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The UCLA Latino Policy & Politics Institute team is devoted to advocating for communities of color across the U.S.
UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute is committed to shaping a new narrative so that Latinos are meaningfully considered in all policymaking conversations.
Today, the UCLA Voting Rights Project (UCLA VRP) filed a landmark lawsuit on behalf of Aleida Aquino and Brendalis Lopez, represented by the UCLA VRP, Myers, Brier & Kelly, LLP, Winebrake & Santillo, LLC, and Frederick P. Rooney. The lawsuit, filed in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, seeks to overturn an at-large election system for the Hazleton Area School Board (HASB) that dilutes the voting strength of the district’s sizable Latino population.
Read More | February 5, 2024
As the February 1, 2024, deadline for the end of the rent freeze and COVID-19 rental debt payments looms in the City of Los Angeles, a new UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute Latino Data Hub brief titled “Facts about Latino Renters in Los Angeles County” offers a comprehensive look into the number and characteristics of renters facing housing cost burden.
Read More | January 30, 2024
Today’s action by the Los Angeles Times to lay off 115 journalists, including Jean Guerrero and Suzy Exposito, the two Latina columnists at the paper, is yet another example of regressive leadership that erases Latino voices in the American story
Read More | January 23, 2024
The UCLA Latino Policy and Politics Institute (UCLA LPPI) has received a grant of $1.2 million from The James Irvine Foundation to finance research that informs policy reforms that can reduce racial/ethnic and gender inequalities that hinder the economic mobility of Latino workers in California.
Read More | December 19, 2023
El Instituto Latino de PolÃtica Pública de UCLA (UCLA LPPI por sus siglas en inglés) ha publicado un nuevo reporte alarmante, The Full Spectrum of Latinx Homelessness: Understanding and Addressing Doubling Up, (El Espectro Completo de la Falta de Hogar en la Comunidad Latina: Como Entender y Afrontar la Necesidad de Compartir Vivienda) que revela un significativo aumento en la falta de vivienda entre la comunidad latina de 8% a nivel nacional y 26% en el Condado de Los Angeles entre los años 2020 y 2022.
Read More | December 13, 2023
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