One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
An open, peer-led meeting for those in recovery, friends and family of people with substance-related challenges, and anyone contemplating a change in their relationship to substances. All are welcome!
Wednesdays from 3:30-4:30pm in JR Howard 114.
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
An open, peer-led meeting for those in recovery, friends and family of people with substance-related challenges, and anyone contemplating a change in their relationship to substances. All are welcome!
Wednesdays from 3:30-4:30pm in JR Howard 114.
The Office of Equity and Inclusion plans to discuss York, and how his journey still impacts our lives and our L&C community.
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Join us to discuss Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, by Gabrielle Zevin, this year’s Everybody Reads selection from Multnomah County Library.
Tuesday, March 19 at 3:30 in Watzek Library Classroom 245. Refreshments will be served! RSVP requested.
Please join Associate Professor of History and Department Chair Reiko Hillyer discuss her latest book, A Wall is Just a Wall: The Permeability of the Prison in 20th Century America (Duke University Press, February 16, 2024) in conversation with Jerry Harp. Influenced by her work teaching in the Inside-Out program, Hillyer traces the decline of practices that used to connect incarcerated people more regularly to the free world.
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) are excited to continue our monthly Faculty & Staff: Inclusive Practice Strategies this spring.
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Join SALSA (South Asian Law Student Association), BLSA (Black Law Student Association), LLS (Latinx Law Society), APALSA (Asian Pacific American Law Student Association), MLSA (Minority Law Student Association), OAILSA (Oregon Arab Iranian Law Student Association), and NALSA (Native American Law Students Association) for a Multi-Cultural Fair with food, art, and performances to showcase the different cultures represented at our campus! RSVP here.
Calling all LC Seniors! Schedule your appointment in the Career Center between March 11th and 15th to receive your gift!
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Come meet and mingle with fellow LGBTQ+ students, staff and faculty! Open to all.
Thursday, March 14th, 2024 from 3:45-5:00 pm in Stamm
Join Professor Steverson and Benjamin as they talk about their personal experiences in the law as women and women of color. This is a safe space to ask questions, share experiences, concerns and find community. All are welcome!
Calling all LC Seniors! Schedule your appointment in the Career Center between March 11th and 15th to receive your gift!
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
An open, peer-led meeting for those in recovery, friends and family of people with substance-related challenges, and anyone contemplating a change in their relationship to substances. All are welcome!
Wednesdays from 3:30-4:30pm in JR Howard 114.
Come have a discussion with Ashley Needham and Chloe Clay, two alums, talk about their experiences working in public defense. As public defenders they are serving marginalized and often BIPOC communities. Although zealous advocacy is aspirational, being a White savior is not and neither is BIPOC fatigue. So how do we avoid it? Come join the discussion. All are welcome!
Join NALSA for our annual Celebrating Celilo Falls event. Hear creation stories from Ed Edmo an elder and storyteller from the Shoshone Bannock Tribe. Learn about Ed’s experience growing up in Celilo Falls– a sacred tribal fishing and trading ground– before the Falls were destroyed by the Dalles Dam.
Calling all LC Seniors! Schedule your appointment in the Career Center between March 11th and 15th to receive your gift!
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Calling all LC Seniors! Schedule your appointment in the Career Center between March 11th and 15th to receive your gift!
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Join IME in a three-part series that aims to critically engage white students with their identity in a way that allows them to dismantle the whiteness that is embedded in our US culture and to equip them to become active change-makers in racial equity.
Join a small, racially diverse group of CAS students to participate in a pilot 2-dialogue series to explore Race, Identity and Community at LC.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
Calling all LC Seniors! Schedule your appointment in the Career Center between March 11th and 15th to receive your gift!
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Day 3 of the 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium!
This year’s symposium focuses on the ways in which digital technology, internet platforms, and online spaces have shaped and been shaped by understandings and expressions of gender and sexuality.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, multidisciplinary panels, workshops, readings, and other events, as well as an art exhibition. View the complete event schedule for details.
Please join us for a Gender Studies Symposium keynote presentation by Moya Bailey, associate professor at Northwestern University and author of Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women’s Digital Resistance.
What Are Gender and Sexuality in the World We Want?
Presentation description: This presentation takes the form of a short story that explores gender and sexuality at the end of the anthropocene. Gather round to hear a tale of hope, even as the world as we know it is at an end. Dr. Bailey will explore what kinds of digital worlds we are dreaming in the aftermath of apocalypse and how our attachment to “identities” might help or harm our process on this unfolding path.
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Day 2 of the 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium!
This year’s symposium focuses on the ways in which digital technology, internet platforms, and online spaces have shaped and been shaped by understandings and expressions of gender and sexuality.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, multidisciplinary panels, workshops, readings, and other events, as well as an art exhibition. View the complete event schedule for details.
Please join us for a Gender Studies Symposium keynote presentation by Avery Dame-Griff, lecturer at Gonzaga University and author of The Two Revolutions: A History of the Transgender Internet.
When It Was Ours: A Queer and Trans Counterhistory of the Internet
Presentation description: In this talk, Dr. Dame-Griff explores three capsule histories of queer and trans services and communities from the early years of the nascent Internet. Each of these stories represents not only a path not taken but also an alternative model for our “digital world,” one where accessibility, community investment, and shared governance are prioritized over profit. Even with rising outside pressure, their creators and users resisted the capitalistic impulse to see the web as solely a transactional medium focused on usability and hyper-optimization. By the end, we’ll consider how these stories inspire us to rethink why we connect online.
An open, peer-led meeting for those in recovery, friends and family of people with substance-related challenges, and anyone contemplating a change in their relationship to substances. All are welcome!
Wednesdays from 3:30-4:30pm in JR Howard 114.
Join the NLG for this Week of Abolition event, a panel with Ashlee Albies, Maya Rinta, and Venetia Mayhew on defending protesters, political prisoners, and oversentencing. Snacks served. Email nlg@lclark.edu to join our mailing list.
One important part of the symposium is an art exhibit of work from community members from Lewis & Clark and beyond. The 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium art exhibit encourages viewers to reflect on their own and others’ experiences around gender and digital technology.
This year’s exhibit includes a physical gallery in the Watzek Library atrium and an online gallery.
Curated by L&C students Isha Elboctorcy ’24, McKenna Jones ’24, and Cecily Munster ’26
Day 1 of the 43rd Annual Gender Studies Symposium!
This year’s symposium focuses on the ways in which digital technology, internet platforms, and online spaces have shaped and been shaped by understandings and expressions of gender and sexuality.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, multidisciplinary panels, workshops, readings, and other events, as well as an art exhibition. View the complete event schedule for details.
Join a small, racially diverse group of LC staff and faculty to participate in a pilot 3-dialogue series to explore Race, Identity and Community at LC.
Join IME in a three-part series that aims to critically engage white students with their identity in a way that allows them to dismantle the whiteness that is embedded in our US culture and to equip them to become active change-makers in racial equity.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
The Nielson Social Change Innovation Grant program is facilitated by the Center for Social Change and Community Involvement. The grant supports Lewis & Clark College undergraduate student-initiated projects and is designed to:
Join the NLG for this Week of Abolition event, a panel with Rian Peck (Visible Law) and Alex Meggitt (formerly OJRC) for a discussion on defending the accused and continuing to defend the incarcerated. Snacks served. Email nlg@lclark.edu to join our mailing list.
In-person Event.
Enjoy delicious foods and fun-filled performances representing the traditions of various regions of the world.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
While intellectual property (IP) law is an established legal framework present in the U.S. and many Western countries, its contributions in balancing among competing policies often falls short of expectations. An Islamic theory of IP law sheds new light on the debate and tension of private property and economic justice. While it is important to understand the implementation of the Islamic theory of IP law in Muslim countries, it should also be noted that its principles can help provide new considerations to shape or reform to Western IP legal systems.
Join us for this important conversation about Hope and the Climate Crisis. A collaboration between Oregon Humanities Conversation Project and the Center for Social Change and Community Involvement.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Please join us for a webinar titled Connections Are Everything: Fostering Campus Cultures of Learning, Belonging, and Thriving on Wednesday, February 28, from 11 a.m. – noon. Registrants will also receive a recording to watch at a later time.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
IME presents: Self-care for Social Justice Advocates
Tuesday, February 27th from 5:30-6:30pm
IME Suite (3rd floor of Fowler Student Center, by the spiral staircase)
Join the Ethnic Studies program in welcoming Professor Matt Guterl (Brown University) to talk about his memoir, Skinfolk, a haunting, poignant story of growing up in a multiracial family.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
In honor of Black History Month, the Black Student Union and the Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement Office are excited to introduce On the Hill: Black Marketplace, an opportunity on-campus for Black-identifying students, staff, faculty, and external vendors to sell their crafts/goods to our L&C community.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Do you consider yourself an LGBTQ+ ally? Want to learn more about how to be an ally? Come to the How to Be a Good Ally Workshop on February 22nd from 6-7 pm in the IME Suite.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Ben Crump, renowned civil rights and personal injury attorney and one of the nation’s foremost lawyers and advocates for social justice, will present the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Endowed Lecture on February 20 at the Agnes Flanagan Chapel on the campus of Lewis & Clark College.
Mr. Crump will be joined by Lewis & Clark Law Professor Robert Klonoff for a Q/A format. Professor Klonoff has worked closely with Ben Crump as co-counsel in ongoing litigation on behalf of the family of Henrietta Lacks against companies that profited by the use of Henrietta’s “immortal cell line.”
This is a hybrid event.
To attend remotely via Zoom, please RSVP here.
There is still space at the lecture in-person, please let us know you are coming: RSVP here
Attendance at the event qualifies for 1.0 MCLE “Access to Justice” credit. (RSVP and advance request for CLE required.)
The Martin Luther King Jr. Endowed Lecture Series
Each year Lewis & Clark Law School hosts an endowed lecture honoring the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made possible by a generous grant from alums Jacqueline Alexander ’07 and Lee Matthews ’73. The mission is to bring internationally recognized legal scholars, practitioners, jurists and civil rights leaders to Lewis & Clark to present a lecture to our law school community on issues of diversity, race relations, tolerance, and equal rights.
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) are excited to continue our monthly Faculty & Staff: Inclusive Practice Strategies this spring.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Los Angeles County operates the largest jail system in the United States, which incarcerates more people than any other nation on Earth. At a cost of nearly $1 billion annually, more than 20,000 people are caged every night in L.A.’s county jails and city lockups. But not every neighborhood is equally impacted by L.A.’s massive jail system. In fact, L.A.’s nearly billion-dollar jail budget is largely committed to incarcerating many people from just a few neighborhoods. In some communities, more than one-million dollars is spent annually on incarceration. These are L.A.’s Million Dollar Hoods.
Led by Prof. Kelly Lytle Hernández, the Million Dollar Hoods (MDH) research team maps and monitors how much local authorities spend on locking up residents in L.A.’s Million Dollar Hoods. Led by Black and Brown women and driven by formerly-incarcerated persons as well as residents of Million Dollar Hoods, the MDH team also provides the only full and public account of the leading causes of arrest in Los Angeles, revealing that drug possession and DUIs are the top booking charges in L.A.’s Million Dollar Hoods. Collectively, this data counters the popular misunderstanding that incarceration advances public safety by removing violent, serious offenders from the streets. In fact, local authorities are investing millions in locking up the County’s most economically vulnerable, geographically isolated, and racially marginalized populations for drug and alcohol-related crimes. This talk provides an introduction to the Million Dollar Hoods project, method, and impact.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
IME and BSU are excited to invite you to take part in our Black History Month Dinner: Being Black - Beyond the Academy.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
We are excited to announce Professor Kenneth Andrews will visit Lewis & Clark College as a Phi Beta Kappa visiting scholar. During his visit, Dr. Andrews will give a public lecture open to all on Thursday, February 15th from 5:00-6:30 p.m. in Gregg Pavilion. His talk is entitled Lessons of the Civil Rights Movement and Black Freedom Struggle.
Submit your LinkedIn profile to join the Challenge and enter our raffle to win a $50 gift card! Visit the Career Center website for details.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
For Student Leaders on Campus: Join us as we learn facilitation techniques for leading our peers with educators from All Together Now, an organization committed to participatory learning.
Join us as we cheer on LC Women’s and Men’s Basketball teams while raising money for a good cause! Snacks available for purchase. All proceeds will be donated to the Harper’s Playground.
IME, Student Counseling Center, and Great Expectations Mentorship program will be hosting a BHM event highlighting the importance of expressing gratitude in relationships. There will be crafts for making cards and writing letters as well as some chocolates/candy.
When: February 8th, 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm
Where: IME Suite
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) office presents the Social Justice Tour.
Do Good Trouble Workshop Series: RSVP HERE
IME and BSU are excited to invite you to take part in our Portland Art Museum Field Trip.
Join us to learn about upcoming programs and events!
Join the Spring 2024 Awakened Awareness Monday or Thursday Cohort for undergrads! Learn more about Awakened Awareness and the optional research study participation in an Info Session on Thursday, Jan. 25 in the Gregg Pavilion. The info session will be from 3:30-4pm, with a general Q & A following. Facilitators will be present until 5pm to answer any questions.
If this time doesn’t work for you, please contact Hilary at hmhiman@lclark.edu to arrange a brief orientation prior to the first workshop.
This event is sponsored by the Law School DEI Committee, as part of our continuing Opt-In series. Lunch will be provided to the first 50 individuals who register.
The artist will perform live at Armory theatre off-campus. Below is the schedule. *First 8 tickets are sponsored.
1:00 I Front of fowler
2:00 I Armory theatre
Questions? Accommodations? multicultrual@lclark.edu
Liberty and justice for all? In this conversation, we’ll examine what the word “justice” means and examine how it’s applied in Oregon. With the aid of local and national hip hop music videos and lyrics, we will examine the history of our state, legal anti-Blackness, and resistance movements.
Join us and learn more about the LGBTQIA2S+ employee resource group on the Graduate School campus in York 101.
2023 Bessie Award-winning South African artist Albert Ibokwe Khoza is coming to Portland for their The Black Circus of the Republic of Bantu performance. Khoza pays witness to the ongoing pain caused by historical and persistent racism, while also engaging in collective healing and the reclamation of dignity. The Black Circus wields theater as a weapon and a salve, turning its gaze outward in service of healing the soul and reclaiming dignity through the power of confrontational art.
MLK Day is a National Day of Service and the only federal holiday recognizing a Black leader. Join us in celebrating part of MLK’s Legacy by committing to serve your community!
Join us in honoring MLK and the legacy of Black Community through Unity. Pre-register to participate in our Volunteer Day, Do Good Trouble Summit and Music as a Tool For Justice Conversation Project!
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) are excited to introduce a new initiative titled: “Faculty/Staff: Inclusive Practice Strategies.” Each month in the semester, our offices will jointly host an opportunity to talk about any challenging situations that may have occurred in the classroom, in your office, during an event, with a student, or a peer.
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
A drop-in mental health check-in; not group therapy but a safe place where students can drop in with questions about mental health, how to cope with stressful events around them, and to gain skills for coping. Every 2nd at 4th Thursday, 5:30-6:30 in the lounge space in the IME office, Room 324 of the Fowler Student Center
Learn more about Campus Living, Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement, and NSO/First Year Experience student leader positions!
Drop by our tabling session in the Trail Room to learn more about student leadership positions for 2024-25!
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Please bring food, clothing, books, and household items to the SWAP SPOT in Roberts 112 (formerly Maggie’s).
Join friends in the Office of Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and try out your knowledge of Queer Icons, History, Random Facts, and Pop Culture (film, media, music).
There will be prizes! Compete either individually or as a team! Open to anyone, you don’t have to identify as LGBTQIA* to participate
Join us for coffee, cocoa, carbs, and conversation!
Intisar Abioto will be presenting as part of the Art Department annual Visiting Artist Program
Lunch & Learn: All About our LC Community (fun with numbers)
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) are excited to introduce a new initiative titled: “Faculty/Staff: Inclusive Practice Strategies.” Each month in the semester, our offices will jointly host an opportunity to talk about any challenging situations that may have occurred in the classroom, in your office, during an event, with a student, or a peer.
LC History and Asian Studies are honored to welcome the Atomic Bomb Survivors Hope & Healing Tour group from Nagasaki, Japan. Join us to hear from first, second, and third-generation atomic bomb survivors for first-hand accounts of the reality of the atomic bombings, their aftermath on current and future generations, tragedy caused by war, and the crucial value of peace.
Join us at the concluding event of the 20th Annual Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies: Race Monologues
Each year a different group of L&C students writes an original series of personal narratives to share their feelings, experiences, and understandings of race, ethnicity, and identity.
Learn more about the history of Race Monologues and see the full list of this year’s keynote speakers, art exhibit, and event schedule.
This year’s Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies is titled Future Forward, and revolves around reimagining society to build a liberating and just future.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, panels, workshops, and other events exploring what it means to integrate BIPOC futurism(s) into the world we create, whether fantastical or real.
Details on the symposium website.
Please join us at the 20th Annual Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies for a keynote presentation by Ingrid LaFleur:
Preparing for Afrotopia
Presentation abstract: How do we prepare for a collective future if anti-Blackness continues to haunt us? How do we trust the future vision being created? What tools do we need to not only anticipate the future also shift its direction? These are the questions central to Ingrid LaFleur’s current research and justice-oriented experimentation. For her keynote, LaFleur will journey the nonlinear pathways to achieving decolonized futures and discuss the steps to building an afrofuture that serves humanity and their ecological home.
ASL interpretation will be provided.
Remote streaming will be available at the Zoom link posted to the symposium website. No registration is required to attend in person or stream remotely.
After the talk, please join us for a reception in the Council Chamber foyer.
A drop-in mental health check-in; not group therapy but a safe place where students can drop in with questions about mental health, how to cope with stressful events around them, and to gain skills for coping. Every 2nd at 4th Thursday, 5:30-6:30 in the lounge space in the IME office, Room 324 of the Fowler Student Center
The 20th Annual Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies is titled “Future Forward” and revolves around reimagining society to build a liberating and just future.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, panels, workshops, and other events exploring what it means to integrate BIPOC futurism(s) into the world we create, whether fantastical or real.
Please join us at the 20th Annual Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies for a keynote presentation by Aya de León, an award-winning writer, speaker, and advocate whose work is at the intersection of social identity and climate justice.
The Apocalypse Is Not Coming: Afrofuturism vs. the Climate Crisis
ASL interpretation will be provided.
Remote streaming will be available at the Zoom link posted to the symposium website. No registration is required to attend in person or stream remotely.
After the talk, please join us for a book signing in the Council Chamber foyer. The speakers’ books will be available for purchase.
Please join the IME suite in celebrating First Generation Celebration Day.
Welcoming all students who identify as a First Generation student. Defining First-Generation is never a simple task as there can be multiple definitions. L&C defines First-Generation college students as someone whose parents or guardians did not earn a 4-year degree.
Hope to see you all there!
The 20th Annual Ray Warren Symposium on Race and Ethnic Studies is titled “Future Forward” and revolves around reimagining society to build a liberating and just future.
Join us for three days of keynote presentations, panels, workshops, and other events exploring what it means to integrate BIPOC futurism(s) into the world we create, whether fantastical or real.
Portland United Against Hate and the Coalition for Racial and Educational Justice, brought to you by Portland Bureau of Transportation are partnering to host a 3 day virtual event to provide resources and tools to those impacted by the hate our communities endure on a daily basis. The Healing Summit is the Coalition’s response to an increase in hate-fueled biased attacks directed at Black, Indigenous and people of color, LGBTQ2SAI+ communities, immigrants, migrants and refugees, and in particular our youth, that have taken place over the last year.
Portland United Against Hate and the Coalition for Racial and Educational Justice, brought to you by Portland Bureau of Transportation are partnering to host a 3 day virtual event to provide resources and tools to those impacted by the hate our communities endure on a daily basis. The Healing Summit is the Coalition’s response to an increase in hate-fueled biased attacks directed at Black, Indigenous and people of color, LGBTQ2SAI+ communities, immigrants, migrants and refugees, and in particular our youth, that have taken place over the last year.
The Beth Miller Lounge will be witness to the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat.
In-Person event
A drop-in mental health check-in; not group therapy but a safe place where students can drop in with questions about mental health, how to cope with stressful events around them, and to gain skills for coping. Every 2nd at 4th Thursday, 5:30-6:30 in the lounge space in the IME office, Room 324 of the Fowler Student Center
An opportunity for students to have conversation with L&C faculty in Ethnic Studies and Gender Studies.
This event is sponsored by the Law School DEI Committee, as part of our continuing Opt-In series.
Topic: Fall Into Self-Care
The Inclusion & Multicultural Engagement (IME) and Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) are excited to introduce a new initiative titled: “Faculty/Staff: Inclusive Practice Strategies.” Each month in the semester, our offices will jointly host an opportunity to talk about any challenging situations that may have occurred in the classroom, in your office, during an event, with a student, or a peer.