51ÁÔĆć

De La Buena at MĂşsica del Lago with Colectivo Coffee

Thursday, August 21
6:00pm
Colectivo Lakefront
1701 N. Lincoln Memorial Dr., Milwaukee WI

Free parking is available across the street in the lot next to the sailing center

Round out your summer with live music by the lakefront from De La Buena, a local 10-piece band playing Afro-Caribbean and Latin Jazz. Colectivo Coffee and 51ÁÔĆć’s CLACS have partnered again this summer to bring three FREE outdoor concerts to Colectivo’s lakefront location for the 20th year running.

Rain date August 28 – concert cancellations due to inclement weather will be announced on no later than 4pm the same day of the show.

 

2025 Summer Teacher Institute: Reflections and Resources on Childhood and Youth in Latin America

This July 7-9, 51ÁÔĆć’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies welcomed 25 K-16 educators to campus for our annual Summer Teacher Institute, supported in part by a National Resource Center grant from the U.S. Department of Education and in partnership with sister centers at UW-Madison and Florida International University.

presentation in classroom
Professor Velez shares his research on Colombia’s educational system and national peace curriculum

Representing the full range of grade levels and many disciplines, educators from across Wisconsin and eight other states quickly jumped into collaborations, taking in expert presentations and buzzing in small group discussion on this year’s topic of Childhood and Youth in Latin America.

On day one, participants learned from Prof. Gabriel Velez (Marquette University, Educational Policy and Leadership) about how Colombian youth are affected by the country’s long history of violence. Dr. Velez shared how internal displacement has affected school systems, and discussed the 2015 implementation of a . Participants were quick to draw connections on incorporating these Colombian examples in their classrooms, including units on civics, Macbeth, and petroleum’s role in the drug trade.

The group rounded out the day with a visit to 51ÁÔĆć Libraries’ Research Collection, introduced by cofounder Julie Kline (UW-Milwaukee academic staff emerita): holds over 400 published children’s and young adult books that portray Latin America, the Caribbean, or Latinos in the United States. (And it is free and !)

assorted books on table
Some highlighted titles from 51ÁÔĆć’s Research Collection

The second institute day focused on Latin America’s rich history of youth activism, presented by Prof. Jessica Taft (University of California Santa Cruz, Latin American and Latino Studies). Returning participant Michelle Roberts (high school English, VA) was impressed to learn about a Latin American student culture of broad reading in social and political theory: a widespread practice that allows Latin American students to pair their own experiences with deeply-researched knowledge to advocate for change. Roberts plans to incorporate material about the Peruvian Working Children’s Movement, and (dignified work), to help her own students reflect on how their own extensive work experiences can help them keep learning and growing as whole people.

Later that day, participant Stephany Virrueta Herrera (Loyola University Chicago, School of Environmental Sustainability) appreciated a presentation from photojournalist Misha Vallejo Prut, who shared on how solar power supports school infrastructure in Ecuador’s Amazon: said Virrueta Herrera, “a lot of my students are majors in environmental sustainability, and sometimes it’s hard to find stories of hope amid these [climate] changes that are happening…I’ll definitely be bringing that story to a few of my classes.”

teachers discussing ideas around a table
Educators shared ideas for incorporating institute materials into their classrooms

Vallejo’s reporting was supported by the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting. The nonprofit – committed to reporting on systemic, global issues – sees classroom teachers as key partners in this endeavor, and offers abundant free resources developed specifically for K-12 and university educators.

An important throughline in institute conversations was the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. In this vein, María Morfín shared about her organization , which promotes children’s right to participate in their communities: the nonprofit facilitates play groups that center democratic decision-making among migrant youth and other vulnerable populations across Mexico.

Professor Hogan leads a discussion on how children are represented in Latin American filmĚý
Professor Hogan leads a discussion on how children are represented in Latin American film 

The institute concluded with a discussion of how young people are portrayed in Latin American films. Prof. Erin Hogan (U of Maryland Baltimore County, Spanish) shared core principles for using screen studies to build intercultural competence, along with dozens of film titles for teachers to use. Participants watched one such title – – in preparation for the event, and filmmakers Carlos Hagerman and Jorge Villalobos joined for a discussion of how they created this groundbreaking animated documentary, which depicts the varied migration stories of three Mexican-American youth.

For first-time participant Aaron Kaio (high school social studies, Madison), the institute helped him reconsider existing units and provided new resources for a Latin American studies class he’ll be teaching for the first time this fall. And for 51ÁÔĆć’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, that is a sure sign the event was a success: helping educators bring more Latin American content to their classrooms – in Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, Madison, La Crosse, and beyond – and preparing students to be informed and empowered global citizens.

Institute participants celebrate a successful three days of learning and collaboration
Institute participants celebrate a successful three days of learning and collaboration

Speaker Bios

  • Carlos Hagerman and Jorge Villalobos are Mexican filmmakers known for their award-winning film Home is Somewhere Else (2023), a documentary animation that shares the rich complexity of the emotional experiences of immigrant children and families to better understand and empathize with them.
    • Carlos Hagerman was born in Mexico City. He received his MFA in Film at NYU as a Fulbright scholar. He worked for eight years as a director in Alejandro González Iñárritu’s production company Zeta Films, before opening his own company. There, he produced and directed award-winning documentaries like Those Who Remain (IDA Humanitas Award 2009), Back to Life, and No Place Like Home. He also co-produced Plaza de la Soledad (Sundance 2013) and Rush Hour (SXSW 2018). He is a founding partner of Brinca Animation Studio.
    • Jorge Villalobos is a writer, director, and producer of animated and live-action projects. He directed several children’s series for Canal Once, Mexico’s Public TV channel. His animated and fiction short films won over 20 international awards. Since co-founding Brinca Animation Studio in 2012, Jorge and Carlos Hagerman have worked as a team, co-producing and co-directing animation projects for children and communication tools for human rights organizations like UNICEF and the Mexican Human Rights Commission.
  • Dr. Erin Hogan is Professor of Spanish at the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC). Dr. Hogan’s broader areas of research range from 17th century Spain to contemporary Latin America, and span the transnational screen arts, intercultural pedagogy, and videographic criticism. Her research particularly examines the child and the patriarchal corpse as biopolitical figures, gynocentric filmic representations of and by women, and the uses of comedy and satire for social justice. Dr. Hogan is the author of The Two cines con niño: Genre and the Child Protagonist in Over Fifty Years of Spanish Film (1955-2010) (Edinburgh University Press, 2018) and Patriarchy’s Remains: An Autopsy of Iberian Cinematic Dark Humour (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2024), and has taught courses including “Film and Society in Latin America” and “Political Childhood and Children’s Political Citizenship in Western Culture”.
  • Julie Kline worked in the UW-Milwaukee Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies for 38 years until her retirement in 2024. She holds a BA from the Ohio State University (International Relations) and an MA from UW-Madison (Ibero-American Studies). A long-standing interest in international children’s literature was shaped by a 1988 fellowship at the International Youth Library, Munich. That experience helped lay the groundwork for creation of the AmĂ©ricas Award for Children’s and Young Adult Literature, with the Consortium of Latin American Studies Programs (CLASP), and coordination of the award for its first 18 years, including an annual award presentation at the Library of Congress. While with 51ÁÔĆć CLACS, Kline also taught a children’s literature course online with the 51ÁÔĆć School of Education, focused on Latin American/Latinx cultural heritages, and co-organized multiple related public events, including the 2021 series “Latin American Children’s Book Creators.”
  • MarĂ­a MorfĂ­n Stoopen is founder and Director of La Jugarreta Espacios de ParticipaciĂłn AC, an organization in Tepoztlán, Morelos, MĂ©xico, that since 2000 supports children in proposing and directing collective projects for the good of the community based on their own interests. MorfĂ­n has a degree in Social Communication from Mexico’s Autonomous Metropolitan University and has consulted for multiple institutions on the implementation of programs promoting child and youth participation (including UNICEF, National System for the Integral Development of the Family, Ministry of Culture, National Electoral Institute). In addition to offering extensive trainings for educators and parents, she is the author of various books, guides, and articles on child and youth participation, such as Child and Youth Participation: A Guide for its Promotion (2012).
  • Dr. Jessica Taft is Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of California Santa Cruz and the Faculty Director of the Dolores Huerta Research Center for the Americas. Her research focuses on young people’s contributions to social change through activism and social movements in North and South America. She is the author of Rebel Girls: Youth Activism and Social Change Across the Americas (NYU Press, 2011), The Kids Are in Charge: Activism and Power in Peru’s Movement of Working Children (NYU Press, 2019), and numerous journal articles on girls’ activism, children’s participation, youth politics, and intergenerational dynamics within social movements. Dr. Taft is part of a variety of local, national, and international collaborative projects focused on child and youth participation and has worked with funders and non-governmental organizations to deepen their analysis of the challenges and possibilities of meaningful engagement with young people.
  • Misha Vallejo Prut is an Ecuadorian audiovisual artist and storyteller whose work blurs the line between documentary and art. His projects explore glocal issues: themes that appear local but reveal global dimensions through his lens. With an MA in Documentary Photography from the University of the Arts London, Misha is the author of three internationally award-winning photobooks as well as the interactive documentary secretsarayaku.net. His photography has appeared in The New York TimesThe Washington PostVICEGEOStern, and Marie Claire, among others, and his exhibitions have also traveled globally. Misha is currently based in Ecuador, where he continues to develop new audiovisual projects.
  • Dr. Gabriel Velez is Associate Professor in Educational Policy and Leadership in the College of Education at Marquette University. Dr. Velez studies identity development in adolescents, particularly in relation to citizenship, human rights, restorative justice, and peace. Dr. Velez has a forthcoming book entitled Making Meaning of Justice and Peace: A Developmental Lens to Restorative Justice and Peace Education, and is working on another manuscript on adolescent development, education, and artificial intelligence, both with Cambridge University Press. He was a secondary educator in Peru and Colombia for 5 years and has worked with a number of Colombian universities as a Fulbright Specialist.

2025-26 CLACS Fellows Selected

51ÁÔĆć CLACS is pleased to announce that we have selected four CLACS Faculty Fellows for academic year 2025-26. Throughout the upcoming year, Fellows will hold periodic cohort meetings for scholarly exchange on works-in-progress, and each will work with CLACS staff to offer a public-facing program that brings their research to a wider audience. (Check back on our website for announcements of these events!)

This year’s CLACS Fellows theme, Challenge and Progress, encourages the cohort to consider how their academic work foregrounds areas of struggle and/or advancement related to Latin America and the Caribbean. In a region historically shaped by positivist narratives of social, political, and economic progress, new perspectives on Latin American and Caribbean development may be in order.

Please join us in congratulating each of this year’s Fellows!

Susana Antunes (World Languages & Cultures)

Resisting Erasure, Reclaiming Futures: Indigenous Cultures of Mato Grosso do Sul and the Tensions of ‘Progress’

Gilberto Blasini (English; Film Studies)

Cinematic and Televisual Construction of Caribbean Cultural Identities

Susi GĂłmez Kennedy (Center for Student Experience and Talent; Comparative Literature)

Illegible Writing, Embodied Reading: Mirtha Dermisache and the Aesthetics of Cognitive Resistance

Gabriela Nagy (Psychology)

Acculturative Stress and Resilience Factors in Immigrants from Latin America

MĂşsica del lago: Orquesta Rumba

Thursday, July 17
6:00pm
Colectivo Lakefront
1701 N. Lincoln Memorial Dr., Milwaukee WI

Free parking is available across the street in the lot next to the sailing center

Join us for free, live music with Milwaukee’s own Orquesta Rumba! Colectivo Coffee and 51ÁÔĆć’s CLACS are partnering again this summer to bring three FREE Latin American music concerts to Colectivo’s outdoor lakefront location.

Mark your calendar for the third Thursday of July and August to enjoy fantastic, free Latin American music all summer long.

Future events in the series:Ěý

  • August 21, 6:00pm – De La Buena (Afro-Cuban and Latin Jazz)
  • Rain date August 28 – concert cancellations due to inclement weather will be announced on no later than 4pm the same day of the show.

Educator Workshop: Teaching Latin America with Digital Maps

old map and more recent map; most for decorationFree professional development opportunity for K16 educators!

Especially relevant for teaching social studies, urban studies, and environmental studies

August 5, 6, and 7, 2025 (10am-11:30am CT, via Zoom)

 

Event recordings available

Free teaching resources available

—-

Maps are a compelling tool for student engagement: their visual presentation of information encourages exploration, critical analysis, and sometimes a new spatial approach to otherwise familiar topics. This three-day webinar series will provide participants with:

  • • An interactive overview of free digitized maps of Latin America and the Caribbean, both historical and recent;
  • • A workshop introduction to the free digital mapping tool , which allows users to overlay multiple maps for visual comparison (); and
  • • A presentation of two current large-scale mapping projects of the region (on Brazilian land use & Latin American mining conflicts), including discussion of how to use them in teaching.

Sessions will include workshop time to support participants in strategizing how to incorporate this material into their existing curriculum.

For questions or more information, contact Monica VanBladel (vanblade@uwm.edu).

Please register below by July 28, 2025.ĚýEveryone who completes the webform registration below will receive an email after July 28 with the zoom link for participation.Ěý

 

This program is a collaboration between the UW-Milwaukee Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLACS); 51ÁÔĆć Libraries; and Tulane University’s Stone Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. CLACS and the Stone Center are Title VI National Resource Centers, with funding from the U.S. Department of Education

Image: upper, “Brasilia et Peruvia,” Gerard de Jode, 1593 (American Geographical Society Libraries) / lower, “Cobertura,” MapBiomas Brasil, plataforma.brasil.mapbiomas.org/cobertura, accessed 23 June 2025.

 

Orquesta Ayala at MĂşsica del lago with Colectivo Coffee

Thursday, June 19
6:00pm
Colectivo Lakefront
1701 N. Lincoln Memorial Dr., Milwaukee WI

Free parking is available across the street in the lot next to the sailing center

Join us for free, live salsa music with Milwaukee’s own Orquesta Ayala! Colectivo Coffee and 51ÁÔĆć’s CLACS are partnering again this summer to bring three FREE outdoor concerts to Colectivo’s lakefront location, for the 20th year running.

Mark your calendar for the third Thursday of June, July, and August to enjoy fantastic, free Latin American music all summer long.

Future events in the series:Ěý

  • July 17, 6:00pm – Orquesta Rumba (Salsa, Cumbia, Latin Jazz)
  • August 21, 6:00pm – De La Buena (Afro-Cuban and Latin Jazz)
  • Rain date August 28 – concert cancellations due to inclement weather will be announced on no later than 4pm the same day of the show.

Professor Sugiyama Marks 10 Years as CLACS Director

Natasha Sugiyama

Among the many celebrations that accompany the successful end to an academic year, this spring CLACS had a special milestone to celebrate: ten years under the leadership of Natasha Borges Sugiyama, Professor of Political Science and Director of 51ÁÔĆć’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Ěý

Professor Sugiyama stepped into the CLACS directorship in May of 2015, and during her tenure has intentionally broadened the scope of what the center does, reimagining how CLACS connects to Milwaukee, the U.S., and globally. This shift has been reflected in CLACS’s programming: under Sugiyama’s leadership, the center launched the successful CLACS Faculty Fellows annual program (autumn 2020), expanded its corps of visiting scholars and connected them to 51ÁÔĆć’s research community, and implemented the Brazil Initiative (February 2019), a regional network to promote scholarship, teaching, and public engagements related to Brazilian Studies. Professor Sugiyama also secured three Tinker Foundation Awards (autumn 2015 – spring 2018) to support graduate student research in Latin America. Ěý

The success of these varied initiatives, and CLACS’s ongoing promotion of Latin American and Caribbean studies on campus and beyond, is thanks to Sugiyama’s clear vision for growth and tireless advocacy. And for her, CLACS’s strong network of collaborators is a reward in itself. Professor Sugiyama notes that the highlight of her work in this role has always been getting to meet and work with so many dedicated scholars and community members, across campus and the Upper Midwest more broadly. “The directorship is really being a champion for all of our affiliates,” she recently noted, and remarked that it has been a joy to take on this advocacy role to help others advance their work in Latin American and Caribbean studies. Ěý

CLACS staff were pleased to celebrate Professor Sugiyama’s leadership recently with our colleagues, when we gathered on May 15 for our end-of-year celebration – an afternoon when we also recognized the contributions of six of our retiring and departing faculty colleagues to our scholarly community. Our collaborations are stronger for the leadership of Professor Sugiyama, and we invite you to join us in thanking her for her decade of advocacy for Latin American and Caribbean studies here at 51ÁÔĆć.Ěý

CLACS 2024-25 Award Recipients

We’re pleased to announce that during academic year 2024-25 we supported 30 51ÁÔĆć faculty, 51ÁÔĆć students, and regional faculty with over $65,500Ěýin funding. These funds supported conference presentations, field research, and less-commonly taught language studies.

Congratulations to all our faculty and student awardees!

We are able to offer this funding thanks to a grant program at the U.S. Department of Education: jointly with , CLACS is a proud National Resource Center (NRC) for Latin America. The reflects a United States commitment to building domestic expertise in foreign language and world area studies, thereby advancing knowledge about all major world areas at universities and in the broader national community.

Student Awards

This academic year we awarded over $57,000 in funding to 16 undergraduate and graduate students:

Graduate Research-Conference Award

  • Stephen Boluwaduro (African & African Diaspora Studies)
  • Marissa Cudworth (Master of Sustainable Peacebuilding)
  • Amy Klemmer (Anthropology)
  • Allison Kusick (Geosciences)
  • Cole Schmidt (Geosciences)
  • Alma Vazquez-Smith (Clinical Psychology)

Ruggiero-Handelman Field Research Award

  • Edwin Guevara (Public Health)
  • Billie Harrison (Biological Sciences)
  • Kaitlyn Lund (Conservation Science/Geography)

Donald Shea Study Abroad Scholarship

  • Anna Gonzalez (Political Science)
  • Eliana Monfre (Business)
  • Kristian Zenz (English)

Foreign Language & Area Studies Summer 2025 Graduate Students

  • Grace Files (Women’s and Gender Studies) – Florida International University’s Haitian Summer Institute, Haitian Creole
  • Eric Schmitt (Engineering) – Tulane University’s Summer in Brazil Program, Portuguese

Foreign Language & Area Studies AY 2024-25 Undergraduate Students for the study of Brazilian Portuguese

  • Anna Gonzalez (Political Science)
  • Lucca Marcello (Film Production)

 

51ÁÔĆć Faculty Research-Conference Awards

9 51ÁÔĆć faculty and teaching academic staff received support for their field research/presentations, totaling $6,000:

  • Susana Antunes (Spanish & Portuguese)
  • Sarah Davies Cordova (Global Studies, French & Francophone Studies)
  • CĂ©sar Ferreira (Spanish & Portuguese)
  • Pamela Harris (Mathematics)
  • Brian Mueller (History)
  • Gabriela Nagy (Clinical Psychology)
  • Jessica Nelson (History)
  • Gabriel Rei-Doval (Spanish & Portuguese)
  • Alex Wier (Music, Percussion)

Regional Faculty Research-Conference Awards

5 Regional Faculty from both public and private institutions received support for their field research and conference presentations, totaling $2,500:

  • Adam Coon (Spanish, University of Minnesota Morris)
  • Gustavo Fares (Spanish, Lawrence University)
  • Michelle Medeiros (Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Marquette University)
  • Astrid Ochoa Campo (Global Cultures & Languages, UW-La Crosse)
  • Michelle Pinzl (English & World Languages, Viterbo University)

 

Undergraduate Research on Latin America Thrives at 51ÁÔĆć

Every year, 51ÁÔĆć’s Office for Undergraduate Research (OUR) hosts a spring symposium to recognize and celebrate undergraduate students’ contributions to the research enterprise here at 51ÁÔĆć. took place on Friday April 25, and featured over 275 student presenters representing nearly all of 51ÁÔĆć’s Schools and Colleges. The research completed during the 2024-25 academic year included compelling projects related to Latin America and the Caribbean, spanning disciplines from music to public health to cultural studies.

The majority of these projects benefited from the support of OUR’s Support for Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program, which accepts proposals from all 51ÁÔĆć faculty and academic staff who apply jointly with a student about the work to be undertaken. Read on to learn about these exciting projects and how they have advanced our understanding of Latin America and the Caribbean!

Devin Grabowski won an outstanding presentation award for the project “Puerto Rican Bomba Music: Analyzing and Transcribing Drum and Vocal Elements” with Professor Alex Wier (Percussion, Peck School of the Arts)

 

2024-25 Undergraduate Research Projects on Latin America and the Caribbean

 

Archiving Cultural Heritage: Creation of a Digital Repository for Decades of Fieldwork Materials on Brazilian Folk Dances, Afro-Brazilian Rituals, and Popular Culture of MaranhĂŁo

Lucca Marcello

Mentors: Simone Ferro (emerita), Dance, Peck School of the Arts; Meredith Watts (emeritus), Political Science, College of Letters and Science

Bumba meu boi is a practice of folk cultural heritage in MaranhĂŁo (a northeastern state of Brazil) that combines ritual, music, choreography, and performance. Over the past 18 years, 51ÁÔĆć Professors Ferro and Watts have compiled a vast quantity of ethnographic materials documenting and preserving this piece of folk and popular culture. Lucca Marcello collaborated with the professors to develop a digital repository for these materials, which will be housed at the University of Florida Libraries’ Latin America & Caribbean Collection. The team organized over 15 terabytes of research material, including still images, video, audio, and transcriptions in Portuguese. Key learning outcomes included gaining expertise in digital archival procedures, metadata management, and repository structuring within a digital humanities framework. Marcello also developed independent research strategies, applied archival tools, and engaged with the materials to support his academic development in film arts and Portuguese. The project is nearing completion with over 1,000 curated entries in the repository, marking a significant milestone in preserving and making accessible cultural heritage materials from MaranhĂŁo.

 

Crossing Borders to Connect Routes: Higher Education, Immigration, and the Pandemic in the Midwest

Rivka Comrov

Mentor: Dante Salto, Administrative Leadership, School of Education

This research aims to understand how immigrant populations were affected post the Covid-19 pandemic in higher education. The focus specifically surrounds students in higher education who are undocumented or who are a Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipient (DACA).Ěý This is a qualitative study that includes primary and secondary studies. The primary studies include interviews with higher education administration. The secondary studies include archival texts and legislation regarding undocumented and DACAmented students, as well as the COVID-19 Pandemic. The most important findings thus far have been in connection to the primary data collected. These findings have demonstrated that undocumented and DACAmented students during the COVID-19 Pandemic were confronted with financial stress and a mental health decline due to federal immigration policies changing in a way that causes potential risk for deportation, thereby negatively impacting their educational opportunities. Higher education institutions during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic have created legal support centers and a variety of economic opportunities (in regards to tuition and program required fieldwork) on campus for DACAmented and undocumented students in order to encourage enrollment and retention in higher education. The findings additionally noted how institutions and students within this population were able to navigate the changing political climate via discretion. An annotated bibliography has been built and categorized regarding the archival texts in connection to DACAmented and undocumented students in higher education, before, during and after the Covid-19 Pandemic. This study will continue to analyze the primary source data in a theoretical framework in regards to street-level bureaucrats. (Lipsky, 2010) This study intends to further impact higher education institutional policies by creating a toolkit that could potentially support undocumented and DACAmented students in higher education based on the data gathered.Ěý

 

Cultural Tapestry: Weaving the Threads of Hispanic / Latine Identities

Salvador Prado

Mentor: Nancy Bird-Soto, Spanish & Portuguese, College of Letters & Science

This project resulted in the creation of instructional resources for educators and facilitators to use when having conversations about hispano/Latinx identities. The five materials are: (1) social media source survey, in which students gather posts about Latine identities and/or inclusive language in Spanish and then curate them by writing a short reflection for each; (2) navigating identity self-reflection essay, in which Hispanic/Latinx students write an essay to reflect on the categories or labels they are familiar with and the ones that feel closer to personal and cultural affinities; (3) class discussions with high school students, including facilitated reflections on bilingual poetry and name stories; (4) college-level advanced conversation (in Spanish) for undergraduates and graduates, including scholarly publications on the bilingual history of the “x” in Latinx; and (5) indigenous identities and the Latine category, a resource that prepares students to pose questions about the limits of Hispanic/Latino/Latine when it comes to indigenous, Black, and other minoritized communities. Items 1 and 2 can be modified for groups as young as middle school.

The researchers have generously made their resources !

 

Frames of Resistance: The Role of Cinema in Brazilian Social Movements

Jack Williams

Mentor: Susana Antunes, Spanish & Portuguese, College of Letters & Science

This project explores the intersection of Brazilian cinema and social movements, focusing on how films serve as tools for resistance, awareness, and advocacy. It examines historical contexts in which Brazilian cinema aligned with social movements, such as the Cinema Novo movement, resistance against the military dictatorship (1964–1985), and contemporary struggles addressing racism, LGBTQIA+ rights, and indigenous issues. Further, it analyzes the role of the new generation of filmmakers and their artistic choices in shaping narratives of resistance and fostering collective identity and action, and assesses the impact of these films on Brazilian society by exploring their reception, cultural influence, and contribution to social change. Finally, the study examines how digital filmmaking and streaming platforms transform the role of cinema in today’s social movements.

 

Library Storytime for Sexual Violence Prevention: Books, Songs, and Activities to Teach Consent and Promote Prevention

Kimberly Bahena and Yaritza Garcia

Mentor: Rose Hennessy Garza, Public Health, Joseph J. Zilber School of Public Health

Sexual violence comprises a range of sexual actions and behaviors that occur without the consent of a victim. Vulnerable populations, such as children and individuals with disabilities, are particularly at risk. Advocates and scholars have called for earlier prevention, as addressing risk and protective factors beginning in early childhood can promote healthy behaviors and reduce future risk of sexual violence. However, few sexual violence primary prevention programs exist for young children, and none have been found for children under three years old. This formative assessment aims to create a sexual violence prevention program for children’s librarians to use during Storytime sessions with young children and their caregivers. The program centers around four established risk and protective factors to prevent sexual violence perpetration in adolescence and adulthood including: 1) social and emotional health, 2) gender socialization, 3) healthy sexuality, and 4) aggression and nonviolence. Formal and grey literature will be reviewed for resources within the four categories to identify suitable materials that can be adapted for Storytime. Materials include books, songs, activities, crafts, and caregiver resources. For materials that cannot be obtained, new materials will be developed. The program will be created in English and Spanish to improve inclusivity in violence prevention. Informal interviews will be conducted with children’s librarians to obtain feedback on materials, request additional resources, and to understand the feasibility of incorporating sexual violence prevention into Storytime sessions. Children’s librarians will be recruited from interviews to participate in an advisory committee and to help pilot test the future program. Providing sexual assault prevention education in library Storytime can infuse prevention in a low-cost manner within an environment where young children and caregivers already gather, potentially contributing to less sexual violence and promoting healthier communities.Ěý

 

Puerto Rican Bomba Music: Analyzing and Transcribing Drum and Vocal Elements

Devin Grabowski – 2025 Symposium Outstanding Presentation Award

Mentor: Alex Wier, Music, Peck School of the Arts

Puerto Rican Bomba has served as a vital form of musical expression, resistance, and cultural identity in Puerto Rico for over 400 hundred years. This project seeks to create a comprehensive educational resource that introduces both the historical context and practical techniques of Bomba music for educators and learners. The resource will focus on the rhythmic foundations, drumming patterns, vocal elements, and cultural significance of the tradition, while emphasizing the possible role of studying Bomba in the world of music education. The pedagogical resource is designed to make it adaptable for various learning environments, including schools and community centers, while addressing different levels of prior musical knowledge. It will incorporate transcriptions of the rhythms and patterns on the various instruments as well as transcriptions of all vocal elements (rhythms, melodies, and lyrics). This research, which includes studies with renowned musician Alberto Torrens, seeks to support educators with the tools to effectively teach Bomba music while promoting cultural appreciation and preservation. The resource will contribute to the broader effort to sustain Puerto Rican heritage and provide a dynamic way for students to engage with this style of music, ensuring that future generations can continue to learn from and participate in this unique cultural tradition.Ěý

CLACS end-of-year celebration

Thursday, May 15
4:30pm
Estabrook Beer Garden
4600 Estabrook Pkwy, Milwaukee WI 53217

Please join the Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies to celebrate the end of this academic year! We will gather on May 15 near campus at the (no weather guarantees but crossing our fingers). Beer, brats, and pretzels available for purchase; carry-in food and soft drinks are welcome!

We will also take the opportunity to celebrate the leadership of Prof. Natasha Borges Sugiyama, who this spring marks ten successful years as CLACS Director.

Please join us to visit and relax before many of us part ways for the summer term. All are welcome (bring a friend, your child, your partner – the more the merrier).