Hosted by CSUSB’s Women of Color in Academia, “A Seat at the Table: Intersectionality in Higher Education,” featured a panel discussion focusing on women of color in higher education and two surprise faculty awards.
Jean Peacock (psychology) and Eri Yasuhara (world languages and literatures), the two founders of CSUSB’s University Faculty Mentoring Network were honored, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about a rarely prosecuted hate crime law.
Rocio Gomez, now the Latino Heritage Intern at the Manzanar National Historic Site, will share her research beginning at 2 p.m. in the John M. Pfau Library, PL-4005.
The Center for Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies (CIMES) at Cal State San Bernardino will host a teach-in, “Palestine Is Still the Issue,” on Thursday, May 24, from 6-7:40 p.m., at the university’s College of Education building, room CE-105.
“Conversations on the Way: The Asafo Edition” host Nana Gyamfi interviewed Ahlam Muhtaseb, CSUSB professor of communication studies, about “1948: Creation and Catastrophe,” the documentary she co-produced and co-directed with Andy Trimlett.
Comm studies students of Lilana Conlisk Gallegos shared a multi-media project on diversity, Kate Liszka wrote on her preservation work in Egypt, and anthropology professor emerita Frances Berdan contributed to research on turquoise in Mesoamerica.
Amy van Schagen (psychology); David Yaghoubian (history); and Timothy Usher (physics), Kimberly Cousins (chemistry and biochemistry) and Renwu Zhang (chemistry and biochemistry).
The journal is an annual publication of the university’s Alpha Delta Nu Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta National History Honor Society, and is sponsored by the CSUSB Department of History.
Vipin Gupta (business), Tiffany Jones (history) and Arianna Huhn (anthropology) were among 21 California State University faculty members selected to attend the “Ghana Calls” faculty seminar in Accra, Ghana, recently.