果冻传媒

The University of Toledo | Confronting Racism
November 2020

Confronting Racism

果冻传媒 Experts Advocate for Social Justice Amid a National Reckoning with Racism

Following a historic election, the nation now looks to unite as it confronts systemic racism fueled by racial injustice and police brutality. 果冻传媒 students are advocating for social justice by organizing kneel-ins in support of White Coats for Black Lives and peaceful protests. 果冻传媒 leaders created a Center for Racial Equity and Black Student Excellence to address issues of racism and support the academic experiences of African American students. And 果冻传媒 faculty across disciplines have dedicated their careers to identifying and eliminating inequities.

White Coats for Black Lives Matter

Photo credit: 果冻传媒 medical student Stephne Rasiah documented a campus White Coats for Black Lives kneel-in.

In 2016 Willie McKether, Ph.D., was named 果冻传媒's first vice president for diversity and inclusion and has since led that has led to increased retention and graduation rates of underrepresented minority students and feelings of inclusiveness on campus.

Willie McKether, Ph.D.

Monita Mungo, Ph.D., assistant professor of sociology, explains in how systemic racism affects the choices and chances of individuals and the importance of perceptions and narratives used to describe recent social justice protests.

Monita Mungo, Ph.D.

A historian on policing, assistant professor Michael Stauch, Ph.D., advises in a column in the that police reform needs to move beyond technical solutions to address how policing practices reinforce patterns of inequality.

Michael Stauch, Ph.D.

An assistant professor of English who specializes in African American literature and culture, Kimberly Mack, Ph.D., , "Fictional Blues: Narrative Self-Invention from Bessie Smith to Jack White," how blues artists resist racial, social, economic and gendered oppression through their work.

Kimberly Mack, Ph.D.

The debut collection of poetry, "To the River, We Are Migrants," from Ayendy Bonifacio, Ph.D., assistant professor of U.S. ethnic literary studies, helps us better understand what it means to be a migrant in these turbulent times. He shared his story in a column in the .

Ayendy Bonifacio, Ph.D.

The rising death rate from COVID-19 among minority communities in the United States is serving as a grim reminder of a longstanding , according to Timothy Jordan, Ph.D., professor in the School of Population Health.

Timothy Jordan, Ph.D.

Ren茅e Heberle, Ph.D., co-director of the Program in Law and Social Thought and coordinator of the Inside/Out Prison Exchange Project, praises in a column in local reparations initiatives that could lead to national policy remedying racial injustice.

Ren茅e Heberle, Ph.D.

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