Faculty
Movements and Organizations Represented
Occupy Wall Street (Micah White)
Black Lives Matter (Alicia Garza)
Kony2012 (Jason Russell)
T.R.U.S.T. South LA (Josefina Aguilar and Oscar Monge)
All Stars Project (Lenora Fulani)
Anti-civilization anarchism (John Zerzan)
Freedom to Marry (Evan Wolfson)
LA Tenants Union (René Christian Moya)
Anti-Eviction Mapping Project (Terra Graziani)
Union de Vecinos (Elizabeth Blaney and Leonardo Vilchis)
Indigenous Vision (Souta Calling Last)
Not An Alternative (Beka Economopoulos)
Micah White, PhD
Program Director of Activist Graduate School
Courses: How to Change the World: Theories and Practices; Housing Justice Activism and Protest: Past, Present, Future
Micah White, PhD is the lifelong activist who co-created Occupy Wall Street, a global social movement that spread to 82 countries, while an editor of Adbusters magazine. White's first book, The End of Protest: A New Playbook for Revolution, was published by Knopf Canada and has been translated into German and Greek. A sought after global public speaker on the future of activism, White has delivered more than thirty lectures at prestigious universities, cultural festivals and private events in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Italy, Indonesia, the Netherlands and the United States. Learn more about Micah at micahmwhite.com
Chiara Ricciardone, PhD
Provost of Activist Graduate School
Courses: How to Change the World: Theories and Practices
With a Ph.D. in Rhetoric from U.C. Berkeley, Chiara writes across a range of genres and disciplines. Her creative work has appeared or is forthcoming in cultural venues including Adbusters Magazine, The Philosopher, and Two Hawks Quarterly; her academic work is at home in journals like Ancient Philosophy and Epoché. Learn more about Chiara at chiararicciardone.net
Brooke Holmes, PhD
Courses: Rupturing Tradition: Ancient Past, Contemporary Praxis
Brooke Holmes is Robert F. Goheen Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics at Princeton.
Dan-el Padilla Peralta, PhD
Courses: Rupturing Tradition: Ancient Past, Contemporary Praxis
Dan-el Padilla Peralta is Associate Professor of Classics at Princeton
Ananya Roy, PhD
Distinguished Guest Faculty
Courses: Housing Justice Activism and Protest: Past, Present, Future
Ananya Roy is Professor of Urban Planning and Social Welfare and inaugural Director of The Institute on Inequality and Democracy at UCLA Luskin. She holds The Meyer and Renee Luskin Chair in Inequality and Democracy. Ananya’s scholarship has focused on urban transformations in the global South, with particular attention to the making of “world-class” cities and the dispossessions and displacements that are thus wrought. Her books on this topic include City Requiem, Calcutta: Gender and the Politics of Poverty and Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and the Art of Being Global, the latter co-edited with Aihwa Ong. A separate line of inquiry has been concerned with new regimes of international development, especially those that seek to convert poverty into entrepreneurial capitalism and the economies of the poor into new markets for global finance.
Symposium Guest Lecturers
Jason Russell
Guest Lecturer on “What is the Future of Activism?”
Jason Russell is an activist film and theater director who co-founded Invisible Children. He is the director of Kony 2012, a short documentary film that went viral in the beginning of March 2012. In the first two weeks it gained more than 83 million views on YouTube.
Lenora Fulani, PhD
Guest Lecturer on “Why Do Protests Fail?”
Dr. Fulani has long been active in creating change through political action. She has twice run for president as an independent. In 1988 she became the first woman and first African American in U.S. history to appear as a presidential candidate on the ballot in all 50 states. In 1994 she co-founded the Committee for a Unified Independent Party, a national strategy center for independent voters, which currently has networks in more than 30 states. She is a founder of the Independence Party of New York State.
Alicia Garza
Guest Lecturer on “Why Do Protests Fail?”
Alicia Garza is the co-founder of Black Lives Matter, and the Principal of the Black Futures Lab. She is also the Strategy + Partnerships Director for the National Domestic Workers Alliance, the nation’s leading voice for dignity and fairness for the millions of domestic workers in the United States. She has been the recipient of numerous awards for her organizing work, including the Root 100 2015 and 2016 list of African-American achievers and influencers. She was also featured in the Politico50 guide to the thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming American politics in 2015. She lives and works in Oakland, California.
Souta Calling Last
Guest Lecturer on “Why Do Protests Fail?”
Souta Calling Last (Blackfeet/Blood) is the Founder and Executive Director of Indigenous Vision, a national educational nonprofit founded in 2015. Before founding Indigenous Vision, Souta served as an Environmental Specialist in a National Tribal Drinking Water Program. Her connection to the landscape remained unhindered and she continued to organize lake shore clean-ups at drinking water reservoirs in the Phoenix area. Souta believes the land is a storybook of information filled with ecological and climate knowledge and that honoring ancestral observation will protect the land and water and will promote ideal human health and wellness.
Evan Wolfson
Guest Lecturer on “What is the future of activism?”
Long-time civil rights leader Evan Wolfson lives in New York City, where he founded Freedom to Marry, the campaign to win marriage nationwide, and served as president through its epic victory in June 2015 until its closing in early 2016. Having achieved the goal he had pursued for 32 years, Wolfson now devotes his time to advising and assisting diverse movements and causes in the US and around the world eager to adapt the model and apply the lessons learned that made the Freedom to Marry campaign so successful. Wolfson has been named a Distinguished Visitor from Practice at Georgetown Law Center, teaching law and social change. Widely acknowledged to be the architect of the movement that won the freedom to marry in the United States, Wolfson has received many awards.
Nathan Schneider
Guest Lecturer on “Challenging Activism”
Nathan Schneider is a journalist who writes about religion, technology and social movements. His current project is an exploration of models for democratic ownership and governance for online platforms and protocols. He is founder of the Media Enterprise Design Lab.
He is the author of Everything for Everyone: The Radical Tradition that Is Shaping the Next Economy, published by Nation Books, and two previous books, God in Proof: The Story of a Search from the Ancients to the Internet and Thank You, Anarchy: Notes from the Occupy Apocalypse, both published by University of California Press. His articles have appeared in publications including Harper’s, The Nation, The New Republic, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and others, along with regular columns for America, a national Catholic weekly. He has lectured at universities including Columbia, Fordham, Harvard, MIT, NYU, the University of Bologna, and Yale. In 2015, he co-organized “Platform Cooperativism,” a pioneering conference on democratic online platforms at The New School, and co-edited the subsequent book, Ours to Hack and to Own: The Rise of Platform Cooperativism, a New Vision for the Future of Work and a Fairer Internet.
Housing Justice Activism and Protest Guest Lecturers
Marques Vestal, Department of History, UCLA
René Christian Moya, LA Tenants Union
Alex Schafran, School of Geography, University of Leeds
Terra Graziani, Anti-Eviction Mapping Project
Elizabeth Blaney, Union de Vecinos
Leonardo Vilchis, Union de Vecinos
Isaac Bryan, Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies, UCLA
Shayla Myers, Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles
Eric Sheppard, Geography, UCLA
Helga Leitner, Geography, UCLA
Josefina Aguilar, T.R.U.S.T. South LA
Oscar Monge, T.R.U.S.T. South LA