The at the University of California, Davis, will celebrate the contributions of Latino community leader Cesar Chavez with a series of noon-hour discussions and a film screening Monday, March 18, through Friday, March 22.
On Monday, a panel of immigrant rights advocates and organizers will discuss "La Lucha Sigue: Immigrant Workers and Their Families in the Ongoing Struggle for Justice."
Novelist Alfredo Vea, author of "La Maravilla," "Silver Cloud Cafe" and "Gods Go Begging," will speak Tuesday about his childhood in the migrant camps of California and the contributions made by Filipino, Mexican and South Asian workers in the struggle for justice for farmworkers.
On Wednesday, Patricio Serna, chief justice of the New Mexico Supreme Court and the country's only Latino chief justice, and , ºÙºÙÊÓƵ professor of law and the first Hispanic to have served on the California Supreme Court, will share their experiences as Latino pioneers in the judiciary.
Elizabeth "Betita" Martinez, author of "500 Years of Chicano History" and founder of the Institute for Multi-Racial Justice, will be among the speakers to discuss on Thursday "Women in the Movimiento."
Cesar Chavez Week will conclude Friday with a screening of "De Colores." The film examines the challenges faced by gay Latinos coming out to their families and communities, as well as the attempts made by some families to overcome homophobia.
All events will take place in the Moot Court Room of King Hall. The week is being sponsored by the La Raza Law Students Association, five other law student groups and the .
Media Resources
Julia Ann Easley, General news (emphasis: business, K-12 outreach, education, law, government and student affairs), 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu