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Events featured on the Tisch Office of Diversity webpage will highlight workshops, performances and gatherings across NYU that promote the ideals of inclusion, diversity, belonging, equity and accessibility. Please click each event and follow links therein to learn more about the programs and offices hosting each of these events.
Events featured on the Tisch Office of Diversity webpage will highlight workshops, performances and gatherings across NYU that promote the ideals of inclusion, diversity, belonging, equity and accessibility. Please click each event and follow links therein to learn more about the programs and offices hosting each of these events.
Join Alyosha Goldstein and Simón Ventura Trujillo, co-editors of "For Antifascist Futures: Against the Violence of Imperial Crisis,” in conversation with Nikhil Pal Singh, Macarena Gomez Barris, and Nadia Abu El-Haj.
NYU best practices for initial conversations with individuals who have been impacted by or involved in a challenging conflict/experiences. The discussion will center restorative questions as a way to gather the appropriate information from the individual.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.
Launched in Fall 2020, A/P/A Reads is a student-run book club for NYU students with an interest in A/P/A writing and literature. Members meet monthly to discuss selected works, and engage in meaningful dialogue together. The club is sponsored by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.
In an unnamed city in the Bay Area, California, a family of Filipino-Americans inherit a run-down restaurant, a suburban home, and a Filipina housekeeper. What happens when the establishment of a legacy clashes with the healing of another?
Through digital paintings, material culture, photography and curated mixtapes these artists will open a portal to their intimate exploration of the self and its ultimate impact in the collective imagination. On display through December 5, 2022.
The exhibition is based on the book of the same name—a stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War Soldiers.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.
In an unnamed city in the Bay Area, California, a family of Filipino-Americans inherit a run-down restaurant, a suburban home, and a Filipina housekeeper. What happens when the establishment of a legacy clashes with the healing of another?
The exhibition is based on the book of the same name—a stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War Soldiers.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.
In an unnamed city in the Bay Area, California, a family of Filipino-Americans inherit a run-down restaurant, a suburban home, and a Filipina housekeeper. What happens when the establishment of a legacy clashes with the healing of another?
The exhibition is based on the book of the same name—a stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War Soldiers.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.
Through digital paintings, material culture, photography and curated mixtapes these artists will open a portal to their intimate exploration of the self and its ultimate impact in the collective imagination. On display through December 5, 2022.
Indigenous Peoples’ Day serves as a day to recognize and celebrate the leadership, resistance, and sovereignty of Native and Indigenous Peoples.
The exhibition is based on the book of the same name—a stunning collection of stoic portraits and intimate ephemera from the lives of Black Civil War Soldiers.
The Students of Color Leadership Series (SOCLS) is a year-long program for first-year and second-year students of color to build connections, unpack social justice concepts, and deepen leadership skills through a lens of transformative justice.