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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.
LPPI expert Efren Perez appeared on NPR Code Switch to discuss the term POC. “When we affirm the parallel experiences that unify the group, you see that higher levels of identifying as a person of color lead you to be more supportive of Black Lives Matter and DACA.”
Read More | October 19, 2020
Sonja Diaz joins KTLA as a political analyst to discuss the first Presidential Debate. “None of what President Trump is saying is factually correct in terms of the response to Coronavirus and also his impact on the economy.”
UCLA professor and LPPI expert Leisy J. Abrego says, “In media depictions we’re [immigrants] either victims or criminals, and we don’t have any agency of our own. That’s why books like Lovato’s are so important, because they start to capture the full humanity, the imperfections, but also the strategy, the agency, the collective work to…
Miguel Unzueta, UCLA LPPI expert, co-authored this piece to propose that the five major annual M.B.A. rankings — U.S. News & World Report, Forbes, Businessweek, the Financial Times and The Economist — include demographic and curricular metrics of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in their program evaluations.
Read More | September 28, 2020
“In Washington, the idea is you’re poor because you don’t work. That’s not the issue with Latinos,” David Hayes-Bautista, a professor of medicine at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said. “Latinos work. But they’re poor. The problem is, we don’t pay them,” he said.
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