Filtering by: community

Clockshop’s 4th Annual ‘Community & Unity People’s Kite Festival’
May
11
2:00 PM14:00

Clockshop’s 4th Annual ‘Community & Unity People’s Kite Festival’

Join Clockshop for their 4th Annual Community & Unity People’s Kite Festival. This year’s festival will celebrate multicultural kite traditions at Los Angeles State Historic Park on Saturday, May 11, 2024 from 2:00–6:00 PM. As part of our inaugural kite commission program, our 2024 artist, Stevie Choi, will be creating three unique Korean kites to bring awareness to animal species native to Los Angeles whose continued existence is threatened by urban and industrial development such as the North American cougar, El Segundo butterfly, and the Least Bell’s vireo. For the first time, a kite competition will take place, inviting attendees to compete for the best handmade kite, judged by kite masters.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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AIA|LA City Leaders Breakfast Reception w/ Jimmy Kim
Mar
14
8:00 AM08:00

AIA|LA City Leaders Breakfast Reception w/ Jimmy Kim

AIA|LA City Leaders Breakfast Reception w/ Jimmy Kim – General Manager, Department of Recreation & Parks, City of Los Angeles

2024 City Leaders Breakfast Series Presented By: Gannett Fleming

The 2024 AIA|LA City Leaders Breakfast Series serves as an opportunity for architects & designers and other community stakeholders to meet directly with key individuals transforming Los Angeles in a roundtable setting to discuss innovative ideas that will ensure a healthy, sustainable, and economically competitive future.

Jimmy Kim is the dedicated General Manager of the Department of Recreation and Parks for the City of Los Angeles and an accomplished leader within the Department. Before rising to his current position, he served as the Assistant General Manager, where he skillfully oversaw the Recreation Services branch, and held the position of Superintendent of Citywide Aquatics and Emergency Management. Notably, he served as the Department’s Homeless Strategy Coordinator and Resilience Officer, showcasing his versatility in addressing complex challenges facing urban environments.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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Jarrett Walker on “Human Transit”
Feb
21
12:00 PM12:00

Jarrett Walker on “Human Transit”

Join Jarrett Walker as he talks about his new book, Human Transit, Revised Edition and offers guidance to achieve successful public transit that will enrich any community.

Transportation expert Jarrett Walker believes that transit can be simple, if we focus on the underlying geometry that all transit systems share. Jarrett’s gift is being able to break down the basic principles of public transit so that you may have the tools necessary to clarify and advocate for your own values.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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Fireside Chat: Libraries as Cornerstones of Democracy
Jan
23
11:00 AM11:00

Fireside Chat: Libraries as Cornerstones of Democracy

  • Mark Taper Auditorium, Central Library (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In a major election year, how can the library continue to foster inclusion, free access to information, and democratic ideals while facing unprecedented new challenges?

Featuring Stacy Lieberman, President and CEO, Library Foundation of Los Angeles, and John F. Szabo, City Librarian, Los Angeles Public Library, in conversation with Austin Cross, Host of LAist 89.3's All Things Considered

Libraries as Cornerstones of Democracy

Tuesday, January 23, 2024 at 11:00 AM

Mark Taper Auditorium, Central Library and live-streamed

11:00 AM | Program and Q&A

12:00 PM | Reception

Learn more and RSVP here.

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The Big Give 2023
Nov
19
7:00 AM07:00

The Big Give 2023

We are already busy getting ready to host our biggest event of the year, Big Give 2023!

On November 19, 2023 we will once again share 1,000 Thanksgiving meal kits with our registered guests, ultimately helping over 4,000 people in our community have the comfort and nourishment of a Thanksgiving meal.

We are proud to welcome the Karsh Center community back for this Thanksgiving meal kit distribution using a “client choice” model, which we used for the first time in 2022, welcoming our registered guests back for an experience in which they will have the opportunity to select their own food items, ultimately choosing a meal that will be most appetizing and accessible for their own families and households.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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CIVICAS: Let's Get Ready L.A.!
Nov
14
6:30 PM18:30

CIVICAS: Let's Get Ready L.A.!

  • Intersection of Pico and the 405 Freeway (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Prepare our Communities for Disasters, and Recovery

Join Women’s Civic Action Network for Conversation, Crudité and Cocktails With Fellow Los Angeles Civic Leaders

Hear from the foremost experts in Los Angeles how to increase community resilience to disaster.

Please RSVP by 11/3!

Location is at the intersection of Pico and the 405 freeway with complimentary parking on site.

Featuring:

Kristin Crowley, Fire Chief, Los Angeles City Fire Department

Carol Parks, General Manager, Emergency Management Department, City of Los Angeles

Moderated by:

Joanne Nowlin, CEO, American Red Cross, Los Angeles Region

Hosted by the Civicas Board of Directors,

Cynthia Hirschhorn

Laura Fox

Nicole Mutchnik

RSVP here.

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El Nido's Farmer's Market Opening Celebration
Oct
21
9:00 AM09:00

El Nido's Farmer's Market Opening Celebration

  • 11243 GLENOAKS BLVD Pacoima, CA, 91331 USA (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

El Nido Family Centers, in partnership with the City of Los Angeles, is excited to announce the El Nido Farmers Market launch, funded by the Peace & Healing Center.

The Farmers Market will improve the community's access to fresh and nutritious food while providing local entrepreneurs and artisans a venue to sell their wares and partner organizations to offer services and volunteer time.

Learn more here.

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BGV Pitch Tour LA
Oct
19
6:00 PM18:00

BGV Pitch Tour LA

  • 3402 Pico Boulevard Santa Monica, CA, 90405 United States (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Black Girl Ventures Foundation is starting the 2023 Fall Pitch Tour in LA on Thursday, October 19th! We will be throwing a BGV Pitch Competition with 7 preselected local Black and Brown women-identifying founders.

A BGV Pitch Competition is like ‘Shark Tank’ mixed with the elements of a classic ‘Rent Party’. At a BGV pitch competition, the audience decides the winner through Raisify.co, our voting platform, with their dollars. The winner is determined by a point system, not the dollar amount raised. The money raised goes to the founders in the form of a grant, despite where they place.

Come out meet the BGV team, network with other founders, investors, and potential customers. Watch these amazing 7 founders pitch, vote with your dollars, and learn about new businesses to interact with. Light refreshments and drinks will be served. You do not want to miss this super dope event.

BGV’s mission is to create access to capital, capacity, and community. This means we want to see ALL Black and Brown women-identifying founders win. We want to help these founders in the communities we serve, scale and grow their businesses, gain the capacity to hire in their communities, and social capital to meet those who will help them grow in partnerships, accessibility, and their industry.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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Rising Up in Disasters: Care, healing & struggle in an era of climate survival
Oct
4
4:00 PM16:00

Rising Up in Disasters: Care, healing & struggle in an era of climate survival

As climate disasters hammer our communities, people are struggling for disaster relief, food, housing, energy, water, and more. In this workshop, disaster resilience expert Caroline Contillo will share case studies of communities that responded to disasters with mutual aid, community care, and collective resource-sharing, leading to grassroots struggles against extraction.

Together, we'll explore questions like: How can meeting our community's basic needs help advance our struggles for liberation? How can we collaborate more strategically, across regions and movements, to build alternative systems and consolidate our power against the fossil fuel industry? 

You will:

  • Hear inspiring stories and case studies from BIPOC youth leaders across the U.S. who are organizing for their survival;

  • Tune in to your own resilience through somatic / sensory awareness activities;

  • And access a toolkit to begin planning climate survival programs in your area.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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The Open Mind Community Lecture & Film Series: The Stress Perception
Sep
19
5:00 PM17:00

The Open Mind Community Lecture & Film Series: The Stress Perception

The Open Mind is a free community lecture and film series that brings together thought leaders in science and culture for relevant and meaningful programs about mental health issues. Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, these programs were held in-person at UCLA but are currently presented on a virtual Zoom platform, attracting a national and international audience. We are honored that the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital Board of Advisors has joined The Friends of Semel in support of the Open Mind.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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Mapping Our Social Fabric: The Tech-Enabled Community Resilience Summit
Sep
15
11:00 AM11:00

Mapping Our Social Fabric: The Tech-Enabled Community Resilience Summit

Join the Center for Public Partnerships and Research (CPPR) and Orange Sparkle Ball for a provocative conversation about the power of community.

Tech-Enabled Community Resilience is a model for harnessing the power of networks in a community ecosystem to influence and change social and health outcomes. This model highlights how co-design principles serve as core equity drivers for technology-enabled community data initiatives. Blending data science with the right technology tools gives communities a platform to pilot rapid innovations, simulate conditions and forecast outcomes, and build strategies to tackle entrenched problems.

This Summit brings together thought-leaders and change-makers in community ecosystems. When faced with opportunity or adversity, community-led efforts start and end with on the ground innovation and inclusion. The power of community is the future face of resilience in a rapidly changing world.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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The UCLA Barbra Streisand Center Inaugural Lecture
Sep
12
4:30 PM16:30

The UCLA Barbra Streisand Center Inaugural Lecture

  • UCLA Meyer and Renee Luskin Conference Center, The Centennial Terrace (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The UCLA Barbra Streisand Center invites you to the inaugural public lecture on the topic of Truth in the Public Sphere

Featuring

André Brock

Frances Haugen

Stuart Stevens

Moderated by

Safiya Noble

Submit a question HERE.

The Barbra Streisand Center was established in 2021 and made possible by the vision and generosity of Barbra Streisand. The Streisand Center will become the future Barbra Streisand Institute at UCLA, a forward-thinking institute dedicated to finding solutions to the most vital social issues.

The Center for Truth in the Public Sphere will be the first area of study and advocacy and will focus on truth in the public sphere, reflecting Streisand's passionate interest in the topic. Speakers and research will delve into urgent and existential threats to democracy, and examine how lies and the proliferation of disinformation can destroy a civic sense of decency, as well as entire countries.

Learn more and RSVP to join in-person or virtually.

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FoLAR River Fest 2023
Jul
23
9:30 AM09:30

FoLAR River Fest 2023

Join FoLAR on Sunday, July 23rd, 2023, at the LA State Historic Park for our second annual River Fest — a free open-air film, arts, and community festival bringing the River to the People and the People to the River! River Fest 2023 will feature a variety of local artists, live performances, short environmental film screenings, interactive art and education exhibits, food trucks, raffles, and more!

Learn more HERE.

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The Stories We Tell Ourselves: How Narratives Are Steering Community Development + What To Do About It
Jul
12
1:00 PM13:00

The Stories We Tell Ourselves: How Narratives Are Steering Community Development + What To Do About It

The Anti-Racist Community Development research project has documented the range of ways that structural racism shows up in community development and the many ways that people are trying to move anti-racist work forward in the sector. Before communities can fully reckon with our past and present and envision a better future, though, we think it’s important to step back and look at some of the fundamental mindsets that shape the sector. The stories we tell about ourselves and about others contribute a lot to how we show up – in our priorities, the ways we spend our limited time and money, our practices, our processes, and our systems.

In “The Stories We Tell Ourselves,” our panel will explore long-standing, hardwired narratives that show up in the community development sector and keep us from doing the racial equity work that so many of us are trying to do. We’ll also look at specific, practical ways that you can creatively push back against those narratives, at the neighborhood level, the city level, or even nationally.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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Learn@Home: Ask an Arborist
Jun
22
12:00 PM12:00

Learn@Home: Ask an Arborist

TreePeople is excited to invite you to our first virtual program where we will have an arborist respond to questions about trees from our community on Thursday, June 22 at 12pm PT. We’re partnering with Dashboard.Earth to collect questions before the event. Questions and photos will be collected through the app. Deadline to submit is Friday, June 16.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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ULI Los Angeles StimULI: Al Fresco 2.0: Long Term Solutions
Oct
18
11:00 AM11:00

ULI Los Angeles StimULI: Al Fresco 2.0: Long Term Solutions

Join ULI Los Angeles for an online panel discussion on what different jurisdictions are doing to create an accommodating environment for outdoor dining as we move away from an emergency solution to permanent planning and urban design guidelines!

As we move away from the COVID emergency, what are different jurisdictions planning to create a permanent, accommodating environment for outdoor dining? What will future planning and urban design guidelines look like? Has this changed how the development community and restauranteurs plan and implement their current and future projects?

Learn more and RSVP here.

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WE RISE 2022
May
1
to May 31

WE RISE 2022

WE RISE 2022 is back for the month of May with free community-led events that center health and healing across Los Angeles County.

Throughout Mental Health Awareness Month in May, local organizations are hosting events that promote wellbeing, creative expression and community connection – and you’re invited! Explore murals, health fairs, workshops, art exhibits — and so much more – all designed by us, for us.

Let’s rise together – because your mental health matters, and we all need connection and support to thrive.

Check out the calendar of events here.

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Next City’s Solutions of the Year
Dec
15
9:30 AM09:30

Next City’s Solutions of the Year

Join Next City for our live Solutions of the Year virtual event series. You will once again be introduced directly to the practitioners and writers highlighted in the “21 Best Solutions of 2021” special issue. Together we’ll explore solutions to the year’s many challenges, ranging from climate action to countering systemic racism. Anyone working for greater justice and equity in cities will be able to take inspiration from this event into 2022.

Everyone who buys a ticket will receive a copy of our annual Solutions of the Year special issue print magazine.

At Next City’s Solutions of the Year presentations, speeches and panel discussions, you will hear from dozens of speakers who made change happen around issues such as guaranteed income, scalable climate responses, collective organizing, small business recovery, anti-racism, and affordable housing. In this time of transformation, our editors have amplified programs and movements that showcase how communities organize to achieve liberation from systems and cultures of oppression. Next City’s mission to elevate positive change matters now more than ever.

This multi-day convening, which includes eight sessions, will frame the conversation for 2022. You can purchase a single ticket now to all of the events for just $50, or register for each event individually. The individual event listings will be published in the coming weeks.

Find out more and RSVP here.

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Place Driving Equity: Investing in Public Space for Shared Prosperity
Nov
10
10:00 AM10:00

Place Driving Equity: Investing in Public Space for Shared Prosperity

Place—the unique space where the physical environment meets the social, emotional, and spiritual aspects unique to human life—is one of the most important drivers of equity and prosperity in communities. However, far too many neighborhoods in the United States have faced decades-long disinvestment, increased concentrated poverty and ongoing, systemic racism, challenging the benefits that vibrant communities can bring.

In response, civic infrastructure, such as parks, trails, libraries, community centers and the public realm, is increasingly critical to creating economic opportunity, eliminating racism, and promoting health.

Join Reimagining the Civic Commons for the release of Place Driving Equity: An evidence-based action guide on the role of public space for shared prosperity. Kyle Kutuchief, Knight Foundation’s Program Director in Akron, will present the publication’s findings and be joined by panelists—Dr. Eugenia (Gina) South, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and Shamichael Hallman, Senior Library Manager of Cossitt Library in Memphis in a conversation with Lynn M. Ross from Spirit for Change Consulting. The panel will highlight the centrality of place as a crucial tool in overcoming inequity, building trust, and generating community-based opportunity and wealth.

Reimagining the Civic Commons is a national initiative transforming public spaces to foster engagement, equity, environmental sustainability and economic development in cities across the country.

Find out more about speakers and RSVP here.

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SPACES & PLACES 2021: Visions of Black-led Communities – Soul City
Aug
5
9:00 AM09:00

SPACES & PLACES 2021: Visions of Black-led Communities – Soul City

Soul City – ​Film Screening and Session discussion

DAY 1 | August 5th | 12 pm to 1:30 pm ET

Soul City is a planned community in North Carolina that was first proposed in 1969 by Floyd McKissick, a civil rights leader and director of the Congress of Racial Equality. Soul City was one of thirteen model city projects under the Urban Growth and New Community Development Act. The city was intended to be a community built and open to all races, but placed emphasis on providing opportunities for minorities and the poor.

This event includes a 30 min film screening of Soul City followed by a panel discussion.

Learn more and RSVP here.

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How to Bring Democratic Decision-Making to Authentic Community Engagement
Feb
10
10:00 AM10:00

How to Bring Democratic Decision-Making to Authentic Community Engagement

Join Next City for a webinar with guest speakers Melissa Lee and George Silvertooth, of Concordia, as they discuss “How to Bring Democratic Decisionmaking to Authentic Community Engagement” on Wednesday, February 10 at 1 p.m. Eastern time.

We have noticed a paradox: communities across the U.S. are aching for the kind of equitable planning that is best achieved through the co-design of democratic decision-making. Yet these processes and power are often locked up in the hands of a few. 

Concordia has learned through 35 years of planning experience that the community needs to be vested with the opportunity and skills to address the problems they face. “With an entire nation reeling from a worldwide pandemic, fighting economic insecurity, and facing institutional racism head-on, this is the time for collective action for equitable decision-making,” says George Silvertooth, marketing and production planner at Concordia.

To address these challenges, Concordia has created a resident-centered engagement process and curriculum called the Roundtable. This course breaks down the boundaries between the urban planner and community resident by teaching the skills necessary to negotiate competing priorities and find agreement on values that support an inclusive community.

“As policymakers, public servants, and nonprofit leaders shift resources to develop equity-centered, data-driven policies and projects, we must ensure that community engagement is a critical element in that shift,” says Melissa Lee, Director of Planning and Community Engagement at Concordia. “Without community-led engagement, even the best policy backed by the most robust data will not yield the results to deal with the issues that social inequities and the pandemic have laid bare, let alone generate the lasting change we need.”

Concordia’s Roundtable is transforming “business as usual,” turning traditional consensus-building methods into actionable planning and collaborative problem-solving. This panel is for all those who are committed to and believe in the mutual influence of community and place, and who seek ways to unlock decision-making from the hands of a few. This panel will amplify examples of how to deepen democratic processes in the planning of our communities and, perhaps more urgent than ever, begin to answer the call of our ecosystems aching for ingenuity and regeneration.

Melissa Lee is the Director of Planning and Community Engagement at Concordia. She is an urban planner, community organizer, social alchemist and reformed public servant, steeped in the certainty that anything is possible when radical imagination pairs with action. Melissa has over 20 years of experience shepherding socially innovative programs from inception to completion across U.S. cities. Melissa received a B.A. in International Relations and an M.P.A from the Wagner School of Public Service at New York University.

George Silvertooth is the Swiss Army knife at Concordia, working as community engagement activity designer, planner, photographer, and graphic designer. He has worked on designing equitable and effective community engagement processes for diverse projects from navigating climate change in southern Louisiana to redefining public land use in Silicon Valley. George received his BFA in Film/Digital Video at University of the Arts in Philadelphia.

A video of the webinar will be made available to those who register.

This is a sponsored webinar. By registering for this webinar you are agreeing to have your contact information shared with Concordia.

Register here.

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Accelerating Clean Energy Transitions: The Role of Community Choice Aggregators in Surpassing State Renewable Energy Goals
Jan
27
11:00 AM11:00

Accelerating Clean Energy Transitions: The Role of Community Choice Aggregators in Surpassing State Renewable Energy Goals

Community choice in energy is transforming California's electricity sector while transitioning the Golden State to carbon-free energy and serving as an effective tool for climate action. Community choice aggregators (CCAs) offer communities control over their electricity purchasing decisions.

Join us for this webinar, which features new research on how CCAs have exceeded California’s renewable energy targets and how rapid CCA growth has resulted in investor-owned utilities to also outpace California’s requirements for renewable energy. Then a discussion with energy leaders in California will address opportunities, concerns, and recommendations for the future of CCAs, clean energy policy, and system reliability in California and beyond.

Presenters:

  • Kelly Trumbull, Energy and Climate Project Manager, UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation

  • Beth Vaughan, Executive Director of CalCCA

Panelists:

  • Angelina Galiteva, Chair, California Independent System Operator

  • Tom Habashi, CEO, Central Coast Community Energy

  • Edward Randolph, Deputy Executive Director for Energy and Climate Policy, California Public Utilities Commission

  • JR DeShazo (Moderator) Director, UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation

RSVP here.

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How To Launch Community Conversations That Create A Sense of Inclusion and Belonging
Oct
7
10:00 AM10:00

How To Launch Community Conversations That Create A Sense of Inclusion and Belonging

Engaging communities around tough topics that affect community health and growth can be difficult, especially in these socially-distanced times. Join Jenn Graham, founder and CEO of Civic Dinners, for a deep dive into successful community conversations in the cities of Sandy Springs and Decatur, Georgia and the City of Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Civic Dinners is a community engagement platform designed to bring people together for conversations that matter. The platform makes it easy for local governments and civic leaders to start conversations and then pass the mic on to community members and stakeholders, who gather diverse voices from the community through self-organized conversations.

In this webinar, you will learn: 

  • How to bring more voices to the planning table on issues from economic mobility to belonging and community visioning

  • How data and insights gathered from conversations help shape long-range strategic plans and inspire a greater sense of belonging and inclusion among neighbors, business owners and civic leaders

  • How the new Inclusive Series by Civic Dinners can support your community with a variety of conversations that help communities build a greater sense of inclusion.

Since starting Civic Dinners as a social experiment in Atlanta, Graham has built a global team and a digital platform that has enabled over 1,800 dinners around the world — both in person and virtual — and has a goal of inviting one million people to the table by 2021. Her clients range from Facebook to Coca-Cola, including beloved organizations such as The King Center, Sierra Club and The Aspen Institute.

Graham was featured as a “2020 World-Changing Woman in Conscious Business” by Conscious Media Company, and last year she was recognized by the Atlanta Business Chronicle as “Small Business Person of the Year – Rising Star.” Graham’s work has also been recognized by President Obama, and she has received numerous awards for social impact and creative community engagement.

This is a sponsored webinar. By registering for this webinar you are agreeing to have your contact information shared with Civic Dinners.

Find out more and register here.

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The 2020 Garden Party
Aug
27
5:00 PM17:00

The 2020 Garden Party

About this Event

Spend the evening celebrating the people and projects that embody our impact with Neighborhood Land Trust allies, partners and friends at Unidad Park & Community Garden on Thursday, June 4th in historic Filipinotown. Come explore this unique community park that is home to the nation’s largest Filipino-American mural west of the Mississippi River and features eighteen raised wooden garden beds installed and tended to by local residents.

Since 2002, the Los Angeles Neighborhood Land Trust has transformed the lives of 380,000 Angelenos who live within a half-mile of one of our 27 parks and gardens. By supporting our 2020 Garden Party, you will assist the Neighborhood Land Trust in reaching thousands more residents who deserve equitable access to greenspace. Join us as we advance our mission and contribute to the equity and well-being of our neighborhoods through the development of parks, gardens, and community-driven organizing.

For more information on the event or sponsorship opportunities, please contact: gardenparty@lanlt.org / 213.572.0188.

RSVP here.

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Reclaiming SPACES AND PLACES: Workshop
Aug
7
9:00 AM09:00

Reclaiming SPACES AND PLACES: Workshop

Reclaiming Spaces & Places will assemble urbanists and community leaders for a 2-day event of virtual learning and exchange. 

Spaces and Places, born of the necessity to be acknowledged within the built environment, has embarked on its most unique and ambitious convening since its conception. Now in its fourth year, the annual grassroots (un)conference will be hosted virtually in partnership with BlackSpace and Next City. This year’s theme, titled Reclaiming, aims to position BIPOC urbanists, designers, and activists as defiant catalysts for liberation and equity.

WORKSHOP (DAY 2)

Reclaiming our Space + Community 

The WORKSHOP (AUGUST 7th at 12pm to 2:05pm ET) on Day 2 will bring together participants to share stories and reflect on the reclamation of space in their own lives. Together we will commit to generating ideas for reclaiming spaces and community. The conversation will include virtual breakout exercises using the BlackSpace Manifesto principles to catalyze and energize participant discussion.

Learn more about the event and RSVP here.

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Reclaiming SPACES AND PLACES: Session
Aug
6
9:00 AM09:00

Reclaiming SPACES AND PLACES: Session

Reclaiming Spaces & Places will assemble urbanists and community leaders for a 2-day event of virtual learning and exchange.

Spaces and Places, born of the necessity to be acknowledged within the built environment, has embarked on its most unique and ambitious convening since its conception. Now in its fourth year, the annual grassroots (un)conference will be hosted virtually in partnership with BlackSpace and Next City. This year’s theme, titled Reclaiming, aims to position BIPOC urbanists, designers, and activists as defiant catalysts for liberation and equity.

SESSION (DAY 1)

Reclaiming our History | Present | Future

The SESSION (AUGUST 6th at 12PM to 1:15PM ET) on Day 1 will highlight innovative speakers in a panel presentation and moderated discussion centered on projects that exemplify the spirit of reclamation through three lenses:

Reclaiming Our History: Reckoning with Our Past to Build Our Future
Reclaiming Our Present: Protect and Strengthen Culture
Reclaiming Our Future: Manifest the Future

Learn more about the event and RSVP here.

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How To Support the Early Childhood Community During a Pandemic
Jul
1
10:00 AM10:00

How To Support the Early Childhood Community During a Pandemic

On Wednesday, July 1, at 1 p.m. Eastern, join Cindy Jurie, Ph.D, Director of Research and Special Projects at the Early Learning Coalition of Orange County (ELCOC)During this webinar, Jurie will discuss how ELCOC stepped up to support child care providers through the pandemic. 

Despite child care services being listed as “essential” during the COVID-19 pandemic, early learning centers across the U.S. have seen a large number of closures. Providers have found themselves struggling to find supplies to help maintain a clean facility. Others have been faced with the daunting task of seeking financial assistance through the CARES Act. 

With the goal of supporting the early childhood community in Orange County throughout the pandemic, ELCOC assembled and distributed cleaning supplies to providers, eased confusion by regularly dispensed information related to the pandemic, and pivoted their business program to provide coronavirus relief consultations

With these supports in place Jurie has found that their community members are more hopeful of their ability to remain open, some of whom have begun to receive grant funding for their programs. 

“Orlando has a strong tradition of coming together in crisis to support our community,” says Jurie.  “Our Early Learning Coalition team has worked collaboratively with our child care community to ensure our children have the best care possible in this time of crisis.”

Jurie has worked in early childhood education  for over thirty years, as an infant/toddler/preschool teacher, director, Child Development Associates trainer and college instructor.  As Director of Research & Special Projects, Jurie has designed & implemented funded initiatives to support infant/toddler quality, early literacy, business support for directors, and early childhood mental health supports.  

This webinar is to pay what you wish to register. Pay any amount that you would like or nothing at all. Those who become sustaining members of at least $5 a month, or who make a one-time donation of at least $20, may receive “19 Best Solutions of 2019” — Next City’s solutions of the year magazine. Your contribution toward this seminar will be used to find even more amazing guests, cover hosting fees and organize seminars like this one more frequently. A video of the webinar will be made available to those who register.

Learn more about the event here and RSVP here.

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Sasha Costanza-Chock on “Design Justice”
May
13
10:00 AM10:00

Sasha Costanza-Chock on “Design Justice”

“Design justice is about how we build a better world, a world where many worlds fit; linked worlds of collective liberation and ecological sustainability,” says Sasha Costanza-Chock, author of the new book, “Design Justice: Community-Led Practices to Build the Worlds We Need.”

In “Design Justice,” professor, designer and media-maker Sasha Costanza-Chock explores how “design might be led by marginalized communities to dismantle structural inequality, and advance collective liberation and ecological survival.” (Read the first two chapters of Design Justice here, and an excerpt from Chapter 3 here. ) 

In a segment of their book, Costanza-Chock explores an example of how design justice can address the needs of a marginalized group. The Center for Migrant Rights developed a Yelp-like website called https://contratados.org, where migrant workers can review potential employers and recruitment agencies. The site also shares information on migrant worker rights and how to avoid recruitment scams. This site was developed through participatory design and included individuals who intended to use the site. 

Join us on Wednesday, May 13, at 1 p.m. Eastern time to learn from Costanza-Chock about design justice and the importance of participatory design. 

Sasha Costanza-Chock is associate professor of civic media at MIT. They are a faculty associate at the Berkman-Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, faculty affiliate with the MIT Open Documentary Lab, and creator of the MIT Codesign Studio. Their work focuses on social movements, transformative media organizing and design justice. Costanza-Chock’s first book, “Out of the Shadows, Into the Streets: Transmedia Organizing and the Immigrant Rights Movement” was published by the MIT Press in 2014. Costanza-Chock is a board member of Allied Media Projects and a Steering Committee member of the Design Justice Network.

This webinar is to pay what you wish to register. Pay any amount that you would like or nothing at all. Those who become sustaining members of at least $10 a month, or who make a one-time donation of at least $60, may receive a copy of “Black In Place,” the new book by Brandi Thompson Summers. Your contribution toward this seminar will be used to find even more amazing guests, cover hosting fees and organize seminars like this one more frequently. A video of the webinar will be made available to those who register.

View more details here and RSVP.

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