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Presented By: Rackham Graduate School

Rackham Minority Serving Institutions Initiative Coffee Chat Series: Critical Hope—Engaging in Racialized Change Work

There is abundant empirical evidence locating higher education policy and organizations as sites that (re)produce persistent racial inequities. These inequities are (re)created, in no small part, by the racialization of institutions that serve the greatest proportion of racially minoritized students—specifically, Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs). As a category of racialized organization, contemporary theory predicts that MSIs would routinely suffer from lesser access to resources and agency, and would face more restrictive regulation and accountability (Ray, 2019; McCambly & Colyvas, forthcoming). Indeed, we can see these patterns emerge across multiple mechanisms of public policy. But what types of actions are available to us as leaders or collectives that may diminish the relative advantages of white institutions over MSIs?
In this talk, Heather McCambly will engage with the community in conversation, sharing a construct she’s developing—racialized change work—to refer to the purposive action that actors take to build new, equitable organizational arrangements or tear down old, inequitable ones. McCambly will present examples and testable propositions for how racialized change work can spread (engagement), stick (institutionalization), and what effects it may have on producing equitable outcomes (impact).
Speaker: Heather McCambly is a mixed-methods, interdisciplinary scholar of higher education. She also studies the role of organizations in (re)producing systemic, racial inequalities. She draws on a range of analytic and interpretive methods to study the influence of aspiring change agents on institutionalized racial inequities in higher education policy. Constructs central to her work include racialized organizations, institutional persistence and change, racial frames, political development and racial backlash, and organizational sensemaking.
McCambly’s current research asks: 1) What is and what could be the role of private philanthropy and public grantmaking in effecting racially just policy change in U.S. postsecondary education? and 2) Under what conditions do equity agendas address racialized inequalities rather than operating as new labels for old practices?
As a first-generation college student, a community college graduate, and a multi-ethnic Latina, she is personally invested in generating clearer explanations for how, despite years of equity interventions, students of color continue to have limited access to life-affirming postsecondary experiences.
Registration is required at https://myumi.ch/293zD.
We want to ensure full and equitable participation in our events. If an accommodation would promote your full participation in this event, please follow the registration link to indicate your accommodation requirements. Please let us know as soon as possible in order to have adequate time, preferably one week, to arrange for your requested accommodations or an effective alternative.

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