In addition to presenting the documentary by Shakti Butler, Project Rebound will host an orientation session sponsored by the Osher Adult Re-Entry Student Success Center.
In|Dignity, aimed at exploring and dismantling intolerance, will mark the end of its nearly yearlong run with the presentation of an original theatrical presentation it inspired.
Arianna Huhn (anthropology and director of the museum), Annika Anderson (sociology), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Michael Stull (entrepreneurship) are included in news coverage of various topics.
The end of the CSUSB Anthropology Museum exhibit In|Dignity was officially marked with an original production based on those who contributed stories to it.
CSUSB’s John M. Pfau Library will host a talk, “We Carry the Border on our Bodies: Bridging and Maneuvering Immigration Status Barriers in U.S. and Canadian Postsecondary Education,” by Paloma E. Villegas, assistant professor of sociology.
Annika Anderson (sociology), was interviewed for an article on Project Rebound, which she directs, and Brian Levin (criminal justice), was quoted in an article on ProPublica’s Documenting Hate project.
“The House I Live In,” a documentary film that examines the profound human rights implications of U.S. drug policy, will be shown on April 4 at the John M. Pfau Library, PL-5005.
Presented by the Institute for Child Development and Family Relations, Elliott’s talk will take place in the Santos Manuel Student Union Events Center, and complements the Anthropology Museum exhibit “smallasaGIANT,” set to run April 15-June 15.
Elliott, who developed the “Blue Eyes/Brown Eyes” exercise after the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., showed how people can recognize and identify disparities in the ways in which power is assigned and maintained.