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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.
Eric Avila, a historian of urban culture at UCLA, said the cityโs โpermissiveness, experimentation and some would say progressivenessโ are features that โplay into West Hollywood becoming the new Amsterdam of the U.S. in terms of cannabis.โ City and business leaders hope the brand refresh will draw big-spending tourists and upscale locals to the planned businesses, where visitors will be able to smoke, eat or imbibe their weed of choice in a range of settings.
Read More | November 29, 2021
An analysis conducted by the UCLA Voting Rights Project used outcomes from other statewide elections, such as the 2012 Supreme Court contest, to see how the District 15 in the plan would perform for Latino voters. The district would consistently vote against Latino candidates of choice, the analysis found.
Read More | November 26, 2021
Chad Dunn, legal director of the UCLA Voting Rights Project, said bipartisan negotiations may be good for political parties, but theyโre not always good for everyone โ including voters of color. His organization has criticized the Washington commissionโs proposed map as potentially violating the federal Voting Rights Act in Central Washington, which is heavily Latino.
Read More | November 24, 2021
Martรญnez subrayรณ que, de acuerdo con un informe reciente del doctor David Hayes-Bautista, director del Centro para el Estudio de la Salud y la Cultura Latina en UCLA, el producto interno bruto de los latinos ascendiรณ en 2018 a $2.6 billones, y si fueran una naciรณn independiente, ocuparรญan la octava posiciรณn en el mundo, con…
Read More | November 23, 2021
Democrats Brady Piรฑero Walkinshaw and April Sims came to the conclusion that it was required, using analysis from UCLA Voting Rights Project director Matt Barreto. Republicans Graves and Joe Fain used a different analysis and said drawing a Latino voter majority district would constitute racial gerrymandering.
Read More | November 18, 2021
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