UCSB scholars organize and will present research at a Mexico City conference on racial inequality in the Americas

“Our interest is to address how the increasing availability of ethnic and racial statistics has created new ways of gathering information, analytical frameworks and conceptual approaches,” Saldivar said. “In particular we are interested to present recent research that addresses the tension between self-identification and racial classification to measure racial inequality.”
 
Consisting of six panels and three workshops, the conference will bring together scholars, government officials, and indigenous and afro-descendant advocacy organizations from Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Brazil, France and the United States.
 
“The goal of the conference,” Saldivar said, “is to provide a space where ethnographers, statisticians, government officials and social activists can exchange their different perspectives and together move forward the work for racial inequality. In order to do so we are using different formats (panels, round tables and a workshop on statistical literacy the morning after the conference) to promote conversations and exchange of ideas.”
 
Other UCSB faculty participating in the conference are Edward Telles, a professor of sociology, and Vilna Bashi Treitler, professor and chair of the Department of Black Studies.
 
The conference, which will be livestreamed, is sponsored by Iberoamericana University, Center for Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS), UCSB and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

News Date: 

Thursday, June 14, 2018