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Tuesday, December 08, 2020 - 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM

ARHU has launched a new campaign to address race, equity and justice in its curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. As part of its goals to increase awareness of issues of systemic racism, equity and inequality, the Dean will be hosting a colloquium and conversation series all year long. The colloquia introduce audiences to the expertise that ARHU faculty have in these key areas and allow for dialogue with the experts and the Dean to engage in ideas for social action and change. 

Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM

ARHU has launched a new campaign to address race, equity and justice in its curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. As part of its goals to increase awareness of issues of systemic racism, equity and inequality, the Dean will be hosting a colloquium and conversation series all year long. The colloquia introduce audiences to the expertise that ARHU faculty have in these key areas and allow for dialogue with the experts and the Dean to engage in ideas for social action and change. 

Friday, November 06, 2020 - 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM

ARHU has launched a new campaign to address race, equity and justice in its curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. As part of its goals to increase awareness of issues of systemic racism, equity and inequality, the Dean will be hosting a colloquium and conversation series all year long. The colloquia introduce audiences to the expertise that ARHU faculty have in these key areas and allow for dialogue with the experts and the Dean to engage in ideas for social action and change. 

Monday, October 26, 2020 - 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM

ARHU has launched a new campaign to address race, equity and justice in its curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. As part of its goals to increase awareness of issues of systemic racism, equity and inequality, the Dean will be hosting a colloquium and conversation series all year long. The colloquia introduce audiences to the expertise that ARHU faculty have in these key areas and allow for dialogue with the experts and the Dean to engage in ideas for social action and change. 

Tuesday, October 06, 2020 - 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM

ARHU has launched a new campaign to address race, equity and justice in its curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. As part of its goals to increase awareness of issues of systemic racism, equity and inequality, the Dean will be hosting a colloquium and conversation series all year long. The colloquia introduce audiences to the expertise that ARHU faculty have in these key areas and allow for dialogue with the experts and the Dean to engage in ideas for social action and change. 

9/15/20

By Jessica Weiss ’05

College and university leaders who are committed to promoting equity, inclusion and success for underrepresented minority (URM) faculty in their institutions can now access "Equity and Inclusion: Effective Practices and Responsive Strategies," a guidebook co-authored by Distinguished University Professor Ruth Enid Zambrana, professor in the Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. 

Released in July 2020, the 30-page guidebook highlights practices that can be incorporated and instituted across research universities to make them more equitable and inclusive; includes a list of 50 essential readings on URM and gender equity; and offers recommendations on hiring and retention practices, mentoring practices, work-family-life balance and pathways to tenure and promotion. It concludes with specific recommendations and strategic actions for senior leadership to ensure institutional accountability. 

“This is a timely and critical resource for all college and university leaders,” Zambrana said. “Equity driven solutions to promote success for URM faculty will mean success for the institution as a whole.”  

The guidebook stems from Zambrana’s 2018 book “Toxic Ivory Towers: The Consequences of Work Stress on the Health of Underrepresented Minority Faculty” and a conference held at the University of Pennsylvania in September 2018, entitled “Changing the National Conversation: Inclusion and Equity,” which was convened in partnership with Swarthmore College and the Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity (CRGE) at Maryland, of which Zambrana is the director. At the conference, more than 100 college and university chancellors, presidents, provosts and other senior colleagues discussed successful strategies and practices for producing, promoting and creating equity and inclusion on campuses with a focus on the recruitment, retention and promotion of traditionally and historically underrepresented minorities. 

Today URM groups constitute about one-third of the U.S. population, but URM faculty (Black, Latino and Native American) represent just 10.2 percent of all faculty in the more than 4,000 colleges and universities in the U.S.

“URM faculty augment the excellence and innovative spirit of universities because they bring different life experiences and theoretical and methodological perspectives that shape their teaching, mentoring and research projects,” Zambrana said. “They indeed bring ‘diversity of thought’ that embraces values of equity, inclusion and social equality and provide a more robust, cogent, meaningful and comprehensive educational experience for all students.” 

health guidebook front cover

The guidebook is being made available by the University of Maryland’s Consortium on Race, Gender and Ethnicity and the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, among other institutions; the American Council on Education will also disseminate sections. 

The guidebook’s other authors include Anita AllenEve HigginbothamJoAnn Mitchell and Antonia Villarruel of the University of Pennsylvania and Debra J. Pérez of Simmons University. 

To access the guidebook, click here.

9/11/20

By ARHU Staff 

The College of Arts and Humanities (ARHU) at the University of Maryland is launching a yearlong colloquium and conversation series, hosted by Dean Bonnie Thornton Dill, to introduce audiences to faculty expertise on issues of systemic racism, inequality and justice. The events are free and will take place virtually. 

The first colloquium will be held Wednesday, Sept. 16 from 9-10 a.m. and features Perla Guerrero, associate professor of American studies and U.S. Latina/o studies. Guerrero’s talk will engage the audience in a discussion on racialization, the different ways Latinx communities are perceived and the way these communities address justice and equity. It will be followed by a conversation with the dean and a Q&A. 

Upcoming talks will focus on topics ranging from ‘racial battle fatigue’ in Black theatre and culture to incarcerated women and media activism. A full list with links to register is available below.  

“This series provides a special opportunity for people to engage with ARHU faculty members, whose expertise on aspects of race, inequality and justice can promote thoughtful conversations and generate ideas for social action and change,” said Thornton Dill. 

The series is part of a new college-wide campaign to address racism, inequality and justice in curriculum, scholarship, programming and community engagement. Among other actions, a recently announced 21-person Committee on Race, Equity and Justice, led by Associate Dean Linda Aldoory and made up of faculty, staff and graduate students, will serve to advise the dean on goals related to the eradication and dismantling of structural racism and on strategies for ensuring equity and social justice throughout the college, campus and community. 

The full list of Fall 2020 colloquia is as follows (spring dates coming soon): 

  • Sept. 16, Perla Guerrero, associate professor in the Department of American Studies, will discuss: “How Latinx communities organize for justice and equity and/or experience inequality in different work spaces.” Learn more and register.
  • Oct. 6, Marisa Parham, professor in the Department of English and director for the African American Digital Humanities initiative (AADHUM), will discuss: “Purpose, Frivolity, Futures: What, really, is inclusion?” Learn more and register.
  • Oct. 26, Scot Reese, professor in the School of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies, will discuss: “Racial ‘Battle Fatigue’ in Black theatre and culture.” Learn more and register.
  • Nov. 5, Julius Fleming, Jr., assistant professor in the Department of English, will discuss: “His book, ‘Black Patience: Performance, Civil Rights, and the Refusal to Wait for Freedom.’” Learn more and register.
  • Nov. 17, Tamanika Ferguson, presidential postdoc in the Department of Communication, will discuss: “The power of voice and resilience: incarcerated women and media activism.” Learn more and register.
  • Dec. 8, Richard Bell, professor in the Department of History, will discuss: “African American political culture, and his book: ‘Stolen: Five Free Boys Kidnapped Into Slavery and Their Astonishing Odyssey Home.’” Learn more and register.

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