Pass the Mic showcases the work of poets at Brown as they grapple with broad questions of race, ethnicity, indigeneity, identity, and experience in their writing. Poets will read their work, discuss their creative processes, and think through poetics as a transformative site for expression.
Co-sponsored by the Department of History, the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America
CSREA is pleased to host a series of professionalization workshops over lunch for graduate students studying race, ethnicity, and indigeneity at Brown.
Tackling the Job Market: A Conversation with Postdoctoral Fellows
Ella Friday and D’Ondre Swails, Postdoctoral Research Associates in Race and Ethnicity
The Department of Africana Studies at Brown University welcomes you into the world of THE BLACK FRONTLINE. The Black Frontline is the largest oral history project of global Black doctors and nurses. On the 3 year anniversary of Covid, the global pandemic which created unprecedented upheaval in our lives and transformed us all, The Black Frontline brings you the stories ofRead More
Please join Red Canary Song and CSSJ’s Human Trafficking Research Cluster in celebrating the premiere of Fly in Power, a documentary film centering the issues of Asian migrant massage and sex workers.Read More
Please join Brown’s Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative, the Contemplative Studies Initiative and the Mindfulness Center for a Workshop on Indigenous Mindfulness lead by Prof. Michael Yellow Bird, Ph.D. on March 14th from 9 am - noon at the Brown/RISD Hillel, the Goldfarb Family Social Hall. Please RSVP to anne_heyrman-Read More
Please join Brown’s Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative, the Contemplative Studies Initiative and the Mindfulness Center for a lecture by Professor Michael Yellow Bird, Ph.D. on The Power of Ceremony: Indigenous Contemplative Practices, Neurodecolonization, and Indigenous Mindfulness in Smith-Buonanno, Rm. 106 from 5:30 - 7 pm. For an abstract of the lecture, pleaseRead More
The Third Rail Series aims to address some of the most thorny and contentious social, political, and cultural issues related to race and ethnicity in contemporary society. These accessible public presentations are designed to inform and move public discussion forward.
Linda Villarosa - Under the Skin: The Hidden Toll of Racism on American Lives and on the HealthRead More
Join the Taubman Center as Justin Driver ’97, Robert R. Slaughter Professor of Law and Counselor to the Dean at Yale Law School, delivers the 2023 Alexander Meiklejohn Lecture on March 9th at 5PM. In his lecture, Driver will discuss the recent battle over free speech in the American
classroom.
Justin Driver is a graduate of Brown (Public Policy), Oxford (Marshall ScholarRead More
CSREA is pleased to host a series of professionalization workshops over lunch for graduate students studying race, ethnicity, and indigeneity at Brown.
Publishing: Strategies and Best Practices for Success
Matthew Guterl, Professor of American Studies and Africana Studies