Past Events

What DaMaris Hill is Thinking About Now

CSREA - Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

A core component of CSREA’s mission is supporting the development of cutting-edge, collaborative, intellectual work. “What I Am Thinking About Now” is an informal workshop/seminar series where faculty and advanced students present recently published works and works in progress for early-stage feedback and development.Read More

Día de los Muertos Community Celebration

Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology

It’s time once again for the celebration of the Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead). This is a time of love, honor and memory. It is not the Mexican Halloween! In the spirit of this popular Mexican holiday, everybody is invited to partake in this joyful celebration of the family and friends who passed away. Learn about the rich traditions and customsRead More

What Damali Britton is Thinking About Now

CSREA - Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

A core component of CSREA’s mission is supporting the development of cutting-edge, collaborative, intellectual work. “What I Am Thinking About Now” is an informal workshop/seminar series where faculty and advanced students present recently published works and works in progress for early-stage feedback and development.Read More

LeaRRn Grand Rounds: Ericka Merriwether presents, Confronting Racism in Pain and Rehabilitation Research: Reframing and Reimagining Study Designs

LeaRRn: Learning Health Systems Rehabilitation Research Network

Ericka Merriwether, PT, DPT, PhD presents Confronting Racism in Pain and Rehabilitation Research: Reframing and Reimagining Study Designs

Racism is a global determinant of health outcomes. Lack of awareness of or an unwillingness to examine the significant impact of racism on health underpins research questions and study design choices that often deepen inequities in painRead More

New Book Talk: Racist Love, Asian Abstraction and the Pleasures of Fantasy

CSREA - Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

What Kiki Nyagah is Thinking About Now

CSREA - Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

A core component of CSREA’s mission is supporting the development of cutting-edge, collaborative, intellectual work. “What I Am Thinking About Now” is an informal workshop/seminar series where faculty and advanced students present recently published works and works in progress for early-stage feedback and development.Read More

Family Weekend Gallery Night at CSREA

(CSREA) Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America

Solidarity, CSREA’s Imagining Social Justice Art Exhibit, highlights works by over 20 artists that build and sustain allyships across diverse, intersectional identities. The collection invites us to reflect upon all that has brought us to this moment and to plumb our reserves of hope as we collectively strive to build a more just world.

Join us at Lippitt House to view theRead More

Structural Violence in Health Care: The Role of the Academic Institution

CSREA - Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America
, 130

Structural Violence in Health Care: The Role of the Academic Institution

 

CSREA’s Faculty Grant program supports ongoing research by convening strong intellectual communities on campus. Brown faculty members submit proposals detailing events, working groups, or otherRead More

STEM Lunch Conversation: Dr. Joel Ducoste

Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America (CSREA)
, 103

Please join us for lunch with Dr. Joel Ducoste, Professor in the Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering Department and the Associate Dean for Faculty Advancement at North Carolina State University. Dr. Ducoste will engage in conversation over lunch about people of color in STEM. What are the opportunities? What are the visible and invisible barriers and hurdlesRead More

Turning Field Work Into a Visual Experience: Where Visual Ethnography and Filmmaking Meet

Department of Anthropology
, McKinney Conference Room

This event is part of Anthropology’s Fall Colloquia Series. 

Raúl Paz-Pastrana is a Mexican immigrant filmmaker, cinematographer, and multimedia creator. His work intersects contemporary art, political documentary, and visual ethnography to explore themes of belonging, alienation, and the concept of “homeRead More

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