Spring Faculty Retreat-May 2022
RSVP NOW
(RSVP is Required)
Webinar ID: 985 0603 2775
Passcode: Retreat
Premise:
UHD has engaged in a yearlong series of conversations and action around diversity,
equity, and inclusion (DEI) with the goals of creating a more equitable and inclusive
environment for faculty, staff and students. The Office of the Provost challenged
academic departments to document and identify more meaningful and sustained efforts
towards DEI outcomes, as was appropriate for the current level of engagement of faculty
and staff in the unit. The goals of the spring 2022 Faculty Retreat are three-fold:
1) recognize, give voice to, and address the criticisms of the DEI efforts of our
campus in the spirit of inclusion and critical dialogue; 2) depoliticize DEI and emphasize
the value of critical theory in catalyzing institutional reform as a key contributor
to student success and staff/faculty support; and 3) create a space to recognize and
showcase the DEI efforts of the faculty in academic units. The spring 2022 Faculty
Retreat will establish the long-standing challenge to continue momentum in DEI efforts
to dismantle systemic marginalization and ensure all students, faculty and staff are
included and supported maximally in all UHD academic, workplace, and social settings.
Proposed External Scholar:
Dr. Emily Drew, Associate Professor of Sociology and Ethnic Studies at Willamette University. Dr. Drew teaches courses about racism, race and ethnicity, urban sociology, mass media, and social change. Dr. Drew is a renowned scholar in the areas of social justice struggles and her primary areas of research involve understanding how race and racism operate inside of social institutions, particularly higher education, media and urban planning.
Proposed Agenda:
9:00–9:20 AM: Opening remarks
“Why DEI and why now?" Dr. Emily Drew, Center for Critical Race Studies Fellows and members of the Office of the Provost will engage in a dialogue of counter-storytelling, in the allegorical manner of Dr. Derrick Bell, to create a shared purpose and framework for DEI at UHD.
11:00 – 11:15: Break
11:15 – 12:15 PM:Case Study in the Work of Inclusion at UHD–
- Create a space to highlight the efforts and struggles of one or two departments in the work of inclusion (to be selected by the Office of the Provost).
- Recognize and celebrate the faculty efforts in DEI and encourage continuous learning, self-reflection, and movement towards institutional transformation.
- Next steps in sustaining the work of equity and inclusion at UHD.
12:15 – 12:30: Closing remarks
12:30 – 2:00 PM: Lunch (for face-to-face participants); Highlight Student Survey Data and DEI Dashboards; Q&A session; optional post-retreat discussions and conversation.
Guest & Keynote Speaker
Dr. Emily Drew
Emily M. Drew is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Ethnic Studies at Willamette
University, where she teaches courses about racism, race and ethnicity, urban sociology,
mass media, and social change. Her primary areas of research involve understanding
how race and racism operate inside of social institutions, particularly higher education,
media and urban planning. She earned her doctorate, as well as Master’s degrees, from
Loyola University Chicago, and has articles published in Critical Studies in Media
Communication and Television & New Media. Drew’s work is driven by a long-term commitment
to social justice struggles. She has been actively engaged in anti-racism organizing
and activism for almost 20 years, and serves as a co-trainer of “Understanding Institutional
Racism” workshops for Crossroads Anti Racism Organizing and Training. She gives presentations
at universities and community-based organizations on the subjects of white privilege,
gentrification, fair housing, reparations and affirmative action. In all of these
capacities, she is an organizer and strategic planner, helping institutions develop
and implement long term commitments to anti-racist, multicultural diversity.
Publications :
Drew, Emily M. (2012). "'Listening Through WhiteEars': Cross-Racial Dialogues as a Strategy
to Address the Harmful Effects ofGentrification," Journal of Urban Affairs, 34(1):99-115.
Drew, Emily M. (2011). "Strategies forAntiracist Representation: Ethnic Tourism and
Gentrification," Journal of Tourism & Cultural Change, 9(2): 55-69.
Drew, Emily M. (2011). "Pretending to be'Post-Racial': The Spectacularization of Race in Reality
TV's Survivor," Television& New Media, 12(4):326-346.