Social Justice

  • An Inside Look At Washington State's Policing And Race Curriculum For Recruits

    Washington has enacted a number of police reforms since George Floyd was murdered one year ago. Among them is a mandatory 8-hour course, broken up into sessions, for police recruits on the history of racism and policing. Alexes Harris, professor of sociology at the UW, is mentioned.

    05/25/2021 | WBUR
  • George Floyd anniversary: BLM got a plaza in Washington — but will the movement get police reform?

    Christopher Sebastian Parker, professor of political science, discusses what sparked the summer of social unrest.

    05/25/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • Beginnings of change hold promise, but our work must continue

    Ana Mari Cauce discusses the one-year anniversary of the murder of George Floyd.

    05/24/2021 | University of Washington Office of the President
  • A Year Ago, the ‘Big Three’ Record Companies Pledged $225 Million to Racial Justice. Where Did It Go?

    Universal, Sony and Warner have paid out just a portion of the money they promised to give, VICE found — revealing a disconnect between how they’ve publicly characterized their donations and what’s really happening behind the scenes. Megan Ming Francis, associate professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.

    05/24/2021 | Vice
  • George Floyd anniversary: BLM got a plaza in Washington. Will it get police reform?

    One year after the killing of George Floyd and the largely peaceful protests it spawned, the BLM movement has achieved mainstream recognition in the United States and beyond, with protests last summer hitting all seven continents. But the movement now faces the same challenge many grassroots efforts have: how to move beyond the recognition toward concrete solutions. Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.

    05/24/2021 | The Los Angeles Times
  • On Asian America: Sex, gender and the 'exotic other'

    From dragon ladies to geeky sidekicks, being Asian in America comes with complicated and contradictory expectations. Douglass Ishii, assistant professor of English at the UW, is interviewed on "Speakers Forum." [The interview with Ishii begins at 14:00]

    05/20/2021 | KUOW
  • Facing Race: Washington sees a surge in Asian activism

    A young generation of Asian and Pacific Islanders is leading a new wave of activism. Connie So, teaching professor of American ethnic studies at the UW, is interviewed.

    05/17/2021 | King 5 News
  • Celebrating Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month

    A collection of work by Arts & Sciences faculty, students, alumni and friends related to Asian American and Pacific Islander history, heritage and culture.

    05/15/2021 | College of Arts & Sciences
  • COMMENTARY: The big lie in Volunteer Park

    Christoph Giebel, associate professor of history and of international studies at the UW, writes of a marker in Seattle's Volunteer Park, "The marker’s words grotesquely falsify a gruesome past ... To call America’s violent conquest of Asia’s first constitutional republic [the Philippines] a 'liberation of oppressed peoples' constitutes an 'alternative fact' so shameless as to render the plaque’s continued display scandalous."

    05/13/2021 | NW Asian Weekly
  • Meet the 2020-21 UW MAP award recipients

    Since 1994, alumni and friends in the Multicultural Alumni Partnership have worked together to promote diversity at the UW and address issues of equity and diversity on our campuses and in our community. This year’s promising scholars range from early undergraduates who are still zeroing in on a major to those pursuing graduate and professional degrees.

    05/11/2021 | UW Magazine
  • Separated at the U.S.-Canada border: For a father and son, 90 miles is a distance too far

    In 2019, federal agents took Carlos Rivera away in handcuffs when he strayed across the U.S.-Canada border, even though he says they could see his 7-year-old son waiting for him with a friend on the Canadian side. The UW's Angelina Godoy, professor of law, societies and justice and of international studies, and director of the UW Center for Human Rights, is quoted.

    05/07/2021 | The Los Angeles Times
  • An Artist Was Targeted in a Hate Crime. So She Designed a Video Game

    The pandemic saw a spike in xenophobia against Asians. Digital artist Chanee Choi, a doctoral student in digital arts and experimental media at the UW, decided to fight back in a way only she could.

    05/03/2021 | Wired
  • Racist restrictions in old home deeds across Washington state will get expanded scrutiny

    A bill state lawmakers passed this month directs UW and Eastern Washington University to search for racial covenants in home deeds and notify property owners when their homes are affected. James Gregory, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.

    05/03/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • When People Say "Support APIA," Do They Really Mean Pacific Islanders, Too?

    As a group, Asian Pacific Islander Americans contain multitudes: East Asians, South Asians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Melanesians. We come from wildly different regions and distinct cultural backgrounds. How did we get grouped together in the first place? And will we always remain this way? Rick Bonus, professor of American ethnic studies at the UW, is quoted.

    05/01/2021 | Popsugar
  • It took this to finally get justice': What was different — and not — George Floyd's murder

    Many people across the country felt relief Tuesday as former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty on all three charges brought against him for the murder of George Floyd. But many also felt conflicted about what the moment meant to them. Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, is interviewed.

    04/21/2021 | KUOW