Published: Oct. 19, 2016
A graphic representing the Flatirons in a rainbow of colors

The CU Faculty Council committees on LGBTQ+ issues and Ethnic and Minority Affairs are co-hosting a collaborative, day-long symposium entitled "Intersections: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Research and Teaching"on the CU «Ƶ campus on Friday, Nov. 11, in the University Memorial Center. On-site registration will begin at 8:30 a.m.

Sponsored by many administrative units throughout the CU system, this unique symposium will bring diverse faculty and their allies together to share research on the intersections of race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality, as well as on transformative teaching practices that will contribute to the amelioration and eradication of social injustice.Kai M. Green, assistant professor of Feminist Studies atUC Santa Barbara, will give the keynote address.

“I am very excited, not only to have this excellent symposium on our campus, but also that this event provides our students, facultyand staff with an opportunity to engage in important conversations and uphold our commitment to inclusive excellence,”said Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic AffairsRussell Moore.

Tina Moser, chair of the Ethnic and Minority Affairs committee said the collaboration "was a perfect fit for the goals of both committees: to assure fairness in the recruitment and retention of respective historically marginalized faculty, to make recommendations to improve the success and well-being of these same faculty, and to foster support networks for underrepresented groups on campus.Particularly now, as we witness the uptick in violence against these and other minoritized groups, we have an opportunity to present research, teaching, and restorative practices that help us move toward a more just university and society."

Green bridges the fields of transgender studies, black feminist studiesand African-American cultural studies.His publications appear in prominent journals such as Transgender Studies Quarterly and GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, and the anthology, No Shade: New Writings in Black Queer Studies.Kwame Holmes, assistant professor of Ethnic Studies, noted, “Dr. Green is at the cutting edge of re-conceptualizing the terms and boundaries of diversity.”

For information about the symposium, including the submission site for proposals, click . The deadline to submit proposals is Oct.21 at5 p.m.