By Dr. Álvaro Huerta
Dear Governor Gavin Newsom:
As one of the few
tenured Latina/o faculty members at the California State University (CSU)—the
largest public university system in the country—I’m requesting that you sign Assembly Bill 1460 or AB
1460 (ethnic studies bill), once
it reaches your desk. As a son of Mexican immigrants who was born in the
State Capital, I’m neither asking nor begging. This is not a “mother may I” or
“pretty please” ask. As part of a racial justice movement led by faculty of
color, students of color and community activists, this is a formal request for
you to do the right thing. While I don’t believe in settling for crumbs—where
all CSU’s should have a College of Ethnic Studies!—AB 1460 represents a small,
yet important first start to diversify CSU’s curricula with a 3-unit ethnic
studies course for graduation. It usually takes 120 units to graduate, as I documented
in my recent essay, “The
Right to Ethnic Studies in Higher Education” (Inside Higher Ed, 05/15/20).
In a time when the curtains of white supremacy are being
torn down by the masses on the streets and countless others in divergent spaces,
this is not the time to oppose a bill aimed at teaching tomorrow’s leaders about
the history and plight of the racialized, marginalized and otherized. Given
that you represent the most powerful person in California, if anything, do it
for your legacy. You don’t want to follow in the disgraceful steps of former
Governor Pete Wilson with his support in 1994 of Proposition 187—a failed, racist
proposition aimed at immigrants. Too often, politicians talk a good game
about racial justice and equity, but when it comes to action, they hide behind
the same rules, regulations and protocols that brutalize and dehumanize
racialized groups and others.
At the end of the day, a 3-unit ethnic studies course is
a minor request. This formal request doesn’t include the abolition of police
forces, prisons and immigration detention centers in California, representing racist
institutions that beat, murder and cage mostly brown and black bodies. Hence, given
that AB 1460 doesn’t threaten the status quo in a radical or transformative manner,
I’m not sure why you haven’t already committed to signing it?
While I’m aware that the predominately white CSU
leadership, including Chancellor
Timothy P. White, opposes AB 1460, you should consider the fact that the
majority of CSU students are non-white. For example, 21 out of 23 campuses consist
of Hispanic-Servicing Institutions (HSIs). Don’t be fooled by the CSU’s diluted
“Ethnic Studies and Social Justice” graduation requirement, which includes and
goes beyond AB 1460’s four designated groups: Latinas/os, African Americans,
Native Americans and Asian Americans. By going beyond these four groups to
include all types of “hierarchy and oppression” under the sun, this
nonsense seeks to appease everyone, like the racist “All Lives Matter.” To
counter this diluted measure, I’m compelled to borrow from Dr. Aaron Wildavsky’s 1973 article on urban planning: If “ethnic studies and social justice” is
everything, maybe it's nothing.
This open letter is not simply an individual request, as
noted above. This is part of a racial justice movement led by faculty of color,
students of color and community activists. This also includes the CSU
Task Force on the Advancement of Ethnic Studies, the California
Faculty Association and others who seek to transform higher education to
reflect the changing demographics of this nation.
As a member of the Academic Senate at California State
Polytechnic University, Pomona (or Cal Poly Pomona), I’m happy to report that we
recently approved an anti-racist resolution which includes support for an
ethnic studies graduation requirement (06/17/20), following the examples of San
Diego State University (SDSU) and California State University, Stanislaus. It’s
also great that California State University, Northridge’s (CSUN’s) Academic
Senate explicitly includes AB 1460 in their resolution (02/20/20).
Finally, like Bob
Dylan’s famous song, “The Times They Are a-Changin,” I hope that you, as governor of the great state of California (formerly
part of Mexico!), “…heed the call” to what we—the racialized,
marginalized and otherized—are demanding during these dark times: to be listened
to; to be treated with dignity and respect.
Cordially,
Álvaro Huerta, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Academic
Senate Member
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
[Dr. Álvaro Huerta is an Associate Professor in Urban & Regional Planning and Ethnic
& Women’s Studies at California State Polytechnic University. Among other
scholarly publications, he’s the author of Reframing the Latino
Immigration Debate: Towards a Humanistic Paradigm and Defending Latina/o
Immigrant Communities: The Xenophobic Era of Trump and Beyond. He holds a Ph.D. in city and regional
planning from the University of California, Berkeley, and an M.A. in urban
planning and a B.A. in history from the University of California, Los Angeles.]
Dr. Álvaro Huerta |
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