
Throughout March, CSUSB will hold a series of virtual events honoring the accomplishments of womxn in celebration of Womxn’s History Month.

CSUSB is proud to join with Excelencia in Education to bring to the public “25 Years of Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs),” a new, major research project. A briefing will be held online beginning at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, March 2.

Open to all, the informative Zoom session set for 11 a.m. on Friday, March 5, will include two prolific CSUSB authors, and acquisitions editors from two of the most esteemed academic publishers, Routledge and Sage.

The presentation, “Policing Different DNAs: How Our Focus on Diversity in Policing May Be Misguided,” will be livestreamed on Zoom beginning at 3 p.m. Wednesday, March 3.

The Modern China Lecture Series will host two talks today and Tuesday, both on Zoom. Hong Kong-based journalist Ryan Ho Kirkpatrick will speak at 5:30 p.m. today on the current situation in Hong Kong. Author Rana Mitter will speak at 10 a.m. Tuesday on how World War II shaped a new nationalism in China.

Virtual Justice Luncheons are set to be presented on Monday, March 1, with Brandon Butler, deputy director of Fair Employment and Housing, and Wednesday, March 3, with Project Rebound staff. Both will take place at noon.

An accounting major in his first two years of college, Mohamed could have gone into corporate or tax law. What he saw on the streets of Washington, D.C., and learned in a Constitutional law class on civil liberties changed that.

Rashid Khalidi, the Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies, discussed his latest book, “The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine: A History of Settler Colonialism and Resistance, 1917-2017,” during a livestream that was viewed by more than 100 people worldwide.

To learn more about the competition, sign up for an information session at 4 p.m. on either Monday or Tuesday, March 1 or 2, at the Innovation Challenge Intent to Compete site.

The John M. Pfau Library will work with Jennifer Tilton, professor of race and ethnic studies at the University of Redlands, to reinvigorate the “Bridges that Carried Us Over” project, which documents the presence and contributions of the African American community in the Inland Empire.

Brian Levin (criminal justice) commented on a bill by a local congressman that would help prevent white nationalists from infiltrating the U.S. military.

This spring semester, CSUSB introduced Latin American Studies 2000, its first-ever introductory and interdisciplinary course on the study of Latin America, which draws on the expertise of five different faculty members from across campus.