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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.
How did people of Chinese descent become an integral and significant component of contemporary Jamaican identity? The arrival of Chinese immigrants to Jamaica was largely rooted in indentureship schemes of the 1840s, planned by the white elite on the island and in Britain. Through their creative lens, top writers and visual artists of Chinese descent in this series will examine how Chinese-Jamaicans have, and continue to, dynamically grow and shape culture in Jamaica.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
Be intentional about bringing your dreams to life. Reflect on the previous year and fearlessly craft your dreams for the future through an afternoon of connection, imagination, and storytelling. In partnership with NYU Leadership Initiative and The Missing Year Project; this summit has been designed to center BIPOC students. Open to all NYU graduate students and SSLD alum.
In this interactive session, establish foundational knowledge about LGBTQ+ communities, issues these communities face, and LGBTQ+ resources at NYU and beyond.
Mele Kiaʻi Mauna highlights the art, music, and creative expression which has been inspired by and has strengthened the movement to protect Mauna Kea. Featuring Jamaica Osorio, Pua Case, and more.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
A screening of short films from the New Negress Film Society, “a collective of Black women and non-binary filmmakers who create community, spaces, and films that reimagine cultural productions that have traditionally exploited our communities”. Post-screening discussion by New Negress Film Society filmmakers Faren Humes, Chanelle Aponte Pearson, Stefani Saintonge, and Yvonne Michelle Shirley. Moderated by Mia Mask (Professor of Film, Vassar).
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
A discerning but affirming workshop space to craft BIPOC pitches to the industry. All Tisch students open to apply.
A discerning but affirming workshop space to craft BIPOC pitches to the industry. All Tisch students open to apply.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
A discerning but affirming workshop space to craft BIPOC pitches to the industry. All Tisch students open to apply.
Join the John Brademas Center in welcoming Maria Hinojosa in conversation about her new book, Once I Was You: A Memoir of Love and Hate in a Torn America, with author and former WWE wrestler AJ Mendez. Maria will talk about her intimate experience growing up Mexican American on the South Side of Chicago.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
Attend a screening of HBO's Genera+ion. It is a dark yet playful half-hour show that follows a group of Orange County high school students, whose exploration of modern sexuality tests deeply entrenched beliefs about life, love, and the nature of family in their conservative community. Think Euphoria meets Booksmart.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
This event is to honor all graduating undergraduate and graduate students who identify as part of the Asian, Pacific Islander, and Desi Diaspora. It serves as a platform to celebrate the connections forged at NYU and remind us to sustain them beyond graduation as active members of the community. We would like to invite faculty and staff members to participate and support our graduating students.
How did people of Chinese descent become an integral and significant component of contemporary Jamaican identity? The arrival of Chinese immigrants to Jamaica was largely rooted in indentureship schemes of the 1840s, planned by the white elite on the island and in Britain. Through their creative lens, top writers and visual artists of Chinese descent in this series will examine how Chinese-Jamaicans have, and continue to, dynamically grow and shape culture in Jamaica.
NYU’s Division of Student Affairs, Global Spiritual Life, and Office of Global Inclusion, Diversity, and Strategic Innovation are holding a Post-Verdict Student Reflection Space to process the verdict in the case of Derek Chauvin’s murder of George Floyd. This 90-minute open share space for NYU students will focus on this moment in time, its nuances, and global impact.
A presentation on the history of migration and immigration in Brooklyn. We will begin in the 19th century with the first waves of European immigration, and then spend time with the Puerto Rican community in the 1970s in the neighborhoods of Bay Ridge, Bushwick, and Red Hook; then move to Crown Heights' burgeoning West Indian population in the 1980s, followed by Sunset Park's Chinese community in the 1990s and the Muslim community on Atlantic Avenue, with much more. This talk will be centered around place and the lived experience of members of each community, using materials from our oral history, photograph, map, postcard, and ephemera collections to tell their stories. The discussion will also refer back to themes explored by Mohsin Hamid in Exit West.
Based on the framework for Omaris Z. Zamora's first book project, Ciguapa Unbound: AfroLatina Feminist Epistemologies of Tranceformation, author and poet Elizabeth Acevedo, artist Firelei Báez, performance artist Josefina Báez, and Ginetta Candelario, Professor of Sociology and of Latin American & Latino/a Studies at Smith College, will join her in collective dialogue of the critical fabulations of La Ciguapa’s story and the ways it allows them to grapple with the erasure of Blackness, through indigenista mestizaje in the Dominican context as well as the transnational geographies she inhabits.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
Presented by the NYU Center for the Study of Gender & Sexuality. Co-sponsored by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU and The Latinx Project at NYU. This panel explores contemporary debates on solidarity and coalitional politics that are instrumental to conceptualizing political subjectivity, collectivity and belonging in our current political conjuncture.
The Hemispheric Institute and the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage of the Smithsonian Institution present: Indigenous Cinema '21. A series of short and feature films from across the hemisphere with a focus on Indigenous voices, languages, and new narratives. Week One Films: Uu?uu~tah - Dir. Chad Charlie (Ahousaht/Canada), Mino Bimaadiziwin -Dir. Ishkwaazhe Shane McSauby (Kchi Wiikwedong Anishinaabe), and La Lluvia Fue Testigo/Witness Was the Rain -Dir. Nicolás Soto Guerra (Mapuche-Huilliche/Chile)
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
The first half of this space for employees will engage a storytelling and narrative process for reflection led by Ssanyu Birigwa, facilitator of narrative medicine and adjunct professor at Columbia University; the second half will focus on community action and commitment, led by Monroe France, AVP for Global Engagement & Inclusive Leadership in OGI. Hosted by the Office of Global Inclusion; co-sponsored by the Provost Office.
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed the dangers of precarious public-facing employment. Hosted by Cities Collaborative at NYU and co-sponsored by The Latinx Project, join this roundtable where three major scholars consider place “essential work”–in the service sector, food preparation, and health care–in broad historical perspective, with attention to Latinx, African American, and women workers who have borne the brunt of high risk, poorly paid, insecure work.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
The Hemispheric Institute and the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage of the Smithsonian Institution present: Indigenous Cinema '21. A series of short and feature films from across the hemisphere with a focus on Indigenous voices, languages, and new narratives. Week One Films: Uu?uu~tah - Dir. Chad Charlie (Ahousaht/Canada), Mino Bimaadiziwin -Dir. Ishkwaazhe Shane McSauby (Kchi Wiikwedong Anishinaabe), and La Lluvia Fue Testigo/Witness Was the Rain -Dir. Nicolás Soto Guerra (Mapuche-Huilliche/Chile)
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
The Hemispheric Institute and the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage of the Smithsonian Institution present: Indigenous Cinema '21. A series of short and feature films from across the hemisphere with a focus on Indigenous voices, languages, and new narratives. Week One Films: Uu?uu~tah - Dir. Chad Charlie (Ahousaht/Canada), Mino Bimaadiziwin -Dir. Ishkwaazhe Shane McSauby (Kchi Wiikwedong Anishinaabe), and La Lluvia Fue Testigo/Witness Was the Rain -Dir. Nicolás Soto Guerra (Mapuche-Huilliche/Chile)
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
The John Brademas Center and NYU Washington, DC will host a DC Dialogues, “Prioritizing Biodiversity and Green Energy: A Conversation with President of Costa Rica Carlos Alvarado” on April 26, 2021 at 12 pm ET (10 am in Costa Rica). Claudia S. de Windt, environmental expert and CEO of Inter-American Institute on Justice and Sustainability (IIJS) will join the discussion as a special guest speaker. Geovanny Vicente Romero, Writer, Founder, Dominican Republic Center of Public Policy, Leadership and Development (CPDL-RD), and Columnist for CNN will moderate the event.
The Hemispheric Institute and the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage of the Smithsonian Institution present: Indigenous Cinema '21. A series of short and feature films from across the hemisphere with a focus on Indigenous voices, languages, and new narratives. Week One Films: Uu?uu~tah - Dir. Chad Charlie (Ahousaht/Canada), Mino Bimaadiziwin -Dir. Ishkwaazhe Shane McSauby (Kchi Wiikwedong Anishinaabe), and La Lluvia Fue Testigo/Witness Was the Rain -Dir. Nicolás Soto Guerra (Mapuche-Huilliche/Chile)
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
Join us in discussing the barriers that women of color face in the workplace and the structural inequities that create a lack of representation in leadership roles. We will share insights on navigating careers, the power of mentorship and sponsorship, and solutions for how to advance equity in the workplace.
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.
How are historically disenfranchised communities winning new political power and standing up to structural racism? What lessons do they offer in the fight for democracy? Join us for a conversation with five leaders whose work strengthens political clout for their communities and voting rights for all Americans.
Hosted by NYU LUCHA (Latinos Unidos Con Honor y Amistad) and CMEP (Center for Multicultural and Education Programs) a night of celebrating Latine Success in Academia.
As the torch (sulo) illuminates, once-obscured visions (panawin) arise from the dark. Part of the Sulo initiative, Visions/Panawin aims to showcase a film tradition that is now increasingly being recognized across international film circles, Philippine cinema. This weeks film is "K’na, the Dreamweaver" (2014, 85 min), written and directed by Ida del Mundo
“The Interruption of Everything: Toward a Black Feminist Theory of Time” A talk with author, college professor, cultural critic, and activist Dr. Brittney Cooper
MindfulNYU hosts a wide offering of FREE yoga and meditation classes throughout the week during the academic year. All classes are open to students, faculty, and staff with a current and valid NYU ID.