
MANAGEMENT
With many others, we mourn the loss of Black lives in the United States. Most recent are George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and Tony McDade, among others, whose humanity was negated and snuffed out due to police violence. Underlying the serious matter of police violence are structural inequities that heighten the consequences of a health pandemic, systemic heteropatriarchal racism, white supremacy, and anti-Blackness that deleteriously impact Blacks鈥 well-being.
On June 2, 2020, 389 students, alumni, staff, faculty, administrators, and community members gathered online for 鈥淩eflections on Ahmaud, Breonna, George, and Others: A Space to Feel and Act.鈥 Several of us were in attendance and struck by the courageously honest students who spoke their truths. And, we heard those who spoke. We listened to their experiences, frustrations, and requests of attendees to use their platform(s). In response, as program directors and members of the Ethnic Studies Steering Committee, we commit to the following:
We support the urgency, necessity, and implementation of more Black studies curriculum on campus. The Ethnic Studies Steering Committee is at work generating additional strategies and commitments on campus to continue our sustained critique of anti-Blackness and white supremacy. We invite allies, collaborators, students, faculty, and administrators to lend a hand and their voice in supporting this work. Under the current budget crisis, institutional support for this work remains imperative. As a campus, the responsibility is all of ours to facilitate difficult but necessary conversations in our classrooms and provide spaces, support, and resources for Black voices.
Signed June 4, 2020
Michelle A. Holling, Incoming Program Director
Rebecca Lush, Steering Committee Member
Laurette McGuire, Outgoing Program Director
Dreama Moon, Steering Committee Member
Konane Martinez, Steering Committee Member
Jason Magabo Perez, Steering Committee Member