An American Suburb, 2018: Stories and photos from Dolton, lllinois

Photo: WBEZ and Better Government Association

Jack Rocha, a community development planner with UIC’s Great Cities Institute, is quoted in a WBEZ/Better Government Association project story examining Dolton, Illinois, and the impact of deindustrialization. Rocha addresses job trends following the closing of steel sites on Chicago’s Southeast Side.

In Dolton alone, there had been brick making, metal parts, steel, aluminum and container factories — all now gone. Right across the border in Riverdale was the Acme Steel plant that employed well more than 1,000 at its zenith. The plant remains under different ownership, but the workforce is a fraction the size.

Jack Rocha, a community development planner at the University of Illinois-Chicago, said the South Works closure accelerated what had already been a stampede for the exits in places like Dolton. “If people had the means, they went and they followed the jobs where they went,” said Rocha, who works with the university’s Great Cities Institute.

Full story from WBEZ »

 

Report release: Youth Citizenship in Action

We are delighted to release Youth Citizenship in Action, an evaluation report on the Participatory Budgeting in Schools pilot program. Public schools in the United States play a critical role in preparing students to become citizens and to participate in civic life. A healthy democracy needs informed, active citizens. In other words, it requires citizens with a sense of agency.

In this newest report from the Great Cities Institute, we share results from three Chicago Public Schools that took part in participatory budgeting processes as part of their civic classes in the spring semester of 2018. After the process was over, more than 80% of students who responded to evaluation questionnaire said that they felt like they had the power to influence their communities or school, that people working together can solve community problems better than people working alone, and that they had a better understanding of the needs at their community and school.

The Participatory Budgeting in Schools pilot program—rolled out by PB Chicago, an initiative of UIC’s Great Cities Institute in collaboration with Our City Our Voice, together with Chicago Public Schools—revealed these and other overwhelmingly positive results. The report shares extensive results from interviews with teachers in all of the participating schools, responses from student questionnaires, and recommendations for how to improve implementation of PB in Schools in future years.

We have long been proponents of building a healthy and robust democracy, particularly now. As participating CPS schools prepare to implement PB in Schools during the 2018–19 school year, this report and its results and recommendations can serve as an important tool for bolstering the program in the classroom and helping to give the skills, experience and knowledge needed to create informed and active citizens of the future. As one teacher said, “The civics goals are about students participating, actually getting up, not just letting things happen, but them being movers and shakers. And that is all the PB process is about, it’s about the students participating not the adults telling them what to do but the students generating their ideas. That is what the goal is for the curriculum, for students to participate in their civics.”

Read the full report here.

Youth Citizenship in Action

Authors
Thea Crum
Katherine Faydash

Abstract
In the spring semester of 2018, high school students at three Chicago Public Schools took part in a participatory budgeting process as part of their civics class. The result? After the process was over, more than 80% of evaluation survey respondents said that they felt like they had the power to influence their communities or school, that people working together can solve community problems better than people working alone, and that they had a better understanding of needs in their community and school. Moreover, because of these students’ participation and voting, schools will be able to establish a safe space for students, set up a school spirit store, pay for bathroom repairs, and beautify a cafeteria. The Participatory Budgeting in Schools pilot program—rolled out by PB Chicago, an initiative of UIC’s Great Cities Institute in collaboration with Our City Our Voice, together with Chicago Public Schools—revealed these and other overwhelmingly positive results.

This evaluation report, Citizens of the Future, prepared by the Great Cities Institute, is based on various data from each participating CPS school in the 2017–18 school year—Al Raby High School, in the East Garfield Park community area; Hyde Park Academy, in Woodlawn; and Steinmetz College Prep, in Belmont Cragin—as well as interviews with teachers who led the process in their classroom, and questionnaires filled out by students in those classrooms. The primary goals of the evaluation were to document the implementation costs and social and educational benefits of the pilot; to determine what students learned as a result of their participation; and to provide results so that CPS, PB Chicago, and other stakeholders can recommend changes to further improve the program as implemented in schools.

Full Text (PDF) »

RTCA: Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance

As part of the Real Time Chicago speaker series, National Park Service Community Planner Michael Mencarini will discuss the mission and work of the Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance Program.  His presentation will detail how the National Park Service plays an important role in rural and urban communities across the country, and how current projects have utilized urban planning processes and techniques to promote outdoor recreation and natural resource conservation.

Michael Mencarini joined the National Park Service in April, 2016 as a Community Planner in the Rivers, Trails, and Conservation Assistance (RTCA) Program. RTCA is a community partnership focused program that provides technical assistance to local governments or community organizations that are planning outdoor recreation or natural resource conservation projects. Through a partnership agreement with the University of Illinois at Chicago, his position is hosted by the Great Cities Institute.

Before joining the National Park Service he was a Presidential Management Fellow with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, where he was assigned as a regional office liaison to state agencies and tribal governments across the Midwest. Prior federal experience also includes positions working with the U.S. Department of Justice and the Chicago Federal Executive Board.

As a Community Planner with the Midwest Regional Office RTCA Program, he works on strategic planning and community outreach initiatives across three states

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Same city, different opportunities: Study maps life outcomes for children

These maps show the average household income for adults in the study who were raised in various census tracts across Cook County. Income for whites studied was significantly higher than for African-Americans.

Matt Wilson, a senior research specialist at UIC’s Great Cities Institute, are among the featured experts cited by the Chicago Tribune in its local breakdown of the Opportunity Atlas, an interactive map of various outcomes — from income levels to rates of incarceration and teen pregnancy – for people born between 1978 and 1983 and details their chances of upward mobility by the neighborhoods of their youth. Wilson notes that the data reflects the deeply entrenched, generation-to-generation poverty that hasn’t changed for decades in certain parts of Chicago.

To UIC researcher Matt Wilson, the data reflect a sad reality: deeply entrenched poverty in certain parts of the city.

Mapping the data shows many neighborhoods where families had little money decades ago and produced kids who make little money as adults. And even though many of the kids have moved away, these neighborhoods continue to house families that make little money. Wilson said these areas illustrate the long-lasting, generation-to-generation nature of poverty.

“What’s discouraging is that, if you grew up in these neighborhoods, we know what your life trajectory was. But we still know in 2016, a lot of these issues are still the same,” said Wilson, a senior research specialist at UIC’s Great Cities Institute.

Full Story from Chicago Tribune »

CMAP releases new On To 2050 Regional Plan

Panelists Dan Cronin, Toni Preckwinkle, Melissa Washington, Raul Raymundo, Laurence Msall, and Leanna Redden discuss the new plan with ABC7 anchor Judy Hsu.

On the morning of Wednesday, October 10, the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP) board voted to adopt a new regional plan for Chicagoland. At an event attended by over 1,000 of the region’s political leaders and planners, the executive director of CMAP, Joseph C. Szabo, presented the three principles of the new plan: Inclusive Growth, Resilience, and Prioritized Investment.

These three principles are applied to each of the issue areas the plan addresses: Community, Prosperity, Environment, Governance, and Mobility. The issue with the most forward discussion at the plan launch was transportation. Speakers stressed the importance of supporting transit and expanding it to underserved communities to provide access to jobs and leverage the growth of the region’s economy. Another big topic was resilience to natural disasters as climate change makes storm events more severe and exacerbates flooding in certain areas of the region.

Overall, the change in tone was noticeable regarding social matters compared to the Go To 2040 plan. The 2050 plan itself, and speakers at Wednesday’s event, stressed the importance of inclusivity in the region and ensuring an economy, education system, and transportation that will build up and benefit those communities that have been left behind in the past.

The On To 2050 plan, though wide in its scope, should prove to be an effective tool for guiding the development of our region for the coming decades.

To view the full plan, visit CMAP’s website at:  http://www.cmap.illinois.gov/onto2050

A Sustainable Nation in Four Generations

Author and urbanist Douglas Farr’s bestselling first book, Sustainable Urbanism: Urban Design with Nature, helped shift the focus of urban sustainability from the stand-alone building to the high-performance neighborhood. Now, Farr returns with Sustainable Nation: Urban Design Patterns for the Future, in which he seeks to move the conversation even further—and faster—forward. Farr proposes more than 70 specific, aspirational urban design patterns, each of which provides guidance on a key aspect of a neighborhood, and all of which can be immediately applied. Join Farr as he provides a hopeful roadmap for overcoming our society’s major sustainability challenges in just four generations.

Douglas Farr (FAIA, LEED AP, CNU-A) is an architect, urbanist, author, and passionate advocate for sustainable design thinking. Doug heads Farr Associates, a Chicago-based firm that plans and designs lovable, aspirational buildings and places. A native Detroiter, Doug Co-Chaired the development of LEED-ND and has served on the boards of urban sustainability organizations including the Congress for New Urbanism, Bioregional, EcoDistricts, and Elevate Energy. His influential books Sustainable Urbanism: Urban Design with Nature (2007) and Sustainable Nation: Urban Design Patterns for the Future (2018) highlight how to create healthy, sustainable neighborhoods. He is an architecture graduate of the University of Michigan and Columbia University. In 2017, Planetizen readers named him one of “the 100 most influential urbanists of all time.

Co-sponsored by the Department of Urban Planning & Policy and the College of Urban Planning Ph.D. Students.

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Deportation and Detention: Addressing the Psychosocial Impact on Migrant Youth and Families

The event will feature first person accounts, practitioners’ reports, and existing research that document the traumatic impacts of deportation and detention upon migrant youth, families and communities. It brings together migrants, practitioners, advocates, and researchers to share knowledge and strategies on preventing and ameliorating these impacts.

If the above RSVP form is not working, please email gcities@uic.edu to RSVP.

 

Keynote Speaker

Luis H. Zayas, Ph.D., is Dean of the Steve Hicks School of Social Work and the Robert Lee Sutherland Chair in Mental Health and Social Policy at The University of Texas at Austin.  He is also Professor of Psychiatry at the Dell Medical School at UT.  Zayas holds an MSW and a Ph.D. in developmental psychology from Columbia University.

As a researcher and practitioner, Zayas has examined the effects of deportation on the mental health of U.S.-born citizen-children of undocumented immigrants.  He has conducted numerous evaluations of citizen-children and testified in immigration court on behalf of citizen-children and their families.  His book on this topic is titled Forgotten Citizens: Deportation, Children, and the Making of American Exiles and Orphans (Oxford University Press, 2016).  Recently, Zayas has looked at the effects of family immigration detention on refugee children and mothers from Central America.  As an advocate, Zayas has joined several federal class-action lawsuits on behalf of refugee and immigrant children held in immigration detention and of DACA youth.

Panelists

Cindy Agustin has extensive experience working with immigrant communities in Illinois as an organizer, advocate, and service provide. She has worked at the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) as a youth organizer to build immigrant youth-led networks across Illinois. She has also worked at Heartland Alliance’s National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC) where she conducted outreach across immigrant communities in Illinois, provided direct legal services as a paralegal and eventually a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) accredited representative, and oversaw the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) pro bono clinic project. In 2016, she returned to ICIRR to support efforts integrating mental health and emotional well-being into ICIRR’s current work. Through ICIRR, she has worked with the Coalition for Immigrant Mental Health (CIMH), a network of mental health providers, researchers, community organizations, and community members who are working to make mental health services accessible to the undocumented community.

She earned her B.A. in Comparative Human Development and Master’s in Social Service Administration from the University of Chicago. Her interests include exploring the intersections between immigration policy, community organizing, and immigrant mental health.

Dagmara Avelar is the Program Manager for the New Americans Initiative and Immigrant Family Resource Program at ICIRR. As the manager of these programs, she works directly with 59 community-based organizations across the state of Illinois to address barriers to citizenship as well as language access primarily for immigrants and refugees. Dagmara was born in Quito, Ecuador but moved to Illinois at the age of 12. As a new immigrant settled in the southwest suburbs, she experienced first hand the challenges of moving to a new country.

For the past 10 years, she has dedicated her life to advancing pro-immigrant policies and programs. She was an active member of a delegation advocating for the passage of the DREAM Act in 2007, worked in several get out the vote efforts to promote civic engagement of new Americans in the southwest suburbs and most recently has worked closely in the creation, implementation, and coordination of ICIRR’s Family Support Hotline. This hotline was the first of its kind in the state of Illinois catered to people who were experiencing a deportation crisis. Prior to her current role at ICIRR, Dagmara worked at Instituto Del Progreso Latino as an accredited representative with a focus on citizenship and DACA and was able to assist over 400 people in their immigration journey. 

She earned a BA. in Justice Studies with a minor in Political Science from Northeastern Illinois University and is currently working on her Master’s in Urban Planning and Policy at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Jessica Boland, LCSW is the Director of Behavioral Health Services at Esperanza Health Centers, a Federally Qualified Health Center, in Chicago, Illinois. As Director, Ms. Boland oversees behavioral health programming and staff, and coordinates efforts relevant to the Hispanic/Latino community as they pertain to mental and emotional health. Esperanza serves a majority Latinx immigrant population, and Ms. Boland has worked closely with healthcare providers and community organizations to provide advocacy and support to families affected by current immigration policy. Prior to Esperanza, Ms. Boland worked at several nonprofit organizations in the Chicagoland area, including the areas of community mental health, perinatal mental health, domestic violence and sexual assault, and child welfare before focusing on community-based integrated healthcare.

Ms. Boland completed her Master of Social Work (MSW) degree from Loyola University Chicago, and graduated from the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor in 2008 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology, and academic minors in Spanish and Gender Studies.

José Bravo is the Executive Director for the Just Transition Alliance (JTA), where he works directly with Environmental Justice (EJ) Communities and Labor (organized and unorganized) to develop best practices and build meaningful and impactful alliances. José is also the National Campaign Coordinator of the Campaign for Healthier Solutions (CHS), a community driven campaign towards healthier discount stores.

Bravo’s work in social justice issues is rooted from his upbringing in the Southern California fields alongside both his parents. Bravo has also been doing work on immigrant rights issues since his days as a student organizer in the 80’s to the present. His participation in the Environmental Justice (EJ) movement since 1990, has over the years gained him recognition as a national and international leader in the EJ movement and co-founder and leader of the Just Transition Movement.

Tanya Cabrera graduated from Northern Illinois University with a major in History with minors in Political Science and Sociology. Recently, completed Northeastern Illinois Universities ENLACE graduate program in Leadership in Higher Education. She completed one year at IIT Kent before welcoming twin girls in 2014. She has served as Chair of the National Advisory for Undocumented Student Access – College Board. A committee formed to call upon 2/4 year institutions to create policy and procedure for Undocumented Students across the United States. Tanya previously worked under the Vice Provost at IIT, as the Associate Director for Minority Outreach and Undocumented Student before joining UIC in the summer of 2016. At the institution she supports all students as, Assistant Vice Provost for Student Inclusion – in particular UIC’s undocumented students.

In 2011 Tanya was appointed by former Governor Quinn and current Governor Rauner (2016) to serve as Chairman for the Illinois DREAM Fund Commission. A role she feels will set the platform for educational access and degree obtainment for undocumented students in Illinois and across the U.S. Tanya claims, that her early exposure to community activism and family values established her commitment of civic responsibility to her family and community.

Oscar A. Chacón is a co‐founder and executive director of Alianza Americas, a Chicago-based national network of Latin American immigrant‐led and immigrant serving organizations in the US. Oscar is an immigrant from El Salvador. He has been an organizer and a leader on community justice issues at the local, national and international levels for over 30 years. He has occupied leadership positions in multiple organizations including Oxfam America, Centro Presente, the Northern California Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, and Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights. Oscar is a member of the Inter-American Dialogue, the American Bar Association’s Immigration Commission and the Latino-Jewish Leadership Council, among other professional associations. Oscar is a frequent spokesperson, domestically and internationally, on economic, social, political and cultural issues affecting Latin American immigrant communities, including the nexus between human mobility, economic inequality, white supremacy and racial justice. Alianza Americas mission is to improve the quality of life of Latin American immigrant communities in the US, as well as of peoples throughout the Americas.

Miguel C. Keberlein joined the Legal Aid Society from the Legal Assistance Foundation (LAF), where he served as the Director of the Immigrants and Workers’ Rights (IWR) Practice Group, a position he held since 2012. In that role he led the Group’s statewide strategy and initiatives, directed LAF’s Migrant Project, litigated federal and state cases, as well as supervised a team of attorneys. Keberlein also secured more than $750,000 in grants supporting immigrants and workers’ rights, and launched LAF’s annual “Farmworker Blues” fundraiser.

In addition, Keberlein also served as Director of LAF Client Support Services. Holding that position since 2015, he integrated social work services into all of LAF’s practice groups, directed the agency’s efforts to train staff in providing trauma-informed services to clients, and furthered LAF’s ability to secure grants that required social work case management. Before holding Director roles with LAF, Keberlein joined in 2002, starting as a Staff Attorney, then was promoted to Senior and Supervisory Attorney, roles he held through 2012. As an attorney in LAF’s Migrant Project, and later in the Immigrants and Workers’ Rights Practice Group, he provided comprehensive legal services statewide to migrant and seasonal farmworkers, litigating on multiple issues. A former adjunct professor at Northern Illinois University College of Law, Keberlein is Chair of the Illinois Statewide Task Force on Human Trafficking. He also is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, the Illinois Immigrant Legal Aid Collaborative Steering Committee, the National Employment Lawyers Association and the Chicago Bar Association. He has been admitted to the State Bars of Illinois and Wisconsin, and has been admitted to practice in the 5th and 7th Federal Courts of Appeals. Keberlein has lectured extensively on issues related to immigration and human/labor trafficking. His honors include being named a Chicago Community Trust Fellow and one of the Chicago Daily Law Bulletin’s “40 Under 40.”

Keberlein earned his Juris Doctor degree in 2002 from the University of Wisconsin-Madison Law School. He also holds a Master’s degree in Third World Development Support from the University of Iowa, and a Bachelor’s degree in International Relations from St. Norbert College.

Patrisia Macías-Rojas is an Assistant Professor in Sociology and Latin American and Latin Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her research interests are in the areas of race, law, and migration. Her current work examines historical, economic, and political links between the immigration and criminal justice systems.

Combining history and ethnography her recent book, From Deportation to Prison: The Politics of Immigration Enforcement in Post-Civil Rights America (New York University Press, 2016) analyzes how the politics and policies of civil rights reforms and mass incarceration gave rise to the punitive turn in immigration and border enforcement From Deportation to Prison won the 2017 Oliver Cromwell Cox book award from the American Sociological Association’s Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities.

Virginia Martinez is an attorney who has spent most of her career working in non-profit organizations and has been a strong advocate for Latinos, women and children. She is a nonprofit management consultant and collaborative leadership trainer. She served as Sr. Policy Analyst for the Illinois Latino Family Commission until early 2015. The commission was established by statute to improve the opportunities and resources available to Latino families throughout the state. Previously she was Legislative Staff Attorney in the Chicago Office of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) where she was responsible for monitoring regional, state and local legislation and policy issues affecting Latinos in the 11-state Midwest region. She was also formerly Director of the International Center for Health Leadership Development at the University of Illinois at Chicago, developing collaborative leadership capacity of individuals from communities, community health centers, and academic institutions and was dedicated to building multidisciplinary bridges to join communities and institutions.

Mary Meg McCarthy is the executive director of Heartland Alliance’s National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), one of the nation’s foremost immigrant and human rights advocacy organizations. Under Mary Meg’s leadership, NIJC has become a leading organization dedicated to advancing justice for immigrants. Working with a pro bono network of 1,500 attorneys, NIJC provides counsel and representation to approximately 10,000 low income immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers each year. NIJC’s legal services inform its advocacy, litigation and educational initiatives to promote human rights locally, regionally, nationally and internationally.

An expert in immigration law, Mary Meg has testified before Congress and is often quoted in major news outlets such as MSNBC, The New York Times, and the Chicago Tribune. As an active member of the American Bar Association, Mary Meg chairs its Commission on Immigration. She is also a member of The Chicago Network, the American Immigration Lawyers Association, and the Chicago Bar Association, among others. Prior to joining NIJC, Mary Meg practiced civil litigation and was an NIJC pro bono attorney. Earlier in her career she worked in local communities in Chile to help safeguard the rights of individuals under a dictatorship.

Swapna Reddy is co-founder and Co-Director of the Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project (ASAP), a nonprofit that brings rapid, remote legal aid and community support to asylum-seeking families in moments of crisis, including mass detention and raids. Since its founding, ASAP has prevented the imminent deportation of more than 400 asylum seekers in 30 states; provided community education to thousands of asylum-seeking mothers online; and mobilized more than 500 volunteers to carry out this work. Swapna’s work has been featured in numerous publications, including the New York TimesTIME Magazine, and Chicago Tribune.

Swapna has a B.A. in Computer Science and Mathematics from Harvard University and a J.D. from Yale Law School. She has received numerous awards for her commitment to public interest work, and is currently an Echoing Green Fellow, an Equal Justice Works Emerson Fellow, and a recipient of the 2017 J.M.K. Innovation Prize. Prior to ASAP, she provided civil rights and immigration legal services and conducted artificial intelligence and development economics research.

Dana Rusch received her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC).  She is a licensed child clinical psychologist and Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at UIC in the Department of Psychiatry at the Institute for Juvenile Research.  She is also a member of the Community-Based Dissemination and Implementation Science program for UIC’s Center for Clinical and Translational Science.  Dr. Rusch’s research focuses on building university-community-policy partnerships to address the mental health needs of immigrant and refugee children and families.  Using an ecological public health framework, she aims to develop models of mental health promotion that elevate the contributions of community-based organizations and non-traditional providers.  This work also extends to translating research findings into policy level changes that can facilitate more effective ways to address mental health inequity.  Dr. Rusch participates in local advocacy efforts to support immigrant and refugee communities, and she serves on several committees focused on the intersection of immigration policy and mental health.

Reshma Shah is Director of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics in the Department of Pediatrics at University of Illinois at Chicago. Her research aims to reduce poverty-related developmental and educational inequities by developing, testing and disseminating primary care-based strategies that improve early childhood development. She is the principal investigator of a career development award from the National Institutes of Health and has also received funding from Maternal Child Health Bureau, The Society of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics and UIC Center for Clinical and Translational Science to support her work. As a developmental-behavioral pediatrician, Dr. Shah cares for young children with developmental disabilities, speech and language delays, and learning challenges.

Claudia Valenzuela is the Detention Project Director at the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC). Claudia joined NIJC in 2002 as an Equal Justice Works (EJW) fellow.  Claudia presently oversees NIJC’s Adult Detention project, which provides legal education and services to individuals in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) custody, as well as NIJC’s Defenders Initiative, which provides technical support to criminal defense attorneys representing foreign-born defendants. Claudia’s work at NIJC has centered on issues impacting individuals in DHS custody facing deportation, including due process challenges to removal orders, as well as unlawful detention and conditions of detention. Claudia is also a contributor to NIJC’s Immigration Detention Transparency and Human Rights Project, which aims to expose the lack of transparency and accountability in the immigration detention system. Claudia is a graduate of DePaul University College of Law.

Yadira Vieyra, M.S. is a Research Specialist in the field of Child Development. She works at the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago evaluating the effectiveness of doula home visiting services being provided to adolescent mothers. Yadira is currently collaborating with the University of Chicago at Illinois and Immaculate Conception Parish in Brighton Park through “Fortaleciendo mi familia” – a series of sessions aimed at bringing low-intensity cognitive behavioral therapy and psychosocial support to Mexican immigrant families experiencing distress, anxiety, and depression due to exposure to community violence, financial challenges, and migration-related worries. Recently, Yadira was appointed as an auditor at the Synod of Bishops in Rome to treat the topic: Young People, the Faith, and Vocational Discernment and will be representing the immigrant community in the United States.

Stevan Weine is Professor of Psychiatry at the UIC College of Medicine, where he also Director of the International Center on Responses to Catastrophes (ICORC) For the past 20 years he has conducted a program of research focused on trauma- and migration-impacted populations. His research mission is to develop, implement, and evaluate psychosocial interventions that are feasible, acceptable, and effective with respect to the complex real-life contexts where migrants and refugees live. This work has been supported by multiple grants from the NIMH, NICHD, DHS, and other state, federal, and private funders, all with collaboration from community partners. This work has resulted in more than 80 publications and two books.

He was awarded a Career Scientist Awards: “Services Based Research with Refugee Families” from the National Institute of Mental Health and “Labor Migration and Multilevel HIV Prevention” from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. He was principal investigator of a National Institute of Mental Health funded research study called “A Prevention and Access Intervention for Survivor Families” that investigated the Coffee and Family Education and Support intervention with Bosnian and Kosovar families in Chicago.

Weine is author of more than 80 publication and two books, When History is a Nightmare: Lives and Memories of Ethnic Cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina (Rutgers, 1999) and Testimony and Catastrophe: Narrating the Traumas of Political Violence (Northwestern, 2006). Weine is currently Principal Investigator of two NIH funded studies: “Migrancy, Masculinity, and Preventing HIV in Tajik Male Migrant Workers”, and he is also Principal Investigator of a DHS funded study on “Violent Radicalization and Terrorist Recruitment in Somali Americans.”

Teresa Córdova (Moderator) is the Director of the Great Cities Institute (GCI) at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Professor of Urban Planning and Policy in the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs (CUPPA).

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