New Jersey Stage logo
New Jersey Stage Menu


Mellon Foundation Awards $500,000 to Humanities Action Lab to Use Public Humanities and Engagement to Confront Adverse Impacts of COVID

originally published: 06/30/2020

Mellon Foundation Awards $500,000 to Humanities Action Lab to Use Public Humanities and Engagement to Confront Adverse Impacts of COVID

(NEWARK, NJ) -- The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has awarded the Humanities Action Lab (HAL), headquartered at Rutgers University–Newark, a $500,000 grant over three years to establish and support Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis: Building Leadership at Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs). This national initiative comprises a cohort of minority-serving colleges and universities charged with confronting COVID, and its racially disproportionate impacts, through public humanities and public engagement. 

Rutgers-Newark Chancellor Nancy Cantor believes this initiative comes at a pivotal moment. “As we stand at the intersection of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and resurgent awareness of the need to eradicate systemic racism, it is critically important to address the persistently disparate impacts of environmental degradation facing communities of color,” said Cantor. “We are profoundly grateful for the Mellon Foundation’s continued support of the Humanities Action Lab to amplify the voices of these frontline communities as they grapple with significant environmental challenges that are now compounded by the disparate public health challenges presented by COVID-19.” 

“Climate change disproportionately affects people of color and low-income earners,” noted HAL Director Liz Ševčenko. “The COVID crisis has exacerbated those inequalities, disproportionately impacting communities whose health has already been compromised by environmental degradation, or whose public health infrastructure has been weakened by climate disasters,” Ševčenko continued. “This demands leadership and radical revisioning from those “front-line” communities, building on generations of knowledge, experience, and connecting local knowledges across the country. We are thrilled for the Mellon Foundation's support for frontline universities and communities to reimagine public humanities for public engagement in social justice.”

Focusing on the interrelated environmental inequalities of COVID and the climate crisis, over the next three years, the initiative will provide fellowships to students, faculty, and community organizations to:

 

 

In year one, HAL will lead a cohort of five MSIs in an evaluation and planning process to determine criteria for successful participation by an MSI in the second cohort of Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis in year two. The second cohort will identify criteria for selection of the third cohort in year three. The first cohort includes:

 



 
Advertise with New Jersey Stage for $50-$100 per month, click here for info



 

One faculty member from each participating MSI will be selected to plan project-based courses, engage with participating colleges in other localities, collaborate with issue organizations, host public events around the Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis traveling exhibition, and ultimately embed climate justice public humanities courses and collaborations into their institutions. One student from each participating MSI will be awarded a stipend for the summer and one semester to support the respective MSI’s faculty fellow, intern at either the partnering community organization or cultural institution to prepare for public engagement when Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis comes to their locality, and engage in a weeklong “domestic study abroad” experience with partner institutions in another participating city. One community organization in each participating locality will partner with the locality’s respective faculty fellow to design an ongoing collaboration that could include courses, internships, leadership development, and public events.

Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis will develop a faculty toolkit and resources around public humanities for climate justice in a world changed by COVID-19. Resources will provide guidance in community co-creation, training students in accessible media, facilitating dialogue among students personally impacted by climate inequality, working in a diverse coalition on contested issues, and confronting issues of power and inequality in the classroom. Moreover, Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis will offer mentoring opportunities among undergraduates, graduate students, junior faculty, and tenured faculty within the MSI group and the larger HAL network. All fellows will collaborate through regular video conferencing.  

For more information about the Climates of Inequality and the COVID Crisis initiative, visit www.climatesofinequality.org

 

About the Humanities Action Lab

The Humanities Action Lab (HAL) is a coalition of universities, issue organizations, and exhibiting spaces in more than 40 cities, led from Rutgers University-Newark, that collaborates to produce community-curated public projects on urgent social issues. Through courses offered simultaneously across multiple campuses, local teams of students and stakeholders explore a single issue of shared concern from different local perspectives, exploring the deep roots, long legacies, and potential futures of the issue in their own communities. After a three-to-six-month creation process, involving dialogue and exchange among diverse local participants, teams engage a broader local and international public by producing multimedia local stories that HAL combines into a single collective physical and digital exhibition. This collective public project travels for years to museums, public libraries, cultural centers, and other spaces in each of the communities that helped create it, with public dialogues and events at each stop. New campuses and communities join and add local “chapters” along the way. This collaborative process -- engaging more than 1,000 people across more than 20 cities in a common endeavor -- approaches public memory as a social movement, training public humanists as civic leaders and change agents.


FEATURED EVENTS

ART | COMEDY | DANCE | MUSIC | THEATRE | COMMUNITY


Do Portugal Circus

Thursday, April 25, 2024 @ 7:30pm
Woodbridge Center
250 Woodbridge Center Drive, Woodbridge Township, NJ 07095
category: community

Click here for full description


CringeFest: Yup, that Happened!

Friday, April 26, 2024 @ 7:00pm
The Vogel
99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701
category: community

Click here for full description


Do Portugal Circus

Friday, April 26, 2024 @ 7:30pm
Woodbridge Center
250 Woodbridge Center Drive, Woodbridge Township, NJ 07095
category: community

Click here for full description


Click here for more events

Listings are available for $10 and included with our banner ad packages.

Click here for more info.







 

LATEST NEWS


NJPAC presents Neil deGrasse Tyson: Science As A Way Of Knowing

(NEWARK, NJ) -- Interested in exploring the mysteries of our Universe? Don't miss out on the chance to see world renowned astrophysicist, professor, and New York Times best-selling author of the Hayden Planetarium Neil deGrasse Tyson at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC) on Sunday, December 1, 2024 at 3:00pm.


Lincoln Mill Haunted House presents Star Wars Inspired - May The 4th Corrupt You




Revisit the Hindenburg's Final Flight at the Ocean County Library Long Beach Island Branch




NJPAC presents An Evening with Richard Dawkins and Friends


Click here for more event previews







New Jersey Stage

© 2024 by Wine Time Media, LLC
PO Box 811, Belmar, NJ 07719
info@newjerseystage.com

Nobody covers the Arts
throughout the Garden State
like New Jersey Stage!


Images used on this site have been sent to us from publicists, artists, and PR firms. If there is a problem with the rights to any image, please contact us and we will look into the matter.

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Threads, and on our RSS feed


Art | Comedy | Dance | Film | Music | Theatre | Ad Rates | About Us | Pitch a Story | Links | Radio Shows | Privacy Policy