EVENTS

Upcoming Events
March 2025
March 27, 3:30 pm –  4:30 pm    

Please join us Thursday, March 27th at 3:30 for a conversation between RBML’s Head of Archives Processing Kevin Schlottmann and Frances Negrón-Muntaner, Julian Clarence Levi Professor in the Humanities and founding curator of the Latino Arts and Activisms (LAAS) collection.

Founded in 2012, the LAAS collection includes the papers and records of Latinos and Latino organizations in New York and related regions that may be of enduring significance as research resources. Areas of principal interest include the arts, politics, and community-based organizations. The curatorial short will canvass the history and care of the collection and share some highlights from the materials.

Register here: https://columbiauniversity.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_-va_wQoORKSZzvzxnmpc3g#/registration

March 27, 5:30 pm –  7:00 pm    

The Asian American Initiative at Columbia is pleased to host The Honorable Goodwin H. Liu, Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court. Following a talk, Justice Liu and Ajay K. Mehrotra, Professor of Law & History at Northwestern University and the American Bar Foundation, will discuss their research on Asian Americans in the Law.

A Portrait of Asian Americans in the Law

Thursday, March 27

Doors open at 5:00pm | Program begins at 5:30pm

Columbia Law School

Jerome Green Hall 103

436 W. 116th Street

Co-sponsored with Columbia Law School, this event iopen to the public and is in-person onlyregistration is required for entry.

March 28, 9:30 am –  6:00 pm    

How are settlement and migration enacted in relation to one another? What fictions of land and architecture live inside ‘settled’ histories of the colonized world? Through towns and camps, enclaves and ghettos, partitions and borderlands, this symposium studies the conversion of oceans, deserts, and forests into architectures, infrastructures, and territories. These sessions seek to ask how the homes of people and animals, now borderlands, frontiers, and wastelands, have been remembered and narrated. Within these forms and narratives live concept histories of settlement.

Presented by The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities and co-sponsored by CSER.

Full event details here.

March 30, 10:30 am –  5:00 pm    

Columbia Raaga is pleased to introduce Raaga Mela, a festival of Indian classical music and dance, hosted at Columbia University on March 30, 2025. The performance lineup includes an ethnomusicology lecture-demonstration on Tamil padams by Dr. B. Balasubrahmaniyan, a sitar concert by Ustad Irshad Khan and Sri Anubrata Chatterjee, and a bharatanatyam duet margam by Jeeno Joseph and Sophia Salingaros. Tickets are available at linktr.ee/curaaga and more information can be found on Instagram @curaaga.

March 31, 1:15 pm –  2:30 pm    

The Institute for the Study of Human Rights and the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race invite you to a panel discussion with two Human Rights Advocates, part of ISHR’s Human Rights Advocates Program.

Featuring Adija Adamu (Grants Coordinator Africa, International Indigenous Women’s Forum, Indigenous Women’s Rights to Finance, Cameroon) and Kathia Carrillo (Chairperson, Las Comunes, Decolonizing Advocacy with Arts and Communications, Peru); moderated by Elsa Stamatopoulou (Director, Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Program, ISHR).

Register here: https://bit.ly/41MT0vc

April 2025
April 1, 6:15 pm –  7:30 pm    

Haiti is often depicted as a place with no future, but Reclaiming Haiti’s Futures tells a different story. Join Professor Dubuisson in conversation with Professor Amelia Herbert as she discusses how Haitian returned intellectuals exercised improvisation, rasanblaj (assembly), and radical imagination to work toward and create future-oriented places of belonging and the lessons for a world now defined by fractures and crises.

RSVP here: bit.ly/cgt_dubuisson

April 2, 6:30 pm –  8:00 pm    
Join the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race (CSER) for Depicting Difference: Race and Ethnicity in Graphic Design, Illustration, and Comics. The panel will focus on racial and ethnic identity in graphic design, illustration, and comics, featuring artists and scholars who deal with visual representations of marginalized groups.
Wednesday, April 2, 2025, 6:30-8PM
420 Hamilton
Dinner will be served!
Panelists:
Aubrey Gabel, Chair of Comics and Graphic Albums University Seminar
Es-pranza Humphrey, Assistant Curator of Collections at Poster House
Greg Pak, Writer and Filmmaker
Jonathan Gray, Professor of English at CUNY
Camila Rosa, Illustrator and Artist
Poster design by Camila Rosa
April 3, 5:30 pm –  7:00 pm    

This panel brings together Indigenous scholars to critically examine the historical and ongoing impacts of exploration, scientific research, and anthropology on Indigenous communities in Papua New Guinea and Hawai‘i. Panelists will explore the intersections of Indigenous rights, data sovereignty, and the colonial legacies embedded within scientific knowledge production.

The panelists will reflect on how historical expeditions and research projects extracted knowledge, resources, and data from Indigenous lands and bodies, often without consent or reciprocity. They will interrogate the ways in which scientific and anthropological institutions have upheld colonial power structures, while also considering how Indigenous scholars and communities are reclaiming control over their knowledge and data.

Through discussions of biocultural heritage, climate research, conservation, and food sovereignty, this panel will highlight efforts to establish ethical research frameworks that respect Indigenous sovereignty. Drawing from experiences in both New Guinea and Hawai‘i, the panelists will address contemporary movements toward Indigenous-led research methodologies, legal protections, and data governance models that center Indigenous epistemologies and self-determination.

By placing these diverse yet interconnected histories and struggles in conversation, this panel challenges dominant narratives of scientific exploration and proposes pathways toward decolonial, community-centered knowledge practices that honor Indigenous rights, agency, and futures.

  • Hi‘ilei Hobart, Assistant Professor of Ethnicity, Race, and Migration at Yale University
  • Ikaika Ramones, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Princeton University
  • Nayahamui Rooney, Senior Lecturer in Culture, History, and Language at Australian National University
  • Miriam Supuma, Programme Manager at Synchronicity Earth
  • Moderated by Paige West, Claire Tow Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University

Hosted by the Center for Science and Society at Columbia University. Co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University. Registration required.

April 9, 5:00 pm –  6:30 pm    

Founded by Latina immigrants in East Harlem, Movement fights for dignity against displacement. Join the Human Rights Graduate Group at Columbia University, Institute for the Study of Sexuality and Gender, and Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race for a discussion with MJEB’s community activists about housing justice in East Harlem. Seating is limited and will be first come, first seated.

April 11, 9:00 am –  3:00 pm    

The Center for African Education (CAE), in collaboration with the Institute for African Studies (IAS) and the Society for International Education (SIE), proudly announces an exciting mini-conference—generously supported by the Office of the Vice President for Diversity & Community Affairs.

Conference Website: (click here to view)

 

We extend a warm invitation to students and faculty across Columbia University and affiliated schools to participate in this dynamic, multidisciplinary conference. For decades, Pan-Africanist dialogue across Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas has shaped the intellectual foundation for unity and progress. This student-centered mini-conference builds on that tradition, convening students and faculty in interdisciplinary exchanges on the intersections of education and Pan-Africanism.

We are currently inviting students to present their research and/or volunteer for conference support.

✔️ Ready to submit an abstract based on the research themes? Click here

✔️ Ready to volunteer to support conference activities? Click here

We are committed to ensuring accessibility for all participants. To request disability-related accommodations contact OASID at oasid@tc.edu, (212) 678-3689, (212) 678-3853 TTY (646) 755-3144 video phone, as early as possible.

April 17, 7:30 pm –  8:30 pm    
 
Sponsored by the Asian American Diasporic Writers Series at the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race and the Columbia University School of the Arts Writing MFA Program
 
*Non-CUID holders will have to register in advance for campus access
 

Panelists:

Marie Myung-Ok Lee is an acclaimed Korean-American writer and author of the novel The Evening Hero, which looks at the future of medicine, immigration, North Korea. She graduated from Brown University and was a Writer in Residence there, before she began teaching at Columbia University’s Writing Division. She is one of the few journalists who have been allowed to travel to North Korea since the Korean War.
Her stories and essays have been published in The Atlantic, The New York Times, Slate, Salon, Guernica, The Emancipator, and The Guardian, among others. She was the first Fulbright Scholar to Korea in creative writing and has received many honors for her work, including an O. Henry honorable mention, the Best Book Award from the Friends of American Writers, and New York Foundation for the Arts Fiction Fellowship. She is a founder of the Asian American Writers’ Workshop and on the board of the National Book Critics Circle.


Rebecca Morgan Frank’s fourth collection of poems is Oh You Robot Saints!, and her poems and criticism appear in The New Yorker, American Poetry Review, Ploughshares, Los Angeles Review of Books, Lit Hub, and elsewhere. She serves on the Board of the National Book Critics Circle and is an assistant professor at Lewis University in Illinois.

 
Dr. Jonathan Leal is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Southern California and serves on the Board of Directors of the National Book Critics Circle. He is the author of Dreams in Double Time, co-editor of Cybermedia, and co-creator of numerous acclaimed musical projects. An interdisciplinary critic and award-winning musician born and raised at the Texas-Mexico border, Leal focuses on music and storytelling as vehicles for communal memory, resistance, and experimentation.
 
Rishi Reddi is the author of the novel Passage West, a Los Angeles Times “Best California Book of 2020” and Karma and Other Stories, which received the 2008 L.L. Winship /PEN New England Award for Fiction. Her short stories have appeared in Best American Short Stories, been broadcast on NPR, and earned honorable mention in the Pushcart Prize.  Her reviews, essays and translations have appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Review of Books, Kirkus Reviews, LitHub, Partisan Review, Alta Journal, and Air/Light, among others. Rishi has received fellowships and grants from the National Book Critics Circle, MacDowell Colony, Bread Loaf, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and the U.S. Department of State. She lives in Cambridge, MA.
Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race
 420 Hamilton Hall, MC 2880
1130 Amsterdam Avenue
New York, NY 10027
CSER is Columbia's main interdisciplinary space for the study of ethnicity and race and their implications for thinking about culture, power, hierarchy, social identities, and political communities.
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