Arts, Lectures and Gatherings

This Week's Events

Grant Writing Basics
Center For Nonprofit Leadership

Oxnard Campus

Workshop attendees will explore the basics of writing a winning proposal and learn how to craft each component of a grant proposal.

The event is from 8 a.m. to noon.

Uncovering Watergate: Intrigue, Investigation, Impact and Untold Stories
FABulous Fall Lecture Series Part A

Lundring Events Center and Zoom

This lecture will dive deep into the Watergate scandal, one of the most notorious political events in American history.

Presentation of the Draft Social Statement on Civic Life and Faith

Ullman Conference Center 100/101

Hear the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America's draft social statement on civic life and faith, which covers the First Amendment, relationship of church and state, and dialogue across differences.

Illustrated Manuscripts: From Devotions to Doodles
FABulous Fall Lecture Series Part A

Oxnard Center and Zoom

This course will examine illuminated manuscripts, hand-written devotional books lavishly illuminated with gold and silver ink on top of brightly-colored images.

Environmental Justice: The Power of a Bold Vision of Change
David N. Pellow, PhD

Swenson Center for Social and Behavioral Sciences 101/102

Join David N. Pellow, PhD, for a lecture on cases of environmental and climate justice involving communities of color and Indigenous communities fighting for liberation, sovereignty and access to recreational spaces.

Orphans of the Nation: Mexican Transnational Citizenship, 1920-1940
History Lecture Series

Ullman Conference Center 100/101

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month with a presentation by Romeo Guzmán, PhD, focused on his current research offering transnational histories of Mexican migrants and Mexican Americans. 

Strategic Board Recruitment Through a DEIJ Lens
Center For Nonprofit Leadership

Oxnard Campus

This workshop seeks to arm nonprofit leaders with a different set of questions to enable them to strengthen both the make-up and overall effectiveness of their boards.

The event is from 9 a.m. to noon.

Are You an Algorithmic Problem? The Democratic Value of Resisting Classification
FABulous Fall Lecture Series Part A

Zoom

In this lecture, Jose Marichal, PhD, will argue that democratic health requires that large numbers of its citizens defy algorithmic classification, hence remain as "outliers" and "algorithmic problems."

Latine Heritage Month Lecture Lunch
"Wait in Punishment: Visualizing Migration to the Mexico-U.S. Border"

Lundring Events Center

Join us for the first lecture lunch as we celebrate Latine Heritage Month with speaker Nancy Rios-Contreras, PhD.

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