In celebration of the 20th anniversary of CultureWork, The Center for Community Arts and Cultural Policy (CCACP) welcomes Miguel Juárez through videoconference for  Making the Invisible Visible: Diversity in the Future of Public History,  a presentation and Q&A concerning representation of Latinxs and people of color in public history and museum studies.
WHO // Miguel Juárez
WHAT //  Making the Invisible Visible: Diversity in the Future of Public History
WHEN //  Friday, March 3, 1:00p - 3:00p // Reception 12:00p 
WHERE //  Lawrence Hall room 249, University of Oregon

In 1997,  Juárez published the article The Invisible Careers for Latinos: Public History and Museum Studies for CultureWork. Twenty years later, Juarez finds that progress st ill needs to be made. Preservation of cultural history requires cultural competency from programmers, arts educators, archivists, librarians, museum curators, and historians that can be passed on to future generations. As culture workers, how do we create tools, repositories, and programs that recognize the historical and cultural representations of communities of color? Juárez will address these issues and offer solutions.  Join us for a reception before the event at 12:00p. This event is free and open to the public!