Kevin Grisham will give the opening address when the California Fair Employment and Housing Council holds a hearing on Monday, Sept. 21, on bias-motivated violence. The hearing, open to the public, will take place virtually.
CSUSB alumnus Emmanuel Gaeta credits a CSUSB campus support network for helping him pursue his goal to become the first doctor in his family.
Francisca Beer (finance), Kenneth Shultz (psychology), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Anthony Silard (public administration) shared their expertise in recent news coverage.
CSUSB's nationally ranked undergraduate and graduate Criminal Justice program prepares students for a broad choice of careers in law enforcement, corrections, social services, and more.
Mike Stull (entrepreneurship) discussed CSUSB’s School of Entrepreneurship and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about the rise in election-related violence.
The panel of activists and community-based scholars will discuss issues ranging from the Los Angeles Police Department, access to translators for indigenous people, the way race shapes the American justice system, the policing of indigenous people across the border and other topics.
Kirsten Ashley Wiest (music) releases her solo album, Kenneth Shultz (psychology) discussed factors people should consider before retiring, and Anthony Silard (public administration) wrote about the causes of loneliness.
Brian Levin (criminal justice) discusses violence tied to left- and right-wing extremists, Kevin Grisham (geography and environmental studies) was interviewed about QAnon’s spread into Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Anthony Silard (public administration) wrote on the problem on insularity during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Where Is Hope: The Art of Murder," directed by Emmitt H. Thrower, a retired New York police officer, chronicles disabled victims killed by police as well as the activists/artists who are fighting to end police brutality against people with disabilities.