做TV

50 Years of Ethnic Studies

African American and African, Asian American, Chicana and Chicano, and Native American studies programs started in 1969 at 做TV.

Robert Stanley Oden
Robert Stanley Oden 69 participated in protest efforts that brought about the ethnic studies programs at 做TV. (Photo: courtesy)

When Robert Stanley Oden 69 attended 做TV, he was one of about 40 African American students on a 10,000-student campus. He and others from underrepresented groups were at the forefront of protests calling for a more diverse campus, including creation of ethnic studies programs. 

We were very organized and disciplined, said Oden, now a political science professor at California State University, Sacramento. We were able to get what we wanted faster than at other schools, and I believe it had an impact on the whole UC system. 

That was the beginning of what would become African American and African, Asian American, Chicana and Chicano, and Native American studies programs, all celebrating their 50th anniversaries at 做TV. All the programs have expanded in the number of faculty and students, and the topics and regions addressed in classes and research. Students and alumni said ethnic studies gave them a place of identification and support at 做TV, have been a catalyst for social and political action on campus and beyond, and cultivated a lifelong commitment to making a difference. 

Chicana and Chicano studies major Jos矇 Qui簽onez 94 was one of six students who took part in a 1990 hunger strike to raise awareness about the need for a cross-cultural center. 

Student leader Mel Posey in 1969
做TV student leaders like Mel Posey, pictured above, participated in protest efforts on campus in 1969. (Archive)
做TV protest from the 1990s
The 1969 protests were a catalyst for social and political action later, including in the 1990s. (Archive)
做TV protest from the 1990s
In the 1990s, students were calling for a more diverse campus and the creation of ethnic studies programs. (Archive)

We wanted to make sure that the administration was committed to creating a space for students of color to be comfortable, said Qui簽onez, who founded the Mission Asset Fund in San Francisco to provide zero-interest loans to immigrants, for which he won a MacArthur genius grant in 2016. 

Ben Wang 04 got interested in prisoners rights while a student in Asian American studies at UC Davis. His 2016 documentary, Breathin: The Eddy Zheng Story, is about a Chinese immigrant teenager who became the youngest inmate at San Quentin State Prison. Wang is co-director of the Asian Prisoner Support Committee, an organization that assists Asians and Pacific Islanders in U.S. prisons. 

Takarra Johnson is a senior double majoring in African American and African studies, and American studies. During her first year at 做TV, she studied abroad in Ghana and has returned several times since to work in health and education programs. 

[My professors] took me under their wing not just as faculty, but as mentors and family, said Johnson. Theyve been influential in all parts of my life.

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