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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.
Furthermore, the compliant said district 15 has a concentration of white voters with a history of racially polarized voting. This was discovered through a study done on voting patterns in the valley by the Director of the UCLA Voting Rights Project Matt Barreto.
Read More | February 10, 2022
“The fight to ensure the voting rights of all Americans is taking place in county and state courthouses all across the nation,” Bernadette Reyes, staff attorney with UCLA Voting Rights Project, said in the release.
The University of California, Los Angeles’s Latino Policy and Politics Institute found that between March 2020 and March 2021, the number of Latinas in the workforce dropped by nearly 3%. “Some of our most insightful and critical workers are going to be left out of the labor force and it’s going to be detrimental to all Americans,” said Sonja Diaz, founding executive director of the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
Read More | February 5, 2022
To speak to the 1929 law, Gorman presented the testimony of Professor Kelly Lytle Hernández, the Thomas E. Lifka Chair of History at UCLA. Professor Lytle Hernández recounted the anti-Mexican sentiment pervading America during what historians describe as the “tribal ’20s,” including the “Juan Crow” regime, a racialized system of legal oppression of Latinos in the U.S. mirroring Jim Crow laws targeting Black Americans in the south.
Read More | February 3, 2022
Wealthier Black families who could afford to move to other places after highways bisected their neighborhoods did so, said Eric Avila, an urban planning professor at UCLA. Those who stayed behind were left with declining job prospects. “Highway construction fueled the disappearance of jobs in the cities, which left these neighborhoods bereft of any kind of economic opportunity,” Avila said.
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