Social Justice Institute Past Events

2022 AAPI Heritage Month Conference

A conference with events from 6:30-7:30 PM on May 2nd, 3rd, and 4th celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. All events will be held virtually on Zoom and require prior registration in order to attend them. Registration links are below each event listing.

Monday, May 2, 2022, 6:30-7:30 PM

American Dreaming: A Film Screening and Talk with Matthew Hashiguchi

Join us for a discussion with Matthew Hashiguchi, a filmmaker, photographer, and Assistant Professor in Multimedia Film & Production at Georgia Southern University. He will talk about his career and work in documentary filmmaking. His first feature-length documentary, Good Luck Soup, was broadcast nationally on PBS World's America ReFramed, received a 2016 Documentary Fund Award from the Center for Asian American Media and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. We will screen his short documentary, American Dreaming, during the talk. The film focuses on the experiences of college-aged DACA recipients in Georgia whose admissions to certain universities was barred by the state due to their immigration status. It was an official selection at a number of film festivals, including the 2018 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival. Art Professor Joseph Tipay will introduce the speaker and moderate the Q&A session at the end of the event.
(View the recording of American Dreaming: A Film Screening and Talk with Matthew Hashiguchi)

Tuesday, May 3, 2022, 6:30-7:30 PM

The Art of Gaming: A Discussion with Professional Artist Donald Phan

Join us for a talk and Q&A featuring Donald Phan, a professional artist who has worked in the video game industry for over fifteen years. He has worked on various projects for EA, Blizzard, Valve, and is currently contracted by Riot Games. Donald holds a BA in Digital Art from George Mason University. Aside from 3D character art, he enjoys film photography, figure drawing, and painting from life. Donald is a first generation American of Chinese and Vietnamese descent and currently resides in Orange County. This talk is co-sponsored by the Bakersfield College Art Department and will be moderated by Joseph Tipay, Professor of Art.
(View the recording of The Art of Gaming: A Discussion with Professional Artist Donald Phan)

Wednesday, May 4, 2022, 6:30-7:30 PM

AAPI Faculty & Staff Spotlight: Kimberly Chin, Professor of Theatre Arts

Join us for a discussion with Professor Kimberly Chin, Professor of Theatre Arts. Professor Chin will talk about her background in theatre and her work at Bakersfield College. Sociology Professor Nicole Carrasco will introduce the speaker and moderate the Q&A session at the end of the event.
(View the Recording of AAPI Faculty & Staff Spotlight with Kimberly Chin)

4th Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference Schedule

The conference concluded on March 31, 2022, Cesar Chavez Day, and all events are now available for viewing on the Bakersfield College Social Justice Institute's YouTube channel. You can watch the entire conference as a complete playlist, or you can refer to the links in the schedule below to watch individual sessions. See you next year for the 5th Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference!
(Watch the complete playlist of the 4th Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference)

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

3:00-4:30 PM Session 1

Conference Welcome by Diego Nieto

Dolores Huerta: Revolution in the Fields/ Revolución en los Campos Student Art Show and Contest, co-sponsored by The Arts Council of Kern
Contest information presented  by Joseph Tipay, Professor of Art with DJ Ome Quetzal Lopez
BCSGA presentation on the student mural project with SGA Officers reflecting on their experience panting two murals with input from artist Shanara Cruz-Wilson
Local artist spotlights on Shanara Cruz-Wilson and Jorge Guillen
(Watch the Conference Welcome and Student Art Presentation)

6:00-7:30 PM Session 2

From Renegade to Triton: Dr. Manuel Vargas' Educational Journey and Work as a Philosopher
Dr. Manuel Vargas is a professor of philosophy at UC San Diego, and he is an alumnus of Bakersfield College. He talks about the trajectory of his career from BC to the present day and discuss his research and work as a philosopher.
(Watch From Renegade to Triton)

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

3:00-4:30 PM Session 3

Panel: Student Activism and Civic Engagement: Past and Present
A panel of current members and alumni from Latinas Unidas, L.U.P.E., and the BC Student Government Association discuss the work they have done and continue to do in their respective communities and how their experiences with BC student orgs have influenced them.
(Watch Student Activism and Civic Engagement)

6:00-7:30 PM Session 4

Panel: New Research in Latina/o Studies
BC faculty members Brenda Valadez (Communication) and Omar Gonzalez (History) and BC alumnus and University of Chicago PhD candidate Linda Esquivel present on their research and work in their respective fields with Dr. Abraham Castillo, Educational Advisor at Bakersfield College, moderating.
(Watch Research in Latina/o Studies)

Thursday, March 31, 2022 - Cesar Chavez Day

3:00-4:30 PM Session 5

Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement: Preserving the Kouns and Clarke Archives at CSU Northridge
Dr. José Luis Benavides, Professor of Journalism and director of the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center at CSU Northridge, discusses his National Endowment for the Humanities project in which he is digitizing and archiving collections of photographs by John Kouns and Emmon Clarke whose work documented the Farmworker Movement in the mid-20th century.
(Watch Digital Stewardship and the Farmworker Movement)

6:00-7:30 PM Session 6

Film Presentation and Panel: Cesar Chavez, the Farmworker Movement, and the Legacy of Ghandi's Commitment to Nonviolent Activism
After premiering a short documentary on the legacy of nonviolent protest in the teachings of Mahatma Ghandi that influenced Farmworker Movement leader Cesar Chavez, a group of students featured in the film and the film's director, Juan Rodriguez, discuss their experiences during the making of the documentary and what they learned as they toured sites of historical importance to the Farmworker Movement in Kern County. Special presentations featuring poet and artist Jorge Guillen and a photographic tribute to Dr. Jess Nieto conclude the conference.
(Watch the Film Presentation and Panel)

Indigenous Influence and Representation in Popular Culture and Media:
A Native American Heritage Month Event

Join us at 6 PM on Tuesday, November 30, 2021, for a panel discussion featuring Native American activists and creatives talking about Indigenous influence and representation in popular culture and media and in their respective fields. This even is free and open to the public and will take place on Zoom.

(View the recording of "Indigenous Influence and Representation in Popular Culture and Media")

2021 AAPI Heritage Month Conference

A single-day conference on Thursday, May 13 celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. All events were held virtually on Zoom and it was co-sponsored by the Levan Center for the Humanities, the Office of Student Life, and the Equal Opportunity & Diversity Advisory Committee of Bakersfield College.

(View the complete playlist of conference videos at the BC Social Justice Institute YouTube channel)

Conference Welcome: Sandy Woo-Cater, Anti-Trafficking Expert

AAPI Faculty & Staff Spotlight: Joseph Tipay, Professor of Art

4:00 - 5:00 PM

Join us for a discussion with Joseph Tipay (Filipino/Chicano-no order), an artist born in Fresno, California who currently teaches in the Bakersfield College art department. He received an M.F.A. from Academy of Arts University, San Francisco in Fine Arts-Printmaking. His prints deal with the struggles of his family and the beauty that comes with adversity. They are also a reflection of the economic, cultural, political, and social climate. Joseph currently works on large-scale woodcuts that investigate the effects of incarceration. He is an award-winning artist, and his work as been exhibited internationally.

(View the recording of the Conference Welcome and the AAPI Faculty & Staff Spotlight with Joseph Tipay)

The Delano Manongs and a Post-Viewing Discussion

5:30 - 6:30 PM

Filmmaker Marissa Aroy, director of the documentary, Delano Manongs: The Forgotten Heroes of the UFW, will join Alex Edillor and Roger Gadiano from the Filipino American National Historical Society and Alex Fabros, retired professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University, to discuss the film and the Filipino/a American experience.

To watch the documentary any time before this event, you will need to follow the link below and create a Vimeo account. Select the Rental option and enter the promotional code "21BC" to stream the documentary for free.

(View the recording of The Delano Manongs and a Post-Viewing Discussion)

Readings and Conversation with Portia Choi

7:00 - 8:00 PM

Portia Choi is a Bakersfield-based poet who immigrated to the United States at the age of 8 from Korea. She lived through the Korean War, and she and her family experienced homelessness and other hardships during and after the conflict. Much of her poetry is autobiographical, and her 2013 book of poems, Sungsook: Korean War Poems, speaks to her early childhood and surviving the war.

(View the recording of Readings and Conversation with Portia Choi)

Energizing Humanities in California's San Joaquin Valley:
A Culminating Conference

A single-day conference on Thursday, April 22, 2021, commemorating this multi-year grant project. This conference is dedicated to the memory of Gerald Haslam, a Bakersfield College alumnus, author, and educator who made the great effort to come back to Bakersfield and serve as the inaugural speaker for this project in the fall of 2017.

Place Based Pedagogy and Our Experiences in the "Energizing Humanities in California's San Joaquin Valley" Grant Project

  • April 22, 2021
  • 3:00-4:30 PM

Project directors Oliver Rosales, Josh Ottum, and Andrew Bond will join members of the current and previous faculty cohorts to talk about their experiences during the run of the programming and how it has influenced their work in the classroom.
(Watch the recording of the Placed Based Pedagogy panel discussion)

Narrating the Southern San Joaquin Valley: Journalism and the Past and Future of Storytelling in the Region

  • April 22, 2021
  • 4:30-6:00 PM

In a region that is often overlooked in widely circulating narrative representation outside of a handful of literary texts and, what some would likely consider niche, historical monographs, local and regional journalists have been writing the Central Valley for decades, covering diverse topics that are relevant to the everyday lives of local residents and defining the region's place in the larger stories of California and the US.

Panelists:

  • Mark Arax, Journalist and Author of The Dreamt Land: Chasing Water and Dust Across California and other regionally important books
  • Olivia Garcia, Professor of History at BC, Reporter and Columnist for The Bakersfield Californian, and former Editor-In-Chief of Bakersfield Life Magazine
  • Jose Gaspar, Reporter and Columnist for The Bakersfield Californian and Anchor at Telemundo Valle Central
  • Lois Henry, Reporter and Columnist at The Bakersfield Californian, and CEO, SJV Water
  • Joe Moore, President and General Manager of KVPR—Valley Public Radio
  • Reyna Olaguez, Executive Director at Kern Sol News
  • Moderated by Erin Auerbach, Professor of Journalism at Bakersfield College, and Haley Duval, Editor-In-Chief of The Renegade Rip

(Watch the recording of the Narrating the Southern San Joaquin Valley panel discussion)

An Evening with Mark Arax: Central Valley Journalist, Author, and Storyteller

  • April 22, 2021
  • 6:30-8:00 PM

Join us for our keynote speaking event featuring Mark Arax with an introduction and Q&A moderation by Dr. Joshua Ottum. Mark Arax is an author and journalist whose writings on California and the West have received numerous awards for literary nonfiction. He is a former staffer at the Los Angeles Times and The California Sunday Magazine, and his books include a memoir of his father's murder, a collection of essays about the West, and the best-selling The King of California. Much of Arax's work focuses on the Central Valley, and his most recent book, The Dreamt Land: Chasing Water and Dust Across California, uses family memoir, history, and extensive reportage on the land to tell the epic story of California's invention and reinventions through the bending of water.

(Watch the recording of Mark Arax's talk)


The 3rd Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conferece

Monday, March 22, 2021

(View the complete March 22nd program in a YouTube playlist)

Or, you can access the individual segments of the day's program below:

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

(View the complete March 23rd program in a YouTube playlist)

Or, you can access the individual segments of the day's program below:

Day 2 Welcome by Mariachi Teachers for the Bakersfield City School District Migrant Education Program Region 21
(Watch the Day 2 welcome performance)

2:00-3:00 PM

Panel: "Unraveling Latina Stereotypes: Latinas Unidas in Conversation"

Panelists: Gaby Gomez, Jasmine Herrera, Edith Mata, and Aris Trujillo with Esmerelda Ochoa moderating
(Watch "Unraveling Latina Stereotypes: Latinas Unidas in Conversation")

3:00-4:00 PM

Panel: "Public Health, Rural Latina/o/x Populations, and the Regional Covid-19 Response"

Panelists: Emmanuel Alcala, Assistant Director of the Central Valley Health Policy Institute; Jennifer Martinez-Medina, PhD Candidate and Cal Ag Roots Storyteller; Reyna Olaguez, Executive Director of South Kern Sol News; Diana Tellefson Torres, Executive Director of the UFW Foundation; Moderated by Dr. Charles Daramola, Professor of Public Health, Bakersfield College and Isis Forney, RN, Public Health
(Watch "Public Health, Rural Latina/o/x Populations, and the Regional Covid-19 Response")

4:00-5:30 PM

Panel: "Celebrating the Legacy of Cesar Chavez, the Farmworker Movement, and the Ongoing Work of the UFW and Cesar Chavez Foundation"

Panelists: Roberto "El Capitan" Bustos, UFW member and Captain on March from Delano to Sacramento; Paul Chavez, President of the Cesar Chavez Foundation; Aurturo Rodriguez, President Emeritus of the UFW; Teresa Romero, President of the UFW; Moderated by Olivia Garcia, Professor of History at Bakersfield College, and Eric Cardona
(Watch "Celebrating the Legacy of Cesar Chavez, the Farmworker Movement, and the Ongoing Work of the UFW and Cesar Chavez Foundation")

5:30-7:00 PM

National Endowment for the Humanities "Energizing Humanities in California's San Joaquin Valley" Event

Book Talk with LeRoy Chatfield on To Serve the People: My Life Organizing with Cesar Chavez and the Poor
(Watch LeRoy Chatfield's Book Talk)

Overview of Wednesday Events and Closing Remarks by Omar Gonzalez, Professor of History, Bakersfield College
(Watch Professor Gonzalez's Nieto Conference Day 2 closing remarks)

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

(View the complete March 24th program in a YouTube playlist)

Or, you can access the individual segments of the day's program below:

Day 3 Welcome by Mariachi Teachers for the Bakersfield City School District Migrant Education Program Region 21
(Watch the Day 3 welcome performance)

2:00-3:00 PM

Panel: "Achieving the Dream: Equity and Higher Education from Students' Perspectives" (L.U.P.E. panel)

Panelists: Elizabeth Arevalo, Rafael De La Mora, Elizabeth Garcia, Jasmine Herrera, and Erick Jared Plata with Edith Mata moderating
(Watch "Achieving the Dream: Equity and Higher Education from Students' Perspectives")

3:00-4:30 PM

Panel: "(En)Acting Change: Activist and AgitProp Theatre from the Chicano and Farmworkers Movements to Now"

Panelists: Dr. Thomas A. Carrasco, Professor of Ethnic Studies at Santa Barbara City College and Co-Founder of Chicano Secret Service; Dr. Jorge Huerta, Professor Emeritus of Theatre at UC San Diego; Richard Montoya, Co-Founder of Culture Clash; Dr. Elias Serna, Co-Founder of Chicano Secret Service; Moderated by Dr. Abraham Castillo, Transfer Advisor at Bakersfield College, and Edith Mata, student and President of L.U.P.E.
(Watch "(En)Acting Change: Activist and AgitProp Theatre from the Chicano and Farmworkers Movements to Now")

4:30-6:00 PM

Panel: "Teaching Chican@/Latinx: An Intercollegiate, Interdisciplinary Panel on Higher Education, Pedagogy, and the Importance of Ethnic Studies"

Panelists: Professor Octavio Barajas, Ethnic Studies, College of the Sequoias; Dr. Lisette Lasater, English, Palomar College; Professor Javier Llamas, History, Bakersfield College; Dr. Elias Serna, President, Association Mexican American Educators-Santa Monica/West LA; Moderated by Professor Nicole Carrasco, Sociology, Bakersfield College and Isai Aguilar, De Anza College student
(Watch "Teaching Chican@/Latinx...")

Overview of Thursday Events and Closing Remarks by Omar Gonzalez, Professor of History, Bakersfield College
(Watch the Day 3 closing remarks)

Thursday, March 25, 2021

(View the complete March 25th program in a YouTube playlist)

Or, you can access the individual segments of the day's program below:

Final Welcome by Mariachi Teachers for the Bakersfield City School District Migrant Education Program Region 21
(Watch the final welcome from the BCSD Migrant Education Program Region 21)

3:00-4:30 PM

Dolores Huerta: A Revolution in the Fields/Revolución en Los Campos Conversation and Virtual Exhibit Opening

Dolores Huerta and Dr. Taína Caragol, Curator of Latino Art & History at the Smithsonian Institution, will discuss Huerta's life of activism and the Smthsonian Exhibition, Dolores Huerta: A Revolution in the Fields/Revolución en Los Campos, which is currently visiting the Bakersfield College Jones Art Gallery. The exhibit will be available for online virtual tours. This event is co-sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the Dolores Huerta Foundation, the Norman Levan Center for the Humanities at Bakersfield College, and the Wylie and May Louise Jones Art Gallery at Bakersfield College.
(Watch A Conversation with Delores Huerta)

Visit the Dolores Huerta: A Revolution in the Fields/Revolución en Los Campos Exhibit Online.

4:30-4:40 PM

Conferece Closing from Organizer and Ethnic Studies Professor Octavio Barajas
(Watch Professor Barajas' closing message)

5:30-7:00 PM

National Endowment for the Humanities "Energizing Humanities in California's San Joaquin Valley" Event

Helena Maria Viramontes, "The Environs of Poverty: Cages, Prisons, and Detention Centers"
Introduction and Q&A Moderation by Dr. Lisette Lasater, Professor of English at Palomar College
(Watch "The Environs of Poverty: Cages, Prisons, and Detention Centers)

Friday, March 26, 2021

10:30 AM-12:00 PM

National Endowment for the Humanities "Energizing Humanities in California's San Joaquin Valley" Event

Dr. Eladio Bobadilla, "'We're Still Here': Work, Hope, Dignity, and Education of the Fields"
(Watch "'We're Still Here': Work, Hope, Dignity, and Education of the Fields")


Book Talk with LeRoy Chatfield

Join us for an evening with LeRoy Chatfield, a former organizer who worked with Cesar Chavez to get union recognition for California farmworkers, created a Saturday school educational enrichment program for farmworker children in Bakersfield, managed the Northern California general election campaign for Jerry Brown, and built the largest volunteer charitable organization in Sacramento. He will talk about his experiences as presented in his book,To Serve the People: My Life Organizing with Cesar Chavez and the Poor (University of New Mexico Press 2019).

The long pilgrimage of LeRoy Chatfield weaves its way through multiple collective projects designed to better the condition of the marginalized and forgotten. From the cloisters of the Christian Brothers and the halls of secondary education to the fields of Central California and the streets of Sacramento, Chatfield's story reveals a fierce commitment to those who were denied the promises of the American dream. In this collection of what the author calls Easy Essays, Chatfield recounts his childhood, explains the social issues that have played a significant role in his life and work, and uncovers the lack of justice he saw all too frequently. His journey, alongside Cesar and Helen Chavez, Marshall Ganz, Bonnie Chatfield, Philip Vera Cruz, and countless others, displays an unwavering focus on organizing communities and expanding their agency. Follow and explore a life dedicated to equality of opportunity for all. May it inspire and guide you in your own quest for a fairer and more just society.


"We're Still Here": Work, Hope, Dignity and the Education of the Fields

Presentation by Dr. Eladio Bobadilla sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities

Dr. Eladio Bobadilla is an assistant professor of history at the University of Kentucky. Bobadilla was born in Zacatecas, Mexico in 1986 to a poor family headed by Benjamin Bobadilla, a farm worker and musician and Lucina Mariscal, a homemaker. In 1997, Bobadilla, along with the remainder of his family, migrated to the United States to live in Delano, California, where his father had worked for several years in the grape fields. Though Bobadilla dreamed of going to college, his undocumented immigrant status prevented him from doing so immediately after graduating high school. About a year after graduating from Delano High School, however, he received permanent resident status and immediately enlisted in the United States Navy.

Bobadilla was then stationed at the Personnel Support Detachment Afloat West in San Diego, CA, where he was promoted to Petty Officer Third Class. In 2008, he was deployed to Camp Virginia, a forward operating base in the Kuwaiti desert in support of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF). He was honorably discharged in November of 2009 with high evaluations and a number of military distinctions, including the National Defense Service Medal, the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, a Flag Letter of Commendation, the Navy Expert Pistol Shot Medal, the Navy Rifle Sharpshooter Medal, the Good Conduct Medal, and the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal.

Bobadilla, together with his wife Timaree, then enrolled at Weber State University in 2010. The couple completed their bachelor's degrees in three years, graduating in 2012. Bobadilla graduated magna cum laude and with departmental honors. At Weber State, he was a member of Phi Alpha Theta (the National History Honor Society), the Pinnacle Honor Society, and the Golden Key International Honor Society. In his last year of college, he was recognized as the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences' Outstanding Graduate and was awarded the university's highest academic honor for students when he was named Crystal Crest Scholar of the Year.

Bobadilla enrolled at Duke University in 2013, where he was awarded the Dean's Graduate Fellowship. While at Duke, he also received several other prestigious fellowships and grants, including the Gilder Lehrman Scholarly Fellowship, the Mellon Fellowship for Dissertation Research in Original Sources, the Ottis Green Fellowship, a Bass Instructional Fellowship, the John Higham Research Fellowship, and the George Pozzetta Dissertation Award.

Outside of his professional life, Bobadilla loves motorcycling and following sports. He is a devoted Blue Devils fan and a supporter of the US Men's National Team and of Real Salt Lake. He lives in Durham, North Carolina, with his wife, a preschool teacher.


Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement

  • February 20, 2020
  • Levan Center

Lori A. Flores, an Associate Professor of History at Stony Brook University, comes to BC to talk about her book "Grounds for Dreaming", which is a deeply-researched history of how the Mexican community in California's Agriculture Belt fought for equality and respect decades before Cesar Chavez founded the United Farm Workers. Grounds for Dreaming flyer.


Second Annual Jess Nieto Memorial Conference

  • April 23-25, 2019
  • Levan Center for the Humanities and Forum 101

The second-annual conference in honor of Chicanx Studies pioneer Jess Nieto featured a roundtable discussion on Ray Gonzales; art by Jorge Guillen, Diego Monterrubio, and BC students; a keynote discussion by Sean Arce; a screening of the documentary "Rise and Fall of the Brown Buffalo", about Chicano activist Oscar Zeta Acosta; graduate student presentations about Chicanx history; and much more. 2019 Jess Nieto Conference flyer.

Photo Gallery


Si, Ella Puede! The Rhetorical Legacy of Dolores Huerta and United Farm Workers

  • April 10, 2019
  • Levan Center for the Humanities

In recognition of Dolores Huerta Day, the Levan Center and the National Endowment for the Humanities presented a discussion with Dr. Stacey K. Sowards, professor and chair of the Department of Communication at the University of Texas in El Paso. Sowards discussed her book, "Si, Ella Puede! The Rhetorical Legacy of Dolores Huerta and the United Farm Workers", which contextualizes Huerta's activism through close, theoretical analysis of the activist's speeches, letters and interviews. Dolores Huerta flyer.

Photo Gallery


Adios Amor: The Search for Maria Moreno

  • March 28, 2019
  • Indoor Theater

Project Conexiones and the Social Justice Institute presented a screening of director Laurie Coyle's documentary "Adios Amor", which tells the story of Maria Moreno's struggle to organize California's migrant farm workers while raising 12 children. The documentary also interweaves Coyle's quest to find photographs and more information about Moreno through the attics and archives of the California Central Valley. After the screening, Coyle and students from Project Conexiones held a roundtable Q and A session.

Photo Gallery


A Culture of Power: Race, Youth, Labor and Sound in East Bakersfield

  • February 14, 2019
  • Levan Center for the Humanities

Daniel Rios, a graduate student pursuing a Ph.D in Ethnic Studies at UC San Diego and a Bakersfield native, presented his research on the political, social, geographic, and cultural production of Bakersfield in the 20th Century, examining how the interplay of race, class, gender, and labor played a central role in shaping the daily lives of working class communities of color.

Culture of Power flyer.

Photo Gallery


Race, Citizenship, and the American Farmworker

  • October 18th, 2018
  • Norman Levan Center for the Humanities

University of Oregon professor Dr. Sarah Wald hosted a conversation about how American ideals about farming and property ownership influence citizenship. Race, Citizenship and the American Farmworker flyer.

Photo Gallery


On Immigration and Journalism: A Conversation with Sonia Nazario

  • October 9th, 2018
  • BC Forum

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sonia Nazario, as well as new media entrepreneur and former Center for Investigative Reporting CEO Joaquin Alvarado, hosted a discussion about the ways that media frames immigration issues as part of the CA 2020: Democracy and the Informed Citizen project. Immigration and Journalism flyer.

Photo Gallery


Revisiting the Two Cultures: Alendra Y. Chang

  • April 19th, 2018
  • Norman Levan Center for the Humanities

Alenda Y. Chang, an Assistant Professor in Film and Media Studies at UC Santa Barbara and editor of the Growing Games blog, presented a discussion about the ways environmental humanitarians and scientists come together to create media that advocates for environmental causes. Her discussion focused primarily on ecocritical theory in PC and console video games. Revisiting the Two Cultures flyer.

Photo Gallery


Jess Nieto Memorial Conference

  • April 17th, 2018
  • Norman Levan Center for the Humanities

The Social Justice Institute hosted a conference recognizing the life and service of Dr. Jesus "Jess" Gilberto Nieto to Bakersfield College. Dr. Nieto was one of BC's first Chicano faculty, a pioneer of BC's Chicano Studies curriculum, and founder of BC's Chicano Cultural Center. 2018 Jess Nieto Memorial Conference flyer.

Photo Gallery


An Evening With Gabriel Thompson

  • January 25th, 2018
  • Norman Levan Center for the Humanities

Author Gabriel Thompson talked about his book "America's Social Arsonist: Fred Ross and Grassroots Organizing in the Twentieth Century." Gabriel Thompson flyer.

Photo Gallery


Homecoming: An Evening with Gerald Haslam

  • November 30th, 2017
  • Norman Levan Center for the Humanities

Sonoma State University Professor Emeritus Dr. Gerald Haslam talked about growing up in Oildale and studying at BC in the mid-1950s and early 1960s before becoming an educator and a prolific writer. He has published novels, essay collections, and historical manuscripts about the Central Valley and its cultures, and he has contributed to news media such as the Los Angeles Times Sunday Magazine, KQED's California Report, and the Sacramento Bee. Gerald Haslam flyer.

Photo Gallery

Gerald Haslam photo gallery available on Smugmug.

 


Social Justice Institute Trip to Washington, DC

  • October 31st-November 1st, 2017

The project leads for BC's Social Justice Institute visited Washington, DC in 2017 to attend a Project Directors meeting hosted by the National Endowment for the Humanities at the Constitution Center.

Photo Gallery

Social Justice Institute Trip to Washington, DC photo gallery also available on Smugmug.


Out of the Shadows by Gary Soto

  • September 25th, 2015
  • Performed by the San Francisco Youth Theater
  • At BC's Edward Simonsen Performing Arts Center (Indoor Theater)

"Out of Shadows", the musical by famed Chicano writer Gary Soto, is based on interviews with Bay Area DREAMers discussing their dreams and despair as they navigate the shadows of immigration policies. The performance was conducted in conjunction with a series of events commemorating the historical legacy of the Delano Grape Strike.


Remembering the Delano Grape Strike

Eliseo Medina, left, and Latina organizer Dolores Huerta

  • September 23-25, 2015
  • Sponsored by the Social Justice Institute, Norman Levan Center for the Humanities, BC Office of Student Success andEquity, California Endowment's Building Healthy Communities-South Kern initiative, American Library Association, National Endowment for the Humanities, and in partnership with CSU Bakersfield

A week's worth of events centered on the Delano Grape Strike and Latino-American history.


California is Different: Environmental Justice Organizing in the 21st Century

  • September 23, 2015
  • Sponsored by the Social Justice Institute, Norman Levan Center for the Humanities, BC Office of Student Success and Equity, and Progressive Education and Action in Kern (PEAK)

For our first "Community Dialogue" event, we hosted environmental justice activists from three local organizations who focus on community organizing and education efforts in rural Kern County, particularly in the Lost Hills area. Their advocacy surrounds issues related to environmental justice, education, community organizing, and the creation of "citizen scientists."

Photo Gallery