of critical narrative pedagogy to educate healthcare students, instructors, and practitioners about identity-based oppression and the consequential identity-based health inequities with a focus on ableism and disability justice.

Yehya Abuzaid

Yehya Abuzaid is a 2021 graduate from UC Berkeley's Global Studies program. There he pursued an undergraduate honors thesis where he analyzed the motivations, strategies, and consequences of foreign intervention in the country of Yemen. Prior to his thesis, Yehya worked with the Berkeley Peace and Justice Commission and the Police Review Commission to research transparency mechanisms for the Berkeley police department and improve civilian oversight.

Sophie Brion Neely

Sophie Brion Neely is a justice-centered playwright, researcher, and educator who recently earned her degree in Ethnicity, Race, & Migration from Yale University. As an undergraduate, she served as the editor-in-chief of the Elm City Echo, an advocacy-oriented literary magazine that develops the work of unhoused community members, and worked as a residential counselor for Professor Allyson Hobbs’s course, “Racial Identity in the American Imagination,” at the Stanford Humanities Institute.

Lamisa Mustafa

The daughter of Bangladeshi-Muslim immigrants, Lamisa Mustafa is a recent honors graduate of Southern Methodist University (SMU), where she received bachelor’s degrees in Human Rights, Sociology, and Public Policy. Serving with the SMU Human Rights Program, Lamisa created opportunities for students to advance human rights awareness and activism on campus, in North Texas, and across the United States.

Kendall Stephenson

Kendall Stephenson is a labor organizer, first year PhD student-worker in the Economics department at Colorado State University, and a Research Assistant at the Regional Economic Development Institute (REDI). Kendall is interested in how structural changes in the economy necessitate varying degrees of government responses, particularly at the state and local level, and how these responses affect economic and social wellbeing. For that reason, his primary research interests relate to labor market policy and public finance.

Katerine Perez

Katerine Perez (she/hers) is a recent graduate of the University of California, Berkeley with a degree in Sociology. Her love for Sociology and research stems from her personal experiences as a first-generation student and woman of color. These identities motivated her to complete a Senior Honors Thesis, which investigates Latinx identity formation and boundary work at highly-selective universities.