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RIC faculty members David Ramírez and Nandita Gurjar have been awarded the North Star Collective Faculty Fellowship by the New England Board of Higher Education (NEBHE). This fellowship was created by BIPOC faculty for BIPOC faculty to support professional development.
Each year NEBHE selects up to two fellows from each North Star Collective institution (a group of colleges and universities in New England who are committed to transforming their institutions and uplifting BIPOC faculty members; Rhode Island College is one of the 13 founding members.)
According to RIC Vice President of External Relations and Diversity Equity and Inclusion Anna Cano Morales, “This partnership helps not only to engage our valued BIPOC faculty members, it also helps the college advance our DEI and hiring and retention goals. I am so pleased to have two fine faculty members in Dr. Ramírez and Dr. Gurjar participating in this year’s cohort. They represent their students and this college so well and work above and beyond to ensure that representation is seen and felt at RIC.”
“We know that these exceptional faculty members will greatly benefit from this experience,” adds Interim Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Carolynn Masters, “and continue to positively contribute to an inclusive campus climate through their teaching, scholarship and service.”
Ramírez, a native of Colombia, came to the United States as a Ph.D. student. Today he is director of RIC’s Latin American Studies Program within the Department of Modern Languages and associate professor of Spanish and Latin American studies. His research work is in the field of Latin American and Hispanic Caribbean studies.
During the period of his fellowship, Ramírez will focus on researching and writing an article about the Afro-Caribbean intellectual Manuel Zapata Olivella. His work will show how Olivella destabilizes the conception of the Caribbean as a fragmented space, divided between islands, languages and nations. Recently, Ramírez received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities for his work on Hispanic Caribbean literature.
Gurjar, a native of India, is assistant professor of elementary and early childhood education. Her research strives to make education accessible, equitable and socially just for marginalized identities and populations. Gurjar focuses on innovative, equity-driven practices and humanizing pedagogies that cultivate inclusivity, empathy and a sense of belonging in a caring community to empower learners with agency.
During the period of her fellowship, Gurjar will research open educational practices through the lens of redistributive justice, recognitive justice and representational justice. Her recent work on equity-based empathy mapping in Learning Experience Design and best practices, approaches and strategies for humanizing online learning will be published by Springer and IGI Global respectively.
“I am honored, humbled, and grateful to have received this fellowship,” Gurjar says, “as it provides a transformative opportunity to connect with other BIPOC scholars in the New England region while providing a restorative, nourishing and uplifting space in a genuine community of care.”
Ramirez adds that “being part of a community of BIPOC scholars who are dedicated to collaborating and supporting each other beyond their roles as academics has been incredible. This has been a unique experience, and I hope RIC will continue to support it for many years to come.”
North Star Collective fellowships run from January to May 2024 and include a stipend for research, publication and professional development; a writing retreat, a biweekly community check-in with fellows; interactive workshops; networking and mentorship through NEBHE’s networks; and a closing colloquium for fellows to share their work in-progress. This year’s closing colloquium will be held in May at Bentley University in Massachusetts.
WARWICK, R.I. (WPRI) — Two people are dead and another person seriously hurt after a crash involving two vehicles on the highway in Warwick Saturday.
Rhode Island State Police said the crash happened around 1:34 p.m. on the ramp from Route 113 West to I-95 South.
According to police, a Hyundai SUV that was driving in the middle lane of the highway started to drift to the right, crossed the first lane, and then crossed onto the on-ramp lane. The car struck the guardrail twice before driving through the grass median.
The Hyundai then struck the driver’s side of a Mercedes SUV that was on the ramp, causing the Mercedes to roll over and come to a rest. The impact sent the Hyundai over the guardrail and down an embankment.
The driver of the Hyundai, a 73-year-old man, and his passenger, a 69-year-old woman, were both pronounced dead at the hospital.
A woman who was in the Mercedes was rushed to Rhode Island Hospital in critical condition.
State police said all lanes of traffic were reopened by 4:30 p.m.
The investigation remains ongoing.
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A federal judge on Friday tossed the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) lawsuit aiming to force Rhode Island to hand over its voter information as part of the Trump administration’s push to acquire voter data from several states.
Rhode Island U.S. District Court Judge Mary McElroy wrote that federal law does not allow the DOJ “to conduct the kind of fishing expedition it seeks here,” siding with Rhode Island election officials. She added that the DOJ did not provide evidence to suggest that Rhode Island violated election law.
McElroy, a Trump appointee, wrote that she sided with the similar decision in Oregon. That decision ruled that the DOJ was not entitled to unredacted voter registration lists.
“Absent from the demand are any factual allegations suggesting that Rhode Island may be violating the list maintenance requirements,” she said in her ruling.
Rhode Island Secretary of State Gregg Amore (D) praised McElroy’s decision. He said in a statement that the Trump administration “seems to have no problem taking actions that are clear Constitutional overreaches, regularly meddling in responsibilities that are the rights of the states.”
“Today’s decision affirms our position: the United States Department of Justice has no legal right to – or need for – the personally-identifiable information in our voter file,” he said. “Voter list maintenance is a responsibility entrusted to the states, and I remain confident in the steps we take here in Rhode Island to keep our list as accurate as possible.”
The Hill reached out to the DOJ for comment.
The DOJ called for the voter lists as it investigated Rhode Island’s compliance with the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, which allowed Americans to register to vote when they apply for a driver’s license.
The DOJ sued at least 30 states, as well as Washington, D.C., in December demanding their respective voter data. This data includes birth dates, names and partial Social Security numbers.
At least 12 states have given or said they will give the DOJ their voter registration lists, according to a tracker operated by the Brennan Center for Justice.
The department stated after it lost a similar suit against Massachusetts earlier this month that it had “sweeping powers” to access the voter data and that, if states fail to comply, courts have a “limited, albeit vital, role” in directing election officers on behalf of the administration to produce the records. The DOJ cited the Civil Rights Act as being intended to unearth alleged election law violations.
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