people

The Center for Critical Race Studies in Education at UCLA's staff, research associates, and visiting scholars are dedicated to the advancement of Critical Race Studies within the disciplines. Please feel free to contact us with any questions or feedback.

 
 
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director

Daniel G. Solorzano, Ph.D.

solorzano@gseis.ucla.edu

Daniel G. Solorzano is a professor in the University of California Los Angeles' Departments of Education and Chicana/o and Central American Studies.  He is also the Director of the Center for Critical Race Studies in Education at UCLA.  He is an interdisciplinary scholar with research and teaching interests in critical race theory, racial microaggressions and microaffirmations, and critical race spatial analysis.  He is the co-author (with Lindsay Perez Huber) of Racial Microaggressions: Using Critical Race Theory to Respond to Everyday Racism (2020), which examines how People of Color are impacted by and respond to everyday racism in the form of racial microaggressions.  He is also co-editor (with Michaela Mares-Tamayo) of the award-winning anthology The Chicana/o Education Pipeline: History, Institutional Critique, and Resistance (2018), which traces 45 years of education scholarship in the oldest Chicana/o Studies journal in the U.S.—Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies.  For his early body of work, Solorzano received the Tomas Rivera Center Postdoctoral Fellowship, the Educational Testing Service Postdoctoral Fellowship, and the Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship.  For the last 50 years, Solorzano has served in all three segments of California's public postsecondary education.  In 2007, Professor Solorzano received the UCLA Distinguished Teaching Award.  In 2012, Solorzano was presented with the American Education Research Association (AERA) Social Justice in Education Award.  In 2012, Solorzano was also awarded the Critical Race Studies in Education Association Derrick A. Bell Legacy Award.  In 2013, Solorzano was given the Mildred Garcia Exemplary Scholarship Award from the Association for Studies in Higher Education (ASHE).  In 2014, Solorzano was elected a Fellow of the American Education Research Association.  In 2017, Solorzano received the inaugural Revolutionary Mentor Award from the Critical Educators for Social Justice (CESJ) within the American Educational Research Association.  In 2019, Professor Solorzano delivered the AERA Distinguished Lecture on Racial Microaggressions.  In 2020, Solorzano was elected to the National Academy of Education.  In 2022, Professor Solorzano received the Spencer Foundation Mentorship Award.

Professor Solorzano grew up in Los Angeles, California, and received a B.A. degree from Loyola University in Sociology and Chicana/o Studies, an M.Ed. in Urban Education from Loyola Marymount University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the Claremont Graduate School in the Sociology of Education.


assistant Director

Magali Campos, M.A.

maxcampos@ucla.edu

Magali Campos is a doctoral candidate in the Social Science and Comparative Education program (Race and Ethnic Studies specialization) at UCLA GSE&IS. As the assistant director, she is responsible for providing administrative support, participating in research projects, developing programming, and leading the research briefs series. Magali is also a teaching assistant for the Chicana/o Studies Department at UCLA. Her research interests include retention of women of color in higher education, silence as a form of resistance to navigate academia, and femtor/mentorship practices.


Research Associate

Omar Ismael Alvarado, M.Ed.

oalvarado@ucla.edu

Omar is a doctoral student specializing in Race, Ethnic, and Cultural Studies in Education. Broadly, he is interested in understanding student experiences in higher education and their trajectories to graduate programs. Specifically, he hopes to learn how exposure to Critical Race Theory impacts students’ journeys to post-secondary education. As a son of the Central American diaspora, he is learning to honor the stories and legacies of his colleagues who entrust them to him. His research pulls from Critical Race Theory, Critical Legal Studies, Education History, and Central American Studies. He earned his Master’s of Education in Student Affairs and his Bachelor’s in Chicana/o and Central American Studies with a minor in History, with an emphasis on Mesoamerica at the University of California, Los Angeles. His journey through higher education is a meaning-making project as much as an academic endeavor.


Research Associate

Janelle Atienza, M.A.

Janelle (she/ella) is a Mexipina, first-generation doctoral student at UCLA’s School of Education and Information Studies specializing in Race, Ethnic, and Cultural Studies. Her research interests include understanding Student of Color epistemological resistance to inform decolonial and abolitionist education, interrogating underlying oppressive ideologies foundational to school systems, and exploring multiracial student experiences. Janelle’s current research focuses on demystifying the covert and dehumanizing cultures of white supremacy, capitalism, and patriarchy in schools, analyzing the role schools have in promoting internalized dehumanization, and exploring the various ways Students of Color practice everyday resistance through joy, rest, and refusal.


research associate

Kourtney Kawano, M.A.

k14kokawa@g.ucla.edu

Kourtney Kawano (she/her) is a Kanaka ʻŌiwi (Native Hawaiian) doctoral student in the Social Sciences and Comparative Education division of UCLA's School of Education and Information Studies. Her research interests include conceptualizing and applying Native Hawaiian feminist epistemology and Kanaka ʻŌiwi critical race theory to understand and challenge internalized oppression and Hawai'i's multicultural society myth. Additionally, Kourtney volunteers with Honua Scholars, a non-profit organization based in Hawai'i that offers STEM-focused programming for local youth.


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research associate

John Pak, M. ED.

johnpak@g.ucla.edu

John Pak is a doctoral student at UCLA’ s Graduate School of Education and Information Studies with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies. As a Deaf student of color, John’s research explores the experiences of deaf students of color and the impact of audist and racial microaggressions in higher education. His research interests centers around the intersections of audism and racial microaggression in education, impacts on deaf students of color, Critical Race Theory and Critical Deaf Theory in education, and Community Cultural Wealth.


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research associate

yadira valencia, m.a.

yaya2yadi@g.ucla.edu

Yadira Valencia is a doctoral candidate in the Social Science and Comparative Education division (Race and Ethnic Studies specialization at UCLA GSE&IS). She is the cohort coordinator of the UndocuBruins Research Program that is hosted in the Academic Advancement Program at UCLA. Through UndocuBruins she works along with undocumented students through their process in to graduate programs and research experience. Additionally, she is TA for the Chicana/o Studies department, her department as an undergraduate student. Currently, her research looks at redefining violence that Chicanas and Latinas encounter in their graduate program and analyzing their healing methods as resistance.


research associate

Nataly Anai Rincon Garcia, B.a.

natalyarincon@g.ucla.edu

Nataly (she/her/ella) is a Novice TEP & Master's student at the School of Education and Information Studies. She completed her undergraduate degree at the University of California, Santa Barbara with a Chicana/o/x Studies major and Educational Studies major. She is pursuing a Social Studies teaching credential with an Ethnic Studies emphasis and a Master's in Education. Her research interests include Ethnic Studies implementation in schools and building community amongst families and schools in the K-12 system. 


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media coordinator

Brenda Lopez, M.A.

byl230@g.ucla.edu

Brenda Lopez is a doctoral candidate in the department of Social Sciences and Comparative Education at UCLA. Her research centers on students of Color using media as a form of transformative resistance. Brenda was born and raised in Fontana, California and went on to earn her B.F.A. from Tisch School of the Arts at NYU in Film and Television. She is a filmmaker, photographer and storyteller eager to share the experiences of marginalized communities through accessible mediums. 


Research Assistant

Brenda Chavez, B.A.

Brenda Chavez transferred from Santa Ana College to UCLA where she completed her undergraduate degree in Psychology with a minor in Education Studies. During her time at UCLA she was a research fellow with AAP’s Educators for Tomorrow and a research assistant for the Research, Assessment and Evaluation. Brenda's research centers the experiences of non-traditional Latinx students in higher education, specifically community colleges. She currently works at Santa Ana College as a Student Services Specialist for the EOPS, CARE, and CalWORKs programs and volunteers for the Transfer Mentor Program where she provides culturally-relevant mentoring to first-generation BIPOC students on the transfer path. 


Research Assistant

SARAHY TORRES

Sarahy Torres is a third-year undergraduate student from Oxnard, California. She double majors in Chicanx Studies and Education and Social Transformation at UCLA. As a research intern, she co-teaches a college transition class to high school seniors at the RFK UCLA Community School. She is a current research fellow for the Educators for Tomorrow research program. Her research focuses on the mental health of students from farmworking backgrounds using critical race and social-emotional learning theories. She currently serves as a state council representative for the Student California Teacher Association (SCTA), advocating for curriculum and instruction in California.


visiting scholar

Lluliana Alonso, Ph.D.

lluliana@ucla.edu

LLuliana Alonso is an Assistant Professor of Urban Education in the Liberal Studies Department at California State University Long Beach. As an interdisciplinary scholar, her research centers local Chicana/o community histories of education, specializing in the nexus between juvenile delinquency discourse and educational policy & practice in the first half of twentieth century. Her work builds on previous scholarship that documents the pervasiveness of racism within and beyond schools in Los Angeles between 1930-1949. In addition, a second strand of her research agenda examines the educational trajectories and conditions of Latina/o teacher candidates in rural fronterizo contexts along the U.S./Mexico borderlands. Originally from South Central Los Angeles, she is a proud first-generation college graduate who began her educational trajectory at Santa Monica College and transferred to University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) where she obtained a B.A. in Political Science, M.A. in Education and Ph.D. in Social Science and Comparative Education with a focus on Race & Ethnic Studies.

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Visiting Scholar

Lorena Camargo Gonzalez, ph.d.

lcamargo@ucla.edu

Lorena Camargo Gonzalez [she/her/ella] is an Assistant Professor of Undergraduate Studies in Education and Gender Equity at Sacramento State University. Dr. Camargo Gonzalez earned her Ph.D. from UCLA’s School of Education and Information Studies with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies. She also holds a master’s degree in education from Long Beach State University and a bachelor’s degree in Ethnic Studies with a concentration on Chicana/o Studies from Sacramento State University. Her educational experiences as an immigrant and first-generation college student inform her interdisciplinary approach in drawing from Critical Race theories, Chicana/Latina Feminist theories, and historical methods such as oral histories and archival research to address the following areas: 1) the activism of Latina/o/x librarians; 2) racial justice within library services, and 3) the history of Latina/o/x children’s literature. Dr. Camargo Gonzalez’s research has been published in book chapters and journal articles including the Handbook of Latinos and Education, Urban Education, and the International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. Dr. Camargo Gonzalez also serves as a visiting scholar for UCLA’s Center for Critical Race Studies in Education.


Visiting Scholar

gabriela Corona Valencia, pH.d.

gcoronav1995@ucla.edu

Gabriela Corona Valencia is a Ph.D. candidate at the School of Education and Information Studies. She is an educator, researcher, and bridge-builder passionate about versatile ways of knowing, learning, and thinking. Her work explores eugenicist methods of control, containment, and surveillance inflicted by educational, familial, religious, and digital spaces that have affected Latina/o/x women's access to their sexual citizenship throughout time, space, and place. She utilizes digital archival sources to pinpoint evidence of Latina/o/x girls and women punished for “crimes” related to impermissible female pursuits of pleasure and desire between 1909 and 1979. Her methodological intentions seek to uphold the buoyant oral histories of past and present Latina/o/x girls and women who have experienced systemized trauma throughout their lives. In addition, she has supported international antiracist initiatives organized by the International Planned Parenthood Federation as a qualitative research consultant. Before her graduate school journey, Gabriela obtained her BA in Chicana/o/x studies with a minor in Anthropology from CSU Dominguez Hills.


Visiting Scholar

Cindy Raquel Escobedo, Ph.d.

Cindy R. Escobedo is a Ph.D. Candidate from UCLA's Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, a 2020 National Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation Dissertation Fellow, and a 2020-2021 UC Office of the President Dissertation Fellow. As a scholar practitioner, Cindy’s professional and research passions explore the intersections of educational (in)equities, Student and Women of Color academic pathways, mother-daughter relationships, and the raced and gendered sociology of family. Cindy is concurrently a Research Associate for the Center for Critical Race Studies in Education at UCLA and has for the past seven years, served as a Senior Research Consultant for the Peer Learning Unit within the UCLA Academic Advancement Program (AAP). AAP is the nation's largest undergraduate student diversity program promoting academic excellence for scholars from historically underserved backgrounds. A three-time UCLA Bruin, Cindy holds a M.A. degree in Education, and a B.A. degree in Political Science with double minors in Education and Public Affairs.


Visiting Scholar

Tanya J. Gaxiola Serrano, Ph.D.

tgaxiolaserrano@sdsu.edu

Dr. Tanya J. Gaxiola Serrano (she, her, ella) is Assistant Professor in Administration, Rehabilitation and Postsecondary Education (ARPE) at San Diego State University. Dr. Gaxiola Serrano earned her Ph.D. from UCLA’s Graduate School of Education and Information Studies with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies. During her time at UCLA, she served as a founding member and assistant director for the Center for Critical Race Studies in Education. She is a Ford Foundation Fellow and American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE) Graduate Student Fellow and Faculty Fellow. Dr. Gaxiola Serrano is a student of Critical Race Theory and Chicana/Latina feminisms. As a first generation immigrant and college student from the Tijuana-San Diego borderlands, her research explores the racialized inequities faced by Communities of Color when navigating educational and border spaces, as well as conceptualizes critical methodological approaches in higher education. Dr. Gaxiola Serrano’s research has been published in book chapters and journal articles including the Community College Journal of Research and Practice, the Journal of Latinos and Education, and the International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education.


visting scholar

Elizabeth González Cárdenas, Ph.D.

Egonzalezcardenas@unm.edu

Elizabeth González Cárdenas received her Ph.D. in Education with an emphasis on Race and Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles. She was born and raised in Boyle Heights, California. Her family migrated to East Los Angeles in the early 1960s from México. Dr. González Cárdenas was also a community college student who majored in Chicana Chicano Studies, which led her to her research and teaching interests. Dr. González Cárdenas’ approach to her research is multi-disciplinary and incorporates the fields of education, sociology, and history to examine the efficacy of Chicana Chicano Studies curriculum and pedagogy. Using oral interviews and archival research, her findings demonstrate that participants developed and maintain a social justice ethos within their careers, family, and community. Her research also demonstrates that Chicana Chicano Studies provides culturally relevant support towards students when obtaining their baccalaureate degrees.  Dr. González Cárdenas has published research on community-based learning in Chicana Chicano Studies and is currently researching the intellectual, curricular, pedagogical, and research impact of Chicana Chicano Studies. In addition to her research, Dr. González Cárdenas taught K-Graduate School in California public schools from 2000-2019 that include LAUSD, LBUSD, CSU, UC, and LACCD systems. Dr. González Cárdenas’ research interests include the following: Chicana/Chicano Latina/Latino Educational Access and Equity, Culturally Relevant Curriculum and Pedagogy, History of Education, Student Educational Movements, Sociology of Education, Chicana and Women of Color Feminism and Epistemologies, Critical Race Theory, and Latina/Latino Critical Theory. 

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Visiting Scholar

Tonia F. Guida, PH.D.

tonia.guida@austin.utexas.edu

Dr. Tonia Guida is a higher education scholar-practitioner with more than nine years of experience teaching, training, and facilitating social justice education and dialogue facilitation. She is both the Assistant Dean for Opportunity and Belonging and an Assistant Professor of Instruction in the Division of Pharmacy Practice at The University of Texas at Austin. As Dean in the College of Pharmacy, Dr. Guida leads the Opportunity and Belonging portfolio of the college and serves as the chief college spokesperson for all programs and initiatives relating to the college’s Opportunity and Belonging goals. Dr. Guida's research agenda entails theorizing around whiteness in higher education and developing more racially and socially just campus environments. Her most recent scholarship has been featured in Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education, Urban Education, The Review of Higher Ed, Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, and Community College Review.

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VISITING SCHOLAR

'INOKE HAFOKA, PH.D.

inoke.hafoka@byuh.edu

‘Inoke Hafoka is an Assistant Professor for Pacific Studies at Brigham Young University-Hawaii which is situated within the Ko'olauloa region of O'ahu. Hafoka descends from the villages of Faleloa, ‘Uiha, Taoa and Ha‘akio in the Ha‘apai and Vava‘u regions of Tonga. He is connected and was raised in the Glendale neighborhood of Soonkahni (Salt Lake Valley), Utah. Hafoka’s work has appeared in AlterNative, Journal of College Student Development, Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, Journal of Global Indigeneity, Oceania, and Pacific Studies. Hafoka received his Ph.D. from UCLA in the Social Sciences & Comparative Education (SSCE) with an emphasis on race and ethnic studies. His teaching and research interests include Pacific Studies, diaspora, educational spaces within and beyond tertiary schooling, Indigeneity, race and ethnicity, and sports.

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Visiting Scholar

ALEJANDRA MAGAñA GAMERO, Ph.d.

alemagana310@g.ucla.edu

Alejandra Magaña Gamero received her Ph.D. in Social Sciences and Comparative Education with an emphasis in Race and Ethnic Studies from the University of California Los Angeles in 2023. Her dissertation explored the experience of Mexicanas/Chicanas in Master of Arts in Education Programs and the factors that influence their decisions to pursue graduate degrees. Alejandra currently serves as Institutional Engagement Manager for Excelencia in Education, a higher education non-profit that accelerates Latino student success in higher education by promoting Latino student achievement, conducting analysis to inform educational policies, and advancing institutional practices while collaborating with those committed and ready to meet the mission. Alejandra holds a Master of Arts in Education from the University of California Los Angeles and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology and Ethnic Studies from Santa Clara University. 


visiting scholar

Michaela Mares-Tamayo, Ph.D.

michaela.j@ucla.edu

Michaela Mares-Tamayo received her Ph.D. in Race and Ethnic Studies in Education at UCLA, exactly fifty years after her father became the first in their family to graduate from college – also from UCLA. Her research brings together the epistemological strengths and methodological tools of critical race theory in education, history, and Ethnic Studies to document the experiences of Students and Communities of Color in local school districts over time. She has been invited to present at staff trainings for the UCLA Center for Community College Partnerships; university courses and community events; and in the form of the opening lecture for the Vrije University’s Introduction Days in Amsterdam, Netherlands. As a Visiting Scholar, she recently completed a co-edited anthology of 40 years of education scholarship in the oldest journal in Chicana and Chicano Studies—Aztlán: The Journal of Chicana and Chicano Studies, titled The Chicana/o Education Pipeline: History, Institutional Critique, and Resistance, with Dr. Solórzano.

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visiting scholar

Socorro Morales, Ph.D.

socorrom1@cpp.edu

Socorro Morales (she/her) is a queer Chicana raised in Fontana, CA. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Utah in Education, Culture, and Society. Her research agenda focuses on understanding and promoting educational equity for historically marginalized populations, specifically through the lenses of Critical Race Theory, Chicana feminisms, and critical youth studies. In particular, she examines the educational experiences of Chicanx and Latinx youth, focusing on subjectivity, youth agency, and pedagogical practice. She is currently an Assistant Professor in the Educational Leadership Department at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Her publications span across areas such as Chicanx youth agency and resistance in K12 as well as Chicana feminist pláticas methodology.

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Visiting Scholar

Audrey D. Paredes, ph.d.

aparedes@csusm.edu 

Audrey D. Paredes, Ph.D. is an assistant professor of educational leadership and administration in the School of Education at California State University, San Marcos (CSUSM). Her role as a teacher-scholar is informed by her positionality as the daughter of Guatemalan immigrants, first-generation college student, and a former college student affairs practitioner. As an interdisciplinary scholar, Dr. Paredes’ broader research agenda utilizes critical approaches to understand and conceptualize the ways in which institutions of higher education, specifically Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), can be sites of transformation so that systemically marginalized communities can thrive. Currently, her research focuses on responding to the heterogeneity of the Latina/o/x college student population within the context of federally designated Hispanic Serving Institutions (HSIs) by way of examining the lived experiences of Central American undergraduates. Dr. Paredes’ has expertise in anti-racist and decolonial theories such as Critical Race Theory and Chicana/Latina Feminist Theories as well as, Chicana/Latina Feminista qualitative methodologies. Prior to joining CSUSM, she was a post-doctoral scholar at UCLA, the lead project manager for the University of California’s Hispanic Serving Institutions (UC-HSI) Initiative, and a consultant for the UC Asian American Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institutions (AANAPISI) working group. Dr. Paredes earned her Ph.D. in education with a specialization in race and ethnic studies at the UCLA, MA in education at UCLA, and BA in Gender, Ethnicity, and Multicultural Studies (concentration in Chicana/o Studies) from California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.

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Visiting scholar

bryant partida, Ph.D.

brypar@ucla.edu

Bryant Partida was born in East Los Angeles, raised in South Phoenix, and is currently rooted in Pacoima. He earned his Ph.D. from UCLA in Social Science and Comparative Education with an emphasis on Race and Ethnic Studies. Bryant’s research agenda focuses on documenting the 20th-century educational histories of Mexican, Mexican American, and Chicana/o communities in Phoenix, Arizona through a Critical Race Educational History and relational lens. He is currently expanding his dissertation work focusing on the 1970 Chicana/o boycott of Phoenix Union High School into diverse research strands that include a wider district relational analysis of race and racism in the Phoenix Union High School District between 1895 and 1982, further documenting the history of segregated Mexican schools in the Valley, and early 1900’s historical Mexican and Mexican American educational social movements at Arizona State Teachers College. Bryant has also translated his interdisciplinary research skills to serve as a public history consultant and co-curator of Chicana/o educational and community history exhibits that have been displayed throughout Los Angeles, California, and Phoenix, Arizona. He is currently a lecturer in Chicana/o Studies at CSU Fullerton and CSU Dominguez Hills.


Visiting scholar

Lindsay Pérez Huber, Ph.D.

Lindsay.PerezHuber@csulb.edu

Dr. Lindsay Pérez Huber is Professor in the College of Education at California State University, Long Beach. She leads and coordinates the master’s program in Equity, Education, & Social Justice (EESJ) program. Her research specializations include race, immigration and higher education, racial microaggressions, and critical race feminista methodologies and epistemologies. Her work is known for further developing theoretical and conceptual frameworks in Critical Race Theory (CRT), bridging CRT and Chicana Feminist perspectives in Education, and for her contributions in understanding Latinx undocumented student experiences. Dr. Pérez Huber is a Ford Foundation Fellow and Faculty Fellow of the American Association of Hispanics in Higher Education (AAHHE). She is also the past Vice President of the Critical Race Studies in Education Association (CRSEA). During her career, Dr. Pérez Huber has supported over 70 thesis and dissertation Students of Color as chair and/or committee member. Dr. Pérez Huber was a recipient of the 2019 Derrick Bell Legacy Award for her contributions to Critical Race Theory (CRT) by the Critical Race Studies in Education Association (CRSEA). She received her Ph.D. in Social Science and Comparative Education (SSCE), with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies from the UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. In 2020, Dr. Pérez Huber published the co-authored book, “Racial Microaggressions: Using Critical Race Theory to Respond to Everyday Racism.” She is also co-editor of the 2021 book, “Why They Hate Us: How Racist Rhetoric Impacts Education.”

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visiting scholar

Ryan E. Santos, Ph.D.

rsantos84@ucla.edu

Ryan E. Santos’ interdisciplinary training is rooted in the fields of education and ethnic studies; having earned his B.A. in Chicano and Latino Studies from California State University, Long Beach, and completing his M.A. and Ph.D. in Education at UCLA with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies. Ryan’s research interests are historical studies of educational issues and legal cases, such as segregation and bilingual education, relevant to Chicana/o and Latina/o communities through a Critical Race Educational History framework. His current research on the school desegregation efforts found in Crawford v. Los Angeles Board of Education (1963-1982) contextualizes the events of Crawford within the larger Chicana/o movement struggle for social justice. His co-authored research on Latina/o community college student experiences with developmental education has been published in the Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, a Perspectivas policy brief, and a PATHWAYS to Postsecondary Success policy report. Ryan was the recipient of a UCLA Dissertation Year Fellowship and an American Educational Research Association (AERA) Minority Dissertation Travel Award.

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Visiting Scholar

Mary Senyonga, Ph.D.

Mary Senyonga is a doctoral candidate in the Social Sciences and Comparative Education division with a specialization in Race and Ethnic Studies within the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies. Her dissertation investigates how Black women and femmes both resist and heal as they attend what she calls Traditionally Oppressive Institutions. Her work employs Black feminism, Critical Race Theory, and Queer of Color Critique to surface liberatory possibilities in the face of marginalization.

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