Bridging the Generational Gap to Understand Shifts in Meaning of Gender

By | June 28th, 2016|Intergroup Relations, LGBTQ+|

The “generation gap” has always impacted how college administrators, faculty and staff relate to students. The zeitgeist of a generation will define how individuals will think about a social identity, including how gender is socially constructed. As a result, the way gender is perceived, defined and lived means different things to different people who are

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There’s a deep divide in how blacks and whites see race. New numbers prove it.

By | June 27th, 2016|Intergroup Relations|

A report that asked thousands of people about their views of racism has found the nation to still be deeply divided, with majorities of black and white Americans holding nearly opposite views of the impact of skin color.

 

Read more in the Los Angeles Times.

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Tears Flow and Spirits Sag, but Some Immigrants Look to November With Determination

By | June 24th, 2016|Immigration|

WASHINGTON — Isabel Aguilar had sworn she would not cry on Thursday if the Supreme Court ruled against President Obama’s programs to give deportation protection to immigrants in the country illegally. But she did.

Read more in The New York Times.

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Supreme Court Deals Blow to Obama’s Immigration Plan — and to Hopes of ‘Dreamers’

By | June 24th, 2016|Education, Immigration|

The U.S. Supreme Court’s deadlock on Thursday in a key immigration case disappointed college students who had hoped for reassurance that their parents and siblings wouldn’t be deported.

Read more in The Chronicle of Higher Education.

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Editorial The Supreme Court keeps affirmative action alive — for now

By | June 24th, 2016|Education|

Thursday’s 4-3 Supreme Court decision upholding a racial preference program at the University of Texas at Austin is a dramatic victory for affirmative action, snatched from what once seemed a likely defeat.

 

http://www.latimes.com/opinion/editorials/la-ed-affirmative-action-20160623-snap-story.html

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