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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260203T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260203T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20260126T055316Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260203T085639Z
UID:10002227-1770148800-1770152400@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Asian Americans & Nature - Virtual Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a collaborative workshop exploring the ways Asian Americans relate to nature through reflections on migration\, labor\, and place!\n\n\nAsian Americans & Nature \nJoin us on Tuesday\, February 3rd at 5PM PST / 8PM EST for our next People’s School for Justice session! \nThis will be a collaborative workshop exploring the ways Asian Americans relate to nature through reflections on migration\, labor\, and place! \nHow have Asian Americans historically been positioned in relationship to nature? What new relationships to our environment can we create? How might we question settler urges to own and commodify nature – what new ways of inhabiting the earth are possible? \nParticipants will come together to reflect on the landscapes and everyday environments that shape Asian American lives. Thinking expansively about both “Asian America” and “nature\,” and centering lived experience\, we will explore how migration\, family history\, and place influence our relationships with our environment. \nNo prior knowledge needed. We will begin with short grounding/framing\, historical context\, and case studies around Asian American relationships to nature drawn from my scholarly research\, and then move through guided prompts and shared conversation. Looking forward to being in community with you. ❤️ \nMeet the Facilitator \nK Yin (they/them/ta) is a writer and scholar. They are currently a PhD student in American Studies at Brown. Broadly\, they have interests in and teach on Asian American art\, race and ethnic studies\, and the environment. Their research explores 19th-century visual archives alongside contemporary Asian American art and performance. \nThey were raised between Sonoma County and Zhejiang. They love leaf-wrapped foods of all kinds (tamales\, zongzi\, etc.). You can find their culinary creations at congee_baby on Instagram. \n 
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/asian-americans-nature/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251218T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251218T213000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20251215T052235Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251215T052235Z
UID:10002157-1766088000-1766093400@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Documenting Stories: Oral History Production and Best Practices
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a presentation on oral history production\, equipment\, software and set ups with a focus on productions with small budgets!\n\n\nDocumenting Stories: Oral History Production and Best Practices \nJoin us for a presentation on oral history production\, equipment\, software and set ups with a focus on productions with small budgets! \nOral Historian\, Artist\, Writer\, Alan Nakagawa will base this workshop on his thirty-nine years of interdisciplinary art projects using oral history as a base for working with diverse communities. \nNakagawa has worked for educational\, non-profit and government institutions with varying budgets and scopes. Keeping a flexible production methodology while listening to the needs of the collaborators\, he has built a portfolio of experiences reflecting diverse needs. \nMeet the Instructor! \nAlan Nakagawa is an interdisciplinary artist with archiving tendencies\, primarily working with sound\, often incorporating various media and working with communities and their histories. He has created a series of Invisible Architecture experiences that are mash ups of the recorded acoustics of historical sites\, giving new context to historic places through a contemporary lens of sound. Nakagawa has been working on a series of semi-autobiographic sound-architecture/tactile sound experiences\, utilizing multi-point audio field recordings of historic interiors; Peace Resonance; Hiroshima/Wendover combines recordings of the interiors of the Hiroshima Atomic Dome (Hiroshima\, Japan) and Wendover Hangar (Utah). His first book\, “A.I.R.Head: Anatomy of an Artist in Residence” was published in January 2023 by Writ-Large Press. It maps his artistic trajectory that led to his nine Artist-in-residencies in six years.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/documenting-stories-oral-history-production-and-best-practices/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/e877c3562860d5dc2cfd81cf1154f7e5.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251216T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251216T214500
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20251208T052235Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251215T052234Z
UID:10002148-1765917000-1765921500@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Content Creation for Collective Liberation
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a cozy community exploration to help you use your voice online for justice\, healing + collective freedom!\n\n\nContent Creation for Collective Liberation \nJoin us on Tuesday\, December 16th at 5:30PM PST for our next People’s School for Justice session for a cozy community exploration to help you use your voice online for justice\, healing + collective freedom! \nIf you’ve ever felt a calling to use your voice for social change\, but hesitated in the face of perfectionism\, visibility fears\, or not knowing where to begin\, this space is for you.  \nContent Creation for Collective Liberation is a 75-minute Zoom workshop designed for anyone who values community care\, collective liberation\, and expressive freedom. \nTogether\, we’ll explore how to create short-form content that centers healing\, justice\, and authenticity\, without sacrificing our mental wellness or creative joy. Through introspection\, conversation\, and gentle group practices\, we’ll unpack our fears\, reconnect with our voices\, and learn tangible tools for sharing liberatory knowledge on social media. Whether you’re returning to content creation or just starting out\, come curious\, leave empowered—and maybe even with your next post drafted. \nWorkshop Session Flow →  \n\nIntentional check-in + introductions\nDefine collective liberation\nRe-member the power of using our authentic voice\nBreak down creative fears + internal blocks\nJournal\, share\, reframe in community\nExplore content topics + formats that fit you\nClose with group shares + reflections\n\nMeet the Facilitator! \nJozelle Wong Yu\, MA (she/they) is a neuroqueer Filipinx-Chinese creator\, coach\, and cultural movement-maker who alchemizes softness into strength. She is passionate about facilitating intimate experiences where anyone\, especially queer\, trans\, and non-binary people of the global majority can reconnect with their radical honesty and be met with tenderness and warmth. \nWith an M.A. in Communication Studies from California State University\, Long Beach\, Jozelle served as a Public Speaking Professor and now mentors entrepreneurs and creatives to reclaim their creative expression and share their stories through her public speaking coaching. An advocate for racial healing and collective liberation\, Jozelle has also served as the Communications Director at Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab. At their core\, Jozelle believes in communication as medicine and the pleasurable alchemy that comes at the intersection of authentic expression\, warm witnessing\, and community.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/content-creation-for-collective-liberation/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251209T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251209T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20251201T052233Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251208T052234Z
UID:10002109-1765310400-1765317600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:House of Mirrors: How Mis and Disinformation Amplify Imperialist Histories to Shape Asian American Political Participation
DESCRIPTION:How Mis- and Disinformation Amplify Imperialist Histories to Shape Asian American Political Participation in California’s 45th District\n\n\nHouse of Mirrors: How Mis- and Disinformation Amplify Imperialist Histories to Shape Asian American Political Participation in California’s 45th District \nIn many Asian American spaces\, we are witnessing narrative trends that contribute to tensions within\, across\, and about our communities. This research project seeks to more deeply understand these tensions through a case study of the California 45th congressional district (CA-45) where two Asian American candidates ran in 2024 in a race set against the backdrop of imperialism\, war\, trauma\, displacement\, grief\, healing\, identity-building\, identity politics\, electoral power\, and most of all\, our shared desire to be seen as who we are. \nIn 2024\, CA-45 was the most expensive House race in the country. In the recent special election in November 2025\, Californians passed proposition 50 that authorized the temporary redrawing of district boundaries\, including CA-45. It will be one of the most watched House races in 2026. \nAbout the Instructor: Shengxiao Yu\, known by her nickname Sole\, is a speaker\, facilitator\, writer\, and social justice educator. She is the creator of Nectar\, a space where she provides political education for the community through giving keynote speeches\, facilitating workshops\, and providing thought leadership. In 2024\, Sole served as the activist-in-residence at the Asian American Studies Center at the University of California\, Los Angeles. In this capacity\, Sole conducted research to more deeply understand the AAPI electoral landscape and the role of mis- and disinformation. Sole is a writer for the Xin Sheng Project\, a platform combating misinformation in the Chinese diaspora community by publishing in-language\, progressive articles that shift perspectives and build intergenerational power. As a generation 1.5 Asian American\, Sole is also working to build community among her fellow Asian Americans in order to build socio-political power and to lift up her lineage. Sole is inspired by BIPOC activists\, grassroots community leaders\, and all the intersectional movement ancestors who have paved the way.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/house-of-mirrors/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Election,History,Virtual,Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251205T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251205T163000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20251124T052237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251201T052233Z
UID:10002105-1764937800-1764952200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Mixed Asian Multitudes & Solidarities
DESCRIPTION:A community-building\, solidarity event to raise collective consciousness towards shared liberation.\n\n\nJoin us for Mixed Asian Multitudes & Solidarities; an in-person community-building event to raise our collective consciousness! \nThis event is open to all identities as we uplift\, learn\, and connect. It’s an opportunity for folks to strengthen their ties with not just the mixed Asian community but with one another as we work to recognize our shared struggles that will bring us closer to collective liberation. \nYou can expect community teach-ins\, a short film screening in collaboration with Mixed Asian Media\, a DJ set\, and more. Stay tuned for more details and programming info! \nSpots are limited! We’re so excited to see you there! \nThe event will be on Friday\, December 5th from 12:30PM – 4:30PM at The People’s Forum. The space is ADA-accessible. Masks are highly encouraged for this event. Please consider testing for COVID before attending or stay home if you’re feeling sick. \n 
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/mixed-asian-multitudes-solidarities/
LOCATION:The People’s Forum\, 320 West 37th Street\, New York\, NY\, 10018\, United States
CATEGORIES:In Person,Networking
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251115T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20251115T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20251110T052253Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251114T203643Z
UID:10002071-1763204400-1763211600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:What Is Our Collective Future?
DESCRIPTION:Join us to Imagine\, Envision\, Discuss\, and write about a new collective future .\n\n\nWhat Is Our Collective Future? \nJoin us on Saturday\, November 15th from 11AM – 1PM PST / 2PM – 4PM EST for our next People’s School for Justice session! \nIn this session\, we will gather to discuss: \n\ncollective liberation\nalternatives to capitalism\ndismantling hierarchies\nconnecting with the land\nre-envisioning interpersonal relationships\n\nThrough guided prompts and open discussions\, we will imagine possibilities of worlds not structured on oppression\, violence\, and hate. \n  \nAbout the Instructor: Karo Ska is a Bengali-Polish gender-fluid writer living on unceded Tongva land. Their writing focuses on identity\, mental health\, and the intersections of trauma and oppressive systems. Anti-capitalist and anti-authoritarian\, they find joy where they can. Their work has been supported by DSTL Arts\, Community Literature Initative\, Anaphora Arts\, California Arts Council and Tin House Summer Workshop. Author of loving my salt-drenched bones (World Stage Press\, 2022)\, they are currently working on a memoir and a novel.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/what-is-our-collective-future/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Writing
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250908T010000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250914T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250908T051734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250915T051733Z
UID:10001790-1757293200-1757894340@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:[REPLAY] Foundations 2025 - History of Asian American Identity
DESCRIPTION:Register to view the workshop recording to explore the origin and history of Asian American identity and the model minority myth.\n\n\nHistory of Asian American Identity (Recording) \nThis session recording explores the origin and history of “Asian American” identity\, both as a racial construct and as a political movement\, as well as the origin of the model minority myth and its function within white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250908T010000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250914T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250908T051734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250915T051734Z
UID:10001791-1757293200-1757894340@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:REPLAY] Foundations 2025: "Modernity" and Institutional Racism
DESCRIPTION:Register to view the workshop recording\, taking a deep dive into understanding systemic racism and global “modernity.”\n\n\nInstitutional Racism and “Modernity” (Recording) \nThis session recording takes a deep dive into understanding systemic racism\, with a focus on institutional racism as the historical engine of global “modernity.” \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism-2/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/5d724d99ae39744da5093292c9890f19.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250908T010000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250914T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250908T051734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250915T051734Z
UID:10001792-1757293200-1757894340@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:[REPLAY] Foundations 2025: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy
DESCRIPTION:Unpack connections between global histories of settler colonialism\, militarization\, & capitalism w/ anti-Blackness and white supremacy.\n\n\nColoniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy (Recording) \nThis session recording unpacks the connections between global histories of settler colonialism\, militarization\, and capitalism with anti-Blackness and white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \nFormations Application Form \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-and-white-supremacy-2/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250703T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250703T183000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250630T050258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250630T050258Z
UID:10001510-1751562000-1751567400@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:De-escalation 101: Finding Your Protest Role
DESCRIPTION:Explore themes of respect and dignity of all people\, intervention vs. self care\, and collective safety when it comes to protests/organizing.\n\n\nDe-escalation 101: Finding Your Protest Role \nJoin us on Thursday\, July 3nd at 5PM PST / 8PM PST! \nIn a time where we’re protesting for justice from a place of love\, we’re asking the question\, “How can our movements open hearts?” when each of us is indispensable…and insufficient \nThere’s a lot to protest about and we need more people empowered to play their role to sustain our movements. You may want to go to a protest or vigil or march but feel scared or unsure on how to show up. Are protests inherently violent? Can nonviolence really create change? What would I do if a counter-protestor starts yelling in my face? How can I be centered when I am face to face with an officer in riot gear? Wherever you are in these questions\, there is a role for you to be part of creating a more just and loving world. \nIn this one hour training\, we will explore the orienting themes of respect and dignity of all people\, intervention vs. self care\, and collective safety when it comes to protests and organizing. \nMeet Our Instructor; Angela Kim is a Visionary Organizing and Kingian Nonviolence facilitator-trainer working towards a world where we have increased capacities to sit with our own and each other’s complexities. Angela stewards community containers where participants can share grief\, practice conflict skills\, and be co-opted into emergence inspired by the erotic\, the intuitive\, the divine\, and the more-than-human.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/de-escalation-101-finding-your-protest-role/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250611T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250611T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250609T044739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250609T044739Z
UID:10001462-1749654000-1749661200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Talking Our Way To Justice: Civic Dialogue for Building the Future
DESCRIPTION:Join us in a conversation about the central role that dialogue has in advancing justice.\n\n\nThis session is open to all\, but there is a limit on the number of participants. Please add yourself to the waitlist if the capacity is full\, and please cancel your registration if you know you will not be able to attend so we can offer the spot to someone else. Thank you! \n \nTalking Our Way To Justice: Civic Dialogue for Building the Future \nWe have likely all had experiences where the reason we left a movement or organization was not because of the mission\, but because of how difficult it felt to work with the other people in the movement. The central problem with the ethic of “less talk\, more action” is that human action goes through human communities. Therefore\, there is no non-authoritarian pathway toward justice that does not at some point include bringing people together to talk about hard problems and develop collective solutions.  \nHowever\, these conversations can be extraordinarily challenging\, and continued failures in these conversations leads to organizational failure\, individual disinvestment\, and burnout. It can be easy to conclude that the problem is simply that people are bad\, inefficient\, and self-absorbed\, but it is much more helpful to consider that communication about things that are important to us is more difficult than we might like to imagine.  \nIn this session\, we will re-center talk as a critical component of justice work\, validate the skills and dispositions people need to develop (that most of us have not) in order to have dialogue about justice\, and work through processes that been used across communities to help people come together to develop civic solutions that advance justice. \n \nMeet the Instructor: \nRicky Blissett is the Associate Director of the Center for Democracy and Civic Life at the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County. Both within and outside of their role at UMBC\, their research primarily focuses on attitudes and ideologies in the politics of educational equity and justice\, as well as the spaces in which public ideologies translate into policy action. Their expertise includes educational politics and governance\, ideological politics of race- and gender-conscious policy\, and program evaluation and research methodology. Further\, they are a dialogue facilitator with training in conflict mediation and multiple models of dialogue. They are the principal investigator of the Democracy and Equity in Education Politics research group\, program co-chair for the Policy and Politics division (L) of the American Educational Research Association\, and principal coordinator for the Just Education Policy institute. Ricky holds a Ph.D. in Leadership and Policy Studies (with a minor in Quantitative Methods) from Peabody College at Vanderbilt University\, as well as a Bachelor of Science in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (with a minor in Computer Science) from the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/talking-our-way-to-justice-civic-dialogue-for-building-the-future/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/0ecbbc8fc6638b5ba8f0873545a1df6c.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250610T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250831T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250616T050307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250901T051745Z
UID:10001476-1749571200-1756684740@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:[REPLAY] Foundations 2025: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy
DESCRIPTION:Unpack connections between global histories of settler colonialism\, militarization\, & capitalism w/ anti-Blackness and white supremacy.\n\n\nColoniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy (Recording) \nThis session recording unpacks the connections between global histories of settler colonialism\, militarization\, and capitalism with anti-Blackness and white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \nFormations Application Form \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-and-white-supremacy/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/efb3eacb70bfbb84ea4257c913f00456.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250610T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250831T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250616T050306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250901T051744Z
UID:10001475-1749571200-1756684740@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:[REPLAY] Foundations 2025: "Modernity" and Institutional Racism
DESCRIPTION:Register to view the workshop recording\, taking a deep dive into understanding systemic racism and global “modernity.”\n\n\nInstitutional Racism and “Modernity” (Recording) \nThis session recording takes a deep dive into understanding systemic racism\, with a focus on institutional racism as the historical engine of global “modernity.” \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/5d724d99ae39744da5093292c9890f19.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250610T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250831T235900
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250609T044738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250901T051744Z
UID:10001461-1749556800-1756684740@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:[REPLAY] Foundations 2025 - History of Asian American Identity
DESCRIPTION:Register to view the workshop recording to explore the origin and history of Asian American identity and the model minority myth.\n\n\nHistory of Asian American Identity (Recording) \nThis session recording explores the origin and history of “Asian American” identity\, both as a racial construct and as a political movement\, as well as the origin of the model minority myth and its function within white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: AAPI experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder and Co-Executive Director\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is an adjunct professor of race and ethnic studies at Cal State LA and a visiting scholar in USC’s Department of American Studies and Ethnicity. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, Discourse: Journal for Theoretical Studies in Media and Culture\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities. She is currently working on a book manuscript entitled The Kinship of Empires: Transpacific Coloniality and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education\, community-building\, and innovation for promoting justice\, radical love\, and emergence. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/ \n \nYou will be able to access the link by signing into your Eventbrite and viewing links from Get Tickets or going the link under Location with View Event Details. \nApplication for our Formations Program ’25-’26 available now.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/replay-foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/6c0c14cd9d4c4b8c860f68e2ecc14987.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250609T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250609T183000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250505T043239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250609T044737Z
UID:10001338-1749488400-1749493800@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Asian American Racial Justice Trainings Part 3:  Coloniality\,  Anti-Blackness\, & White Supremacy
DESCRIPTION:Explore global connections between settler colonialism\, militarization\, capitalism\, anti-Blackness\, and white supremacy.\n\n\nFoundations: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, & White Supremacy \nWe often think of racial stereotypes in isolation\, but it is important to explore how these concepts connect. Racial stereotypes are interconnected and reproduced within a global system of white supremacy that creates our contemporary understandings of race. \nJoin us to learn more about how colonialism\, anti-Blackness\, and white supremacy interlock and propagate racial stereotypes and systemic racism. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: Asian American experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nFoundations Part 1: History of “Asian American” Identity\, Saturday\, June 7 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity-tickets-1349094270279 \nFoundations Part 2: “Modernity” and Institutional Racism\, Sunday\, June 8 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism-tickets-1349094641389 \nFoundations Part 3: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy\,  Monday\, June 9 at 8pm to 9:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-white-supremacy-tickets-1349094932259meric \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder\, co-director 2019-2024\, and current board Chair\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is a professor in the Department of Asian and Asian American Studies at Stony Brook University\, where she received the David L. Ferguson Award for Excellence in Inclusive Teaching. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities\, among other journals\, and is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Kinning Empire: Transcoloniality\, Kinship\, and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education and community-building for incubating justice\, practicing liberation\, and cultivating collective agility for change. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-white-supremacy/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/8d778fe3ed77be58557fef89d8b17a02.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250608T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250608T113000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250505T043238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250602T113718Z
UID:10001337-1749376800-1749382200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Asian American Racial Justice Trainings Part 2: "Modernity" and Institutional Racism
DESCRIPTION:A deep dive into understanding systemic racism\, with a focus on institutional racism as the historical engine of global “modernity.”\n\n\nFoundations: “Modernity” and Institutional Racism \nEver consider how ideas of “modernity”/“modern”/“modernization” have structured our contemporary world into racist institutions? This session takes a deep dive into understanding systemic racism\, with a focus on institutional racism as the historical engine for global “modernity” (the quotation marks are intentional) and vice versa. \nJoin us this week and next week to learn more about what modernity and coloniality have to do with white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: Asian American experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nFoundations Part 1: History of “Asian American” Identity\, Saturday\, June 7 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity-tickets-1349094270279 \nFoundations Part 2: “Modernity” and Institutional Racism\, Sunday\, June 8 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism-tickets-1349094641389 \nFoundations Part 3: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy\,  Monday\, June 9 at 8pm to 9:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-white-supremacy-tickets-1349094932259meric \nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder\, co-director 2019-2024\, and current board Chair\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is a professor in the Department of Asian and Asian American Studies at Stony Brook University\, where she received the David L. Ferguson Award for Excellence in Inclusive Teaching. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities\, among other journals\, and is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Kinning Empire: Transcoloniality\, Kinship\, and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education and community-building for incubating justice\, practicing liberation\, and cultivating collective agility for change. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/8d778fe3ed77be58557fef89d8b17a02.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250607T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250607T113000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250505T043237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250602T113609Z
UID:10001336-1749290400-1749295800@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Asian American Racial Justice Trainings Part 1: History of Asian American Identity
DESCRIPTION:Join this workshop to explore the origin and history of Asian American identity and the model minority myth.\n\n\nFoundations: History of Asian American Identity \nThis session explores the origin and history of “Asian American” identity\, both as a racial construct and as a political movement\, as well as the origin of the model minority myth and its function within white supremacy. \nAll are welcome. We offer these trainings in order to equip you with histories and critical frameworks that can deepen the work of antiracism in your lives and in your communities. This three-part series intentionally integrates what is often left out of general racial justice education: Asian American experiences and decolonial values. They represent our beliefs and values as an organization and are the foundation for organizing emergent community-led labs for mutual care\, community-building\, collaboration and innovation. \nFoundations Part 1: History of “Asian American” Identity\, Saturday\, June 7 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity-tickets-1349094270279 \nFoundations Part 2: “Modernity” and Institutional Racism\, Sunday\, June 8 at 1pm – 2:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-modernity-and-institutional-racism-tickets-1349094641389 \nFoundations Part 3: Coloniality\, Anti-Blackness\, and White Supremacy\,  Monday\, June 9 at 8pm to 9:30pm EDT\, https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foundations-2025-coloniality-anti-blackness-white-supremacy-tickets-1349094932259meric \n\n\nThe facilitator for this series is AAJIL’s founder\, co-director 2019-2024\, and current board Chair\, Dr. Sandra So Hee Chi Kim. She is a professor in the Department of Asian and Asian American Studies at Stony Brook University\, where she received the David L. Ferguson Award for Excellence in Inclusive Teaching. Her research explores the intersections of race\, global coloniality\, migration\, and culture. Her articles have appeared in Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies\, Positions: Asia Critique\, Korean Studies\, and Occasion: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities\, among other journals\, and is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Kinning Empire: Transcoloniality\, Kinship\, and Korean Historical Trauma. \nThe Asian American Justice + Innovation Lab (AAJIL) is a community racial justice incubator committed to education and community-building for incubating justice\, practicing liberation\, and cultivating collective agility for change. \nAll workshop donations go directly towards covering AAJIL’s operating costs. As a completely volunteer-run organization\, we are so grateful for your financial support! \nwww.aajil.org \nwww.instagram.com/aajil_org/
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/foundations-2025-history-of-asian-american-identity/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/avif:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_1021461763_2573885958_1_original.avif
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250606T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250606T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250602T044734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250602T111620Z
UID:10001438-1749240000-1749247200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Community Action: Resist the U.S. Census Bureau Reclassification
DESCRIPTION:Join us for resource sharing and letter-writing to your local reps and media outlets as a call for action against unjust reclassification!\n\n\nThis is a virtual event; Zoom information will be emailed to attendees closer to the date! \nCommunity Action: Resist the U.S. Census Bureau Reclassification \nDid you know? The U.S. Census Bureau is using the MARC (Modified Age and Race Census) data files to reclassify folks who selected “Some Other Race” or multiple race categories without our consent. The data doesn’t lie; the number of people who identify as two or more races has decreased from 33.8 million to14.6 million… while those identifying as white increased by 40.5 million. \nGather with community to condemn the unjust use of the MARC data files to reclassify data collected in the U.S. 2020 Census. This will be an interactive\, virtual event where folks will actively participate in gathering contact information for their local representatives and media outlets as well as writing letters for a call to action against the MARC method. \nAbout the Facilitator: Dante Comet (She/Her) is a racial justice advocate based in the unceded\, ancestral lands of the Munsee tribe of the Lenni Lenape people known as Lenapehoking (colonially known as Manhattan\, New York).\nShe is currently part of AAJIL’s Core Team and facilitates a Community Lab called Mixed Asian Multitudes. Her passions lie in exploring “mixed” Asian advocacy and identity as well as building bridges for shared liberation.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/community-action-resist-the-u-s-census-bureau-reclassification/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/9c35d551138f28191449900427bf9889.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250601T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250601T143000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250512T043300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250526T044736Z
UID:10001383-1748782800-1748788200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Songs That Raised Us ; Face (Part 2/2)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a dual community music exchange and micro language lab rooted in heritage study! This is a two-part series on May 14th and 28th.\n\n\nSongs That Raised Us ; Face (Part 2/2) \nDrawing on native vernacular + formative music memory\, we will peel off the distortion of saving Orientalized ‘face’\, hear a case of moving national tradition toward modernity\, and relink the diasporic time capsule to a family of language that brings vibrancy to soundbites of cultural difference. \nThis dual community music exchange and micro language lab may be of particular interest for heritage learners while all skill levels and heritage-curious are welcome! \nMeet Our Instructor; Laura Ng \nAn interdisciplinary culture worker-sense maker and aspiring Canto diaspora\, Laura Ng uses design inquiry and provocation to facilitate collective discovery. \nTheir Heritage Restoration practice reclaims assimilated genealogy in American/transnational movements toward a new relating—of opt-in—contributing research + editorials in Arts for America\, CCA Design Is\, and Getty Pacific Standard Time. \nHer present interests involve the worldviews embodied in language and somatic currents of social signaling\, principled on reconnection to cultural transmission as it is lived. \nThis is a virtual event\, Zoom information will be emailed closer to the date of the event! This is the second and last part of this event.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/songs-that-raised-us-face-part-2-2/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/505ea17149a7edd9498d672f5c039bfd.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250601T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250601T113000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250505T043237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250526T044735Z
UID:10001335-1748772000-1748777400@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Fundamentals 2025: Social Identities
DESCRIPTION:In this workshop series\, participants will be introduced to different historical and political formations of the Asian American identity.\n\n\nFundamentals 2025- Connecting Histories: Social Identities \nIn this workshop series\, participants will be introduced to different historical and political formations of the Asian American identity. \nThis session will explore Asian American identity formations\, with participants reflecting on their intersecting social identities\, while analyzing the consequences of stereotypes and bias. \nYou will receive a Zoom link upon registration. \n \nMeet our Facilitator \nReiney Lin (she/her) is a trainer and a team leader with the Racial Equity Institute\, where she serves as the lead Asian American trainer\, a consultant with the Groundwater Institute\, and the founder\, a core team member\, and organizer with the California Anti-Racism Alliance. Reiney has an institutional background in public health with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and in higher education with the Center for Race\, Ethnicity & Diversity Education at Elon University. She is honored to be a part of the AAJIL team and contribute to collective learning spaces essential to organizing and the movement for racial justice.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/fundamentals-2025-social-identities/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/d5abe861aed9a8aa0883616ae2dfcb21.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250531T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250531T113000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250505T043236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250526T044735Z
UID:10001334-1748685600-1748691000@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Fundamentals 2025: Collective Stories
DESCRIPTION:In this workshop series\, participants will be introduced to different historical and political formations of the Asian American identity.\n\n\nFundamentals 2025 – Connecting Histories: Collective Stories \nIn this workshop series\, participants will be introduced to different historical and political formations of the Asian American identity. \nIn this session\, through dialogue and group interaction\, participants will connect their own personal histories to larger themes in the Asian American experience. \nMeet our Facilitator \nElaine Chiu (she/her) is an experienced educator and community leader. She holds 2 master’s degrees\, one in Early Childhood Special Education and the other in Intercultural Studies\, with a focus on Asian American contexts. With 16 years of classroom experience spanning China\, Taiwan\, New York City\, and Los Angeles\, Elaine brings a wealth of educational expertise. She currently serves as a Program Manager at Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics (LEAP)\, was a former co-director\, and current board member at AAJIL.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/fundamentals-2025-collective-stories/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://potluckasianamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/16e922c47ba1dcbc547c8fd80dfaa479.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250514T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250514T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250512T043259Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250512T055227Z
UID:10001382-1747245600-1747251000@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Songs That Raised Us ; Face (Part 1/2)
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a dual community music exchange and micro language lab rooted in heritage study! This is a two-part series on May 14th and 28th.\n\n\nSongs That Raised Us ; Face (Part 1/2)  \nDrawing on native vernacular + formative music memory\, we will peel off the distortion of saving Orientalized ‘face’\, hear a case of moving national tradition toward modernity\, and relink the diasporic time capsule to a family of language that brings vibrancy to soundbites of cultural difference. \nThis dual community music exchange and micro language lab may be of particular interest for heritage learners while all skill levels and heritage-curious are welcome! \nMeet Our Instructor; Laura Ng \nAn interdisciplinary culture worker-sense maker and aspiring Canto diaspora\, Laura Ng uses design inquiry and provocation to facilitate collective discovery. \nTheir Heritage Restoration practice reclaims assimilated genealogy in American/transnational movements toward a new relating—of opt-in—contributing research + editorials in Arts for America\, CCA Design Is\, and Getty Pacific Standard Time. \nHer present interests involve the worldviews embodied in language and somatic currents of social signaling\, principled on reconnection to cultural transmission as it is lived. \nThis is a virtual event\, Zoom information will be emailed closer to the date of the event! This event will be two parts\, with the second being on May 28th.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/songs-that-raised-us-face-part-1-2/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250415T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250415T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250407T043232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250414T210554Z
UID:10001181-1744747200-1744754400@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:War’s Long Shadow: Generational Grief from War - Watch Party and Conversation
DESCRIPTION:Join us to watch a recording of a conversation between Jungwon Kim and Linda Thai on the impact of war on generational grief!\n\n\nWar’s Long Shadow Watch Party and Community Conversation \nJoin us to watch a recording of a conversation between Jungwon Kim and Linda Thai on the impact of war on generational grief followed by a guided community conversation! \nTogether\, we’ll watch the beautiful conversation between Linda Thai and Jungwon Kim where they explore psychological\, spiritual\, and communal reverberations of historical violence\, framed within the context of U.S. wars in Korea and Vietnam\, yet deeply relevant to other conflicts\, past and present. Their conversation touches on themes of intergenerational war trauma and grief as well as how we can use communal ritual practices towards collective healing. This conversation was hosted and recorded by Science and Nonduality on March 12. \nThe recording will be followed by a guided community conversation and connection practice. \nMeet the Instructor: \nAngela is a Visionary Organizing and Kingian Nonviolence facilitator-trainer working towards a world where we have increased capacities to sit with our own and each other’s complexities. Angela stewards community containers where participants can share grief\, practice conflict skills\, and be co-opted into emergence inspired by the erotic\, the intuitive\, the divine\, and the more-than-human.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/wars-long-shadow-watch-party-and-community-conversation/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250326T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250326T190000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250324T043231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250326T004432Z
UID:10001119-1743012000-1743015600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:An Open Space for the Children of Asian Fathers
DESCRIPTION:Why Are You The Way That You Are? An Open Space for the Children of Asian Fathers \nHave you ever gotten into a tiff with your Asian father and thought\, much like Michael Scott once did: why are you the way that you are? Do you feel like you’ve spent decades of your life trying to make sense of the unique psychology of your Asian father to little avail? Do you just need an open\, honest\, and affirming space to reflect on the nature of Asian fathers and fatherhood from the perspective of their Asian offspring? Then this session is for you. \nJoin Nairuti\, fellow child of an Asian father\, for an hour of: \n\nprocessing our unique relationship to our Asian fathers;\nfinding solace in community for said relationships’ joys and challenges; and\nideally\, co-visioning a world in which Asian fatherhood can be something more poignant than a bowl of cut fruit.\n\nInstructor Bio: \nBorn and raised in Ahmedabad\, Gujarat\, Nairuti is a proud descendent of care workers and revolutionaries who fought for Indian independence in the early-mid 20th century. It is this very spirit that informs her work as a researcher\, educator\, and practical radical. Prior to joining the Center for Economic Democracy as the organization’s inaugural Director of Policy & Research\, Nairuti spent eight years as a movement operative supporting anchor institutions to realize their potential\, driving national narrative change campaigns\, organizing resource-holders (and holding them to account)\, accelerating community wealth building activity\, and more. Ultimately\, Nairuti dreams of a world where community is at the heart of our political\, economic\, and social systems.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/an-open-space-for-the-children-of-asian-fathers/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250312T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250312T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250310T043238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250311T021738Z
UID:10001009-1741804200-1741809600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Strategy of the Civil Rights Movement
DESCRIPTION:A look behind how the philosophy and strategy of the Civil Rights Movements developed. If it freed us then\, maybe it can free us now.\n\n\nStrategy of the Civil Rights Movement (with George Dou) \n“We must accept finite disappointment\, but never lose infinite hope.” \n-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. \nHow can the past help us respond to our present moment? This session will give participants a look behind how the philosophy and strategy of the Civil Rights Movements developed. If it freed us then\, maybe it can free us now. \nAbout Kingian Nonviolence (KNV): \nKNV is the philosophy and strategy that Dr. King utilized in organizing the Civil Rights movements. Since his passing\, many of his close friends and allies took to teaching and passing down his teaching. \nAbout Nonviolent Communication (NVC): \nNVC is a language and tool developed by the late Dr. Marshall Rosenberg to answer the question: “why do people hurt each other”? It’s a communication framework that can help us resolve conflicts in a positive way. \nDuring the workshop\, we will explore how Dr. King and other Civil Rights organizers organized and solved problems\, and how we might apply some of their philosophies to today. \nMeet the Instructor: George Dou \nGeorge (He/Him) is an educator and conflict resolution trainer\, and a double-alumnus of North Carolina State University\, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in Communication and Masters of Education. He received certification in Kingian Nonviolence training from the University of Rhode Island. \nHis current work revolves around supporting college students of underrepresented and historically marginalized backgrounds.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/strategy-of-the-civil-rights-movement/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250227T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250227T220000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250217T043229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250226T063942Z
UID:10000972-1740686400-1740693600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Greenlining Our Communities
DESCRIPTION:We will discuss the role of community engagement in local public policy and development projects.\n\n\nGreenlining Our Communities \nHow would you create a more just and sustainable community? Would you improve active transportation and mobility? Implement nature-based solutions to build more climate resilient neighborhoods? Divest from policing and prisons and invest in multi-benefit community projects? \n  \nThere are many factors that contribute to the growing inequities in community development\, health impacts\, environmental burdens\, and access to green space\, especially in communities of color. Discriminatory housing practices concentrate communities of color by industrial zones\, highways\, and pollution sources. Systemic barriers to political influence also prevent the equitable investment of resources into our communities. \nWith the Trump administration’s recent executive order to remove government support for Diversity\, Equity\, and Inclusion (DEI) practices\, environmental justice offices at the Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Justice have suspended activity. The Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights\, which is tasked with ensuring communities disproportionately affected by environmental pollution are provided access to a healthy\, livable environment\, is likely to shutter. \nThis session will discuss the role of community engagement in local public policy and development projects and share ways you can advocate for equitable investment in your community! \n  \nOur Instructor \nJean Park (she/her) is a Program Coordinator for API Forward Movement’s Water is Life project\, currently working to develop community-informed infrastructure projects in the West San Gabriel Valley. Born and raised in Los Angeles\, Jean supports equity driven policies and recently joined LA Forward’s organizing committee to advocate for the first city-wide Capital Infrastructure Plan (CIP).
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/greenlining-our-communities/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250212T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250212T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250210T043254Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250212T194431Z
UID:10000963-1739383200-1739388600@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Leading with Love: Reframing Conflict & Accountability
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a teach-in about how conflict can transform our relationships and communities for the better.\n\n\nLeading with Love: Reframing Conflict & Accountability \nConflict is everywhere\, yet many of us are adverse to confronting it. Join us for a teach-in about how conflict can transform our relationships and communities for the better. \nThis session utilizes the teachings of Dr. King’s philosophy of Nonviolence and Dr. Marshall Rosenberg’s Nonviolent Communication. \nAbout Kingian Nonviolence (KNV): \nKNV is the philosophy and strategy that Dr. King utilized in organizing the Civil Rights movements. Since his passing\, many of his close friends and allies took to teaching and passing down this philosophy. \nAbout Nonviolent Communication (NVC): \nNVC is a language and tool developed by the late Dr. Marshall Rosenberg to answer the question: “why do people hurt each other”? It’s a communication framework that can help us resolve conflicts in a positive way. \nParticipants should come to the session with a conflict they’d like to explore\, and ideally\, that they would want to share. Sharing is encouraged\, but not required. \nOur Instructor \nGeorge Dou (he/him) is an educator and conflict resolution trainer\, and a double-alumnus of North Carolina State University\, where he received a Bachelor of Arts in Communication and Masters of Education. He received certification in Kingian Nonviolence training from the University of Rhode Island. \nHis current work revolves around supporting college students of underrepresented and historically marginalized backgrounds.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/leading-with-love-reframing-conflict-accountability/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Education,Virtual,Webinar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250129T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250129T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250127T043246Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250127T043246Z
UID:10000956-1738173600-1738179000@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Unpacking Resistance to  Justice-Oriented Policy
DESCRIPTION:Join us in exploring what we know about the psychological explanations for why people resist justice-oriented policy.\n\n\nUnpacking Resistance to Justice-Oriented Policy \nFor as long as people have been mobilizing for justice\, others have fought against those same efforts. Policies meant to advance racial justice\, especially in education\, have long had difficulty being adopted and maintained in the United States. In recent years\, we have seen a strong surge in resistance to justice-oriented policies\, including efforts to bans certain kinds of curricula in schools to mobilization and legal action against affirmative action. While top-level structural analyses of those forces influencing this resistance are critical for identifying where power lies in this movement\, we often forget those forces that are not located in any state house or any website\, but in people’s own minds. In other words\, what do we know about the psychological explanations for why people resist justice-oriented policy? In this discussion\, we will walk through some of the major perspectives\, supported by research evidence\, about what is happening in people’s minds when they resist justice-oriented policy. Included in this conversation will be a special focus about what we know about Asian Americans’ perspectives. The aim of this session is for people to come away with broad lessons for how to understand these perspectives and ideas about how to confront them in real life. \nOur Instructor \nRicky Blissett\, Ph.D. is the Associate Director of the Center for Democracy and Civic Life at the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County. Both within and outside of their role at UMBC\, their research primarily focuses on attitudes and ideologies in the politics of educational equity and justice\, as well as the spaces in which public ideologies translate into policy action. Their expertise includes educational politics and governance\, ideological politics of race- and gender-conscious policy\, and program evaluation and research methodology. Further\, they are a dialogue facilitator with training in conflict mediation and multiple models of dialogue. They are the principal investigator of the Democracy and Equity in Education Politics research group\, program co-chair for the Policy and Politics division (L) of the American Educational Research Association\, and principal coordinator for the Just Education Policy institute. Ricky holds a Ph.D. in Leadership and Policy Studies (with a minor in Quantitative Methods) from Peabody College at Vanderbilt University\, as well as a Bachelor of Science in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology (with a minor in Computer Science) from the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/unpacking-resistance-to-justice-oriented-policy/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250122T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250122T193000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250113T041730Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250120T041835Z
UID:10000921-1737568800-1737574200@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:Alternative Archiving: Micro Operas and Beyond
DESCRIPTION:Join us in exploring the science of archiving on both a personal level and as a part of the API Diaspora with our instructors.\n\n\nAlternative Archiving: Micro Operas and Beyond – Alan Nakagawa with Umi Hsu and Amanda L. Andrei \nChanging how archives function has become fundamental in the efforts for diversification/ decolonizing historical resources. \nArtists have utilized the science of archiving by adopting the practice and transforming art making through building and documenting historical data. \nThree artists will present their use of archival practice in developing work both personal and part of the API Diaspora. \nThese are alternatives to the orthodox fields of archiving while telling stories that may have otherwise been overlooked or denied. \nMeet the Instructors  \nAlan Nakagawa (he/him) has been the Artist-in-Residence at the Smithsonian Museum of American History\, the Getty Villa\, Geth Archives at CalState Dominguez Hills and the University of Barcelona. The data and objects collected during his four year Artist-in-Residence at the Pasadena Buddhist Temple titled Invisible Tea House was accepted into the State of California Archives earlier this year. He is a member of the Oral History Association and the World Federation of Acoustic Ecology. Currently\, he is the Artist-in-residence for Kaya Press and the National Coalition for Redress and Reparations Collection at the Gerth Archives CalState Dominguez Hills \nUmi Hsu (they/them) was born in Taipei and moved to Virginia at age twelve.Hsu is a trans nonbinary sound artist\, musician\, and writer whose practice is driven by inquiries about sound and migratory communities. Working to create social change through sound\, Hsu co-founded LA Listens\, a community engagement project aboutLA’s changing sonic and social ecology; and mobile placemaking collective MovableParts. They also write songs and produce music about the melancholic postcolony inghost pop band Bitter Party. \nAmanda L. Andrei (she/her) is a playwright\, literary translator\, theater critic\, and community archivist residing in Los Angeles by way of Virginia/Washington DC. She writes epic\, irreverent plays that center the concealed\, wounded places of history and societies from the perspectives of diasporic Filipina women\, and she co-translates from Romanian to English with her father\, Codin Andrei.
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/alternative-archiving-micro-operas-and-beyond/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250116T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250116T190000
DTSTAMP:20260404T011851
CREATED:20250113T041729Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250115T061604Z
UID:10000920-1737046800-1737054000@potluckasianamerica.org
SUMMARY:An Art of Resistance\, Experimentation\, & Intimate Organizing
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a “side conversation” exploring art and practices of creativity as a contribution to change in our material conditions.\n\n\nA Side Conversation: An Art of Resistance\, Experimentation\, and Intimate Organizing \nJoin us for a “side conversation” exploring art and practices of creativity as a contribution to change in our material conditions. \nThis is an interactive session sharing some experimental methodologies of care and intimate organizing. \nHopeful Skills/Takeaways: \n• (Re)learning our understanding of art x science \n• Role of imagining otherwise possibility (Ashon Crawley) as a contribution to our material conditions \n• Inspiring ourselves into sustained resistance against: time as a commodity\, relationships as transactional\, state-sanctioned violence\, empire\, etc. \nMethodologies of building capacity: \n• Learning shared value of “side conversations”: \n• Mutual aid as an experimental practice of intimate organizing and harm reduction rooted in a Black feminist ethic of care \n• Practicing how to effectively 1:1 (tactic with roots in labor organizing) \n  \nMeet the Facilitator \nJacinda Lee is a recent college grad from unceded Eastern Goshute/Shoshone land (Salt Lake City\, UT). \n“I recently moved to Taiwan to be near my loved ones and ancestors. l am just a guy who really likes practicing/sharing art and appreciates what the scientific process can contribute to our practices of care(giving/receiving)\, relationship building\, and organizing spaces. \nAll funds being sent to the Al-Hayek family. <3 They’ve recently surpassed HALF of their goal and need far more support to survive and evacuate.” \nhttp://tinyurl.com/Alhayek-gaza-evac
URL:https://potluckasianamerica.org/event/an-art-of-resistance-experimentation-intimate-organizing/
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
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LOCATION:
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