Activist Meet & Greet: People of Color.
The Activist Meet & Greet Series provides informal networking events focused on different areas of public health practice.
This event features health organizations and advocates in partnership with communities of color. The work these organizations are doing in community action, program development, and individual empowerment align strongly with the ethos of SPH and the Activist Lab. The goal is to build connections and foster relationships between these organizations and the BUSPH community. Our partners are looking to engage in thoughtful, meaningful discussions with faculty and staff whose research and scholarship align with the needs of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) as well as MPH, MS, DrPH, and PhD students who are looking for:
- Part-time jobs
- Full-time jobs
- Volunteer opportunities
- Practicum opportunities
- Networking and opportunities to learn more about the organization
All students, faculty, and staff interested in building their network in the BIPOC communities are welcome to attend. Food will be offered to-go. Please follow all BU COVID-19 public health and safety protocols. Masks are required during this event.
Please RSVP using the form below.
Community Partners:
Asian Women for Health
AWFH is a peer-led, community-based network dedicated to advancing Asian women’s health and wellness through education, advocacy, and support. We envision a world where Asian women are well-informed, have access to care that is culturally appropriate and high quality, and inspired to live happy, healthy lives.
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Boston Public Health Commission
The Boston Public Health Commission, the country’s oldest health department, is an independent public agency providing a wide range of health services and programs. It is governed by a seven-member board of health appointed by the Mayor of Boston.
Public service and access to quality health care are the cornerstones of our mission – to protect, preserve, and promote the health and well-being of all Boston residents, particularly those who are most vulnerable. The Commission’s more than 40 programs are grouped into six bureaus: Child, Adolescent & Family Health; Community Health Initiatives; Homeless Services; Infectious Disease; Recovery Services; and Emergency Medical Services.
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Boston University Center for Antiracist Research
The mission of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research is to convene researchers and practitioners from various disciplines to figure out novel and practical ways to understand, explain, and solve seemingly intractable problems of racial inequity and injustice. We foster exhaustive racial research, research-based policy innovation, data-driven educational and advocacy campaigns, and narrative-change initiatives. We are working toward building an antiracist society that ensures equity and justice for all.
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Massachusetts Public Health Association
The Massachusetts Public Health Association (MPHA) is a nonprofit organization that promotes a healthy Massachusetts through advocacy, community organizing, and coalition building. We are leaders in the movement to create health equity by addressing the root causes of health and wellness. We promote policies that impact the major drivers of health outcomes, such as access to healthy food, safe affordable housing, and transportation. We also advocate for equitable public health services throughout the Commonwealth.
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New England Innocence Project
The New England Innocence Project (NEIP) is an independent social justice non-profit that works to correct and prevent wrongful convictions and fights injustice within the criminal legal system for innocent people imprisoned for a crime they did not commit in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Our team provides free forensic testing, investigation, experts, and an experienced legal team to exonerate the innocent and bring them home to their loved ones. We provide exoneree support as they work to rebuild their lives in freedom through the peer-led Exoneree Network. We also use our expertise about wrongful convictions to provide education and advocate for legislative and judicial reforms to prevent future tragedies.
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Saheli
More than two decades years ago, Saheli recognized that domestic violence adversely affected many immigrant families. Saheli’s aim was to become a beacon of hope for women and children affected by this public health crisis. Today Saheli is a non-profit that offers many cultural and language-specific services to South Asian and Arab domestic violence survivors and their children. South Asian and Arab women with diverse religious, cultural and linguistic backgrounds, and varying English language proficiency often find it difficult to find vital culturally sensitive services. Saheli is well aware of barriers for women who want to reach out for help like unique cultural factors, acculturation stress, a limited support structure in the US, and limited English language proficiency.
Saheli is here to offer non-judgmental culturally sensitive domestic and sexual violence services that are vital to the wellbeing of immigrant survivors of domestic and sexual violence while keeping in mind their unique cultural beliefs and upbringing.
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Raul Fernandez for State Representative
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Raul knows that real progress requires representatives who are deeply committed to these fights. As our next State Representative, he will work every day for our Brookline community and to build justice across the Commonwealth on topics from housing to education to climate to community safety. He knows what it takes to make change, why we need it so urgently, and that it’s past time for us to get to work making it.