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Jeff Schauer presents at the European Conference on African Studies

Jeff Schauer (History) participated in the European Conference on African Studies in Cologne, Germany. He was a contributor to the panel titled “Wilder Futures? Rewilding and multispecies coexistence in rural Africa” alongside colleagues from Germany, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. Schauer’s paper was titled “Chongololo: The Children’s Wildlife Magazine and the future of conservation and the wild from 1970s Zambia.” 

Chongololo was among other things, Schauer argued, a project for treating hyper-local spaces — the garden, the farm ditch, the city park — as conservation spaces. This challenges traditional conceptions of “rewilding” because the Chongololo movement involved investment in a philosophical or ethical reconceptualisation of the value of spaces, rather than their physical transformation — reconstituting what we consider “wild” rather than reintroducing the “wild” to a somehow diminished landscape. It was also part of the hinge whereby environmentalism in Zambia expanded from focusing solely on wildlife conservation to including concerns about pollution, environmental justice issues, and eventually anthropogenic climate change.

Source: UNLV News Center

Eduardo Robleto’s student Jessica Grifaldo awarded National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

[Eduardo] Robleto (Life Sciences) oversees the National Science Foundation REU Site grant that supports 10 undergraduate students for nine weeks each summer. The program aims to provide the students with hypothesis-based projects that investigate mechanisms of evolution and promote careers in science. 

The REU grant has been funded at UNLV for the past 16 years and Robleto and his colleague Kurt Michael Regner were awarded the grant again this year. It will support a total of 30 students over the next three years. 

Robleto says it has proven to be an effective tool to for increasing the representation of students from historically excluded communities in science overall. And more specifically, to help UNLV recruit graduate students. Grifaldo is now a Ph.D. student at UNLV.

“We need to make stories like Jessica’s more common. We have a diverse campus. It’s easy to find minority undergraduate students in the science fields, but it gets harder at the graduate and Ph.D. levels. It is important to give them a chance. We have great talent at UNLV, but unless we help them, they don’t have a chance to express that talent.”

Read more from “First-Gen Student Awarded National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship

Source: UNLV News Center

Alain Bengochea leads Project PUEBLO

For many school districts in multi-ethnic communities, supporting the needs of English language learners can be like running a never-ending race. The Clark County School District (CCSD) is training for the ultimate marathon. While many districts across the country have significant populations of English language learners, one in every five Southern Nevada public school students is an emergent bilingual. 

To address this challenge, UNLV’s department of early childhood, multilingual, and special education created an accelerated master’s degree program in English language development. The program, Progressive Understandings of Emergent Bilingual Learners Opportunities, also known as Project PUEBLO, started in the Summer of 2022 and graduated its first cohort of 96 teachers in spring 2023 at an impressive 98.9% completion rate….

Alain Bengochea, an assistant professor in the department of early childhood, multilingual, and special education, leads the Project PUEBLO effort.

Read more from “Project PUEBLO: Unlocking the Potential of Emergent Bilingual Students

Source: UNLV News Center

May 2023 Latinx Graduation

The Office of Student Diversity and the LFSA celebrated graduating students at the Latinx Graduation!

From L to R: Margarita Jara (World Languages and Cultures), graduating student Rosa Portillo, and Jorge Galindo (World Languages and Cultures)

LFSA Featured Authors Luncheon

On May 4, 2023 the LFSA hosted a Featured Authors Luncheon. The was the first event in UNLV’s history dedicated to honoring and celebrating Latinx faculty’s knowledge production. Thank you to the dozens of people who showed up to hear Latinx faculty discuss their recently published books:

  • Michael Alarid (History)
    • Hispano Bastion: New Mexican Power in the Age of Manifest Destiny, 1837-1860
  • Carlos Dimas (History)
    • Poisoned Eden: Cholera Epidemics, State-Building, and the Problem of Public Health in Tucumán, Argentina, 1865-1908
  • Roberto Lovato (English)
    • Unforgetting: A Memoir of Family Migration, Gangs, and Revolution in the Americas
  • Cassaundra Rodriguez (Sociology)
    • Contested Americans: Mixed-Status Families in Anti-Immigrant Times
Pictured from L to R: Brittany Paloma Fiedler (co-organizer), Michael Alarid (featured author), Carlos Dimas (featured author and co-organizer), Cassaundra Rodriguez (featured author), and Roberto Lovato (featured author)

This event was sponsored by the Latinx Faculty and Staff Alliance.

The UNLV Borderlands Lecture Series Presents: Michael Wilson and José Antonio Lucero

Michael Wilson (a human rights activist and a member of the Tohono O’odham Nation) and José Antonio Lucero (Associate Professor and Chair of the Latin American and Caribbean Studies Department at the University of Washington) discussed the writing of their forthcoming book What Side Are You On? A Tohono O’odham Life Across Borders (University of North Carolina Press). If you would like to read more from them, please check out Mike Wilson’s 2017 interview with Ecololgies of Migrant Care or José Antonio Lucero’s 2022 article Friction, Conversation, and Contention: Prophetic Politics in the Tohono O’odham Borderlands (available open access through Cambridge University Press).

This event was sponsored by the Latinx Faculty and Staff Alliance, UNLV’s Department of English and the Black Mountain Institute.

Cassaundra Rodriguez publishes book

Cassaundra Rodriguez (Sociology) has a forthcoming book Contested Americans: Mixed-Status Families in Anti-Immigrant Times through the New York University Press.

In Contested Americans, Cassaundra Rodriguez explores how members of mixed-status families experience and articulate belonging in the United States. The sixteen million people in the US who fall under this classification share the fear of a family member’s possible deportation or the anxiety of leaving behind a child or elderly relative.

Rodriguez highlights how different members of the same mixed-status families mediate undocumented statuses while maintaining the collective whole of a family. For many young adults, this may mean negotiating the sponsorship of their immigrant parents, and for the parents, planning for the emotional, physical, and financial well-being of their children in case of deportation.

Contested Americans is a timely book, filled with vivid storytelling, that shows how immigration policies, racism, and privilege collide in the backdrop of the lives of millions of mixed-status families.

Source: NYU Press