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January 27, 2025


Dear Aoki Community:



We feel a heaviness in our hearts as we witness government attacks on society's vulnerable and on hard earned advancements for justice and equity. Professor Linus Chan reminded us of the importance of checking in on one other, but to also take a moment to absorb sources of hope and beauty. These sources can sometimes take the shape of poetry and we thought we would share with you this poem highlighted by Professor Linus:


A House Called Tomorrow by Alberto Ríos, 1952


You are not fifteen, or twelve, or seventeen—

You are a hundred wild centuries

And fifteen, bringing with you

In every breath and in every step

Everyone who has come before you,

All the yous that you have been,

The mothers of your mother,

The fathers of your father.

If someone in your family tree was trouble,

A hundred were not:

The bad do not win—not finally,

No matter how loud they are.

We simply would not be here

If that were so.

You are made, fundamentally, from the good.

With this knowledge, you never march alone.

You are the breaking news of the century.

You are the good who has come forward

Through it all, even if so many days

Feel otherwise. But think:

When you as a child learned to speak,

It’s not that you didn’t know words—

It’s that, from the centuries, you knew so many,

And it’s hard to choose the words that will be your own.

From those centuries we human beings bring with us

The simple solutions and songs,

The river bridges and star charts and song harmonies

All in service to a simple idea:

That we can make a house called tomorrow.

What we bring, finally, into the new day, every day,

Is ourselves. And that’s all we need

To start. That’s everything we require to keep going. 

Look back only for as long as you must,

Then go forward into the history you will make.

Be good, then better. Write books. Cure disease.

Make us proud. Make yourself proud.

And those who came before you? When you hear thunder,

Hear it as their applause.


Together let's advance our work for social justice while carrying the strength of those who came before us and holding on to a vision for a better tomorrow.


In Solidarity,

|| Aoki Center Updates ||

TODAY: Critical Perspectives on Property Law w/ Dr. Karrigan Börk



Join us for our Critical Perspectives on 1L Courses on Property Law presented by Dr. Karrigan Börk! This series aligns presentations with courses first-year law students take. Through the incorporation of critical perspectives, we hope to engage students with meaningful, relatable ways they can contextualize their course material beyond the classroom, all while connecting with our extraordinary faculty members who are experts in their disciplinary fields.


Professor Börk graduated with Distinction and Pro Bono Distinction from Stanford Law School in 2009, and completed his PhD dissertation in Ecology at UC Davis in September 2011. He received the Shapiro Family Award in 2011 as the Outstanding  PhD Graduate in Ecology at UC Davis. His publications run the gamut from the definitive text on the history and application of California Fish and Game Code Section 5937 to a hatchery and genetic management plan for spring-run Chinook salmon. Professor Börk is currently examining legal and ethical issues in ecological restoration. His past work has focused on the management of guest species, those invasive species that managers invite in and make comfortable, and on the evolution of law via administrative actions. He is currently working on local governance issues in ecosystem management. 


Monday, January 17 | 12:00 to 1:00 PM | Room 1301 | Livestream

TOMORROW: Debrief - On Immigration Policy & Advocacy



Please join the Aoki Center as we host a community debrief on the Trump administration's recent executive orders and agency regulations. What can we expect? How can we fight back?


The discussion will be moderated by Aoki fellow Giselle Garcia and our panel will include three of King Hall's immigration law experts: Amagda Perez, Raquel Aldana, and Kevin Johnson.



Tuesday, January 28 | 12:00 PM | Room 1301

Aoki Team In Action!

Kevin R. Johnson

Read King Hall's recent news update on the various media contributions made by immigration experts Kevin R. Johnson and Gabriel "Jack" Chin as they provide their insights for assessing President Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement agenda.

Gabriel "Jack" Chin

Let's Get to Work for Immigrants' Rights!



Migra Watch Rapid Response


Aoki fellow Giselle is a project lead on NorCal Resist's Migra Watch Rapid Response Program. Our team responds to community reports of suspected ICE activity and if confirmed, alerts the community to avoid the area.


Listen to Giselle's live radio interview with KPFA's UpFront on how our community is responding to the moment and why we should all join the cause!


Know Your Rights & Canvassing


It is more than clear that we must empower our immigrant community with knowledge that can help protect them or help them navigate our complex immigration system.


Join us on Saturday, February 8 at 8:30 AM for our day laborer outreach canvassing day! We will be hitting the streets to pass out important information on what to do if ICE shows up, how to access free legal services, and more, to our day laborer neighbors. Please RSVP to norcalresist@gmail.com and we will send you our meetup information.


If you have any questions, please reach out to Aoki Legal Fellow Giselle Garcia: gigarcia@ucdavis.edu

King Hall At Work!



On Saturday, January 25, Aoki Co-Director Raquel Aldana volunteered as an attorney reviewer at NorCal Resist's Pro Se Asylum Clinic alongside Aoki Fellow Giselle '23 who served in coordinating the clinic. King Hall alumni Lindsay Bennett '04 and Ian Dougherty '19 also volunteered as attorney reviewers (pictured above).


Several King Hall students with ILA (Immigration law Association) also volunteered as preparers in aiding families from Mexico, Afghanistan, Nicaragua, and more with their I-589 asylum petitions. What a wonderful display of public service and solidarity with our immigrant neighbors!

|| King Hall ||

Communities and Places of Environmental Justice: Perspectives from Australia



Environmental justice has universal relevance, but it requires translation and integration into different legal systems and geographies. This presentation discusses how environmental justice has been brought into Australian environmental laws. It identifies a gap in how the law understands and responds to communities of and for environmental justice.


Environmental justice cannot be realized if the law fails to recognize the existence and interests of communities on the terms of the communities themselves. This presentation deliberately challenges the law relating to standing and human rights, arguing those aspects of law are deficient in achieving an increasingly multi-faceted concept of environmental justice, and suggests a broader role for, and a wider understanding of, communities in environmental law, grounded in ideas of place-based connection. Approaching the question of achievement of environmental justice with community interests at its centre, the environment of environmental justice also broadens to encompass places of shared value.


Dr. Brad Jessup, Senior Lecturer at Melbourne Law School, will focus on learnings from case studies regarding: development of places of worship; proposals to locate nuclear waste on land traditionally owned by Aboriginal People; landfill pollution in suburbs of socio-economic disadvantage; and the demolition of queer night-time venues. This event is brought to you by the California Environmental Law and Policy Center and the California International Law Center. 


Tuesday, February 4 | 12:00 - 1:00 PM | Room 1301 or Zoom | Register

|| Main Campus ||

TODAY - UCD Global Migration Center Hosts Seminar, "Immigrants, Imports, and Welfare: Evidence from Household Purchase Data"



Speaker: Christoph Albert, Collegio Carlo Alberto, Turin 


Do immigrants make goods from their origin country more accessible to their non-immigrant neighbors? We argument U.S. grocery scanner data to include the origin country of both households and products, thereby enabling the first direct estimate of how local immigrant presence affects import penetration. Using a quantitative model of trade, we show that immigrants increase the grocery import expenditure share by 8%. Three quarters of this effect is attributable to immigrants’ own disproportionate preferences for imported goods. Immigrants therefore raise import expenditures primarily through their own consumption, with muted benefits for their non-immigrant neighbors. The benefits that do accrue to natives are concentrated within high-income and urban households.


Monday, January 27 | 12:00 - 1:00 PM | 273 SS&H Building | Zoom

Friday: Hemispheric Institute on the Americas Book Talk Series feat. Break & Flow - Hip Hop Poetics in the Americas with Author Charlie D. Hankin



Hip hop is a global form of expression, and in Cuba, Brazil, and Haiti, artists use it to empower their communities against postcolonial violence. In Break and Flow, Charlie Hankin explores how these rappers share a vision of hip hop's role in public discourse, emphasizing themes of neighborhood and nation. Drawing on extensive fieldwork and a large archive of songs, he examines how new media enables knowledge production in the Global South, enhancing our understanding of poetry and popular music.


Charlie Hankin studies the connections between music and literature in the Caribbean and Brazil, focusing on sound studies and ethnomusicology. His current project, "Writing in Clave," examines the relationship between popular music and literature. Hankin is also a professional violinist and co- produced the nominated Cuban hip hop album Sentimientos Desafinados in 2017.


Friday, January 31 | 12:10 - 1:30 PM | L.J. Andrews Conference Room (SSH 2203)

AAS Brown Bag Speaker Series Features Dr. Traci Parker,

"Targeting Black Love: The FBI's War on Intimacy and the Civil Rights Movement"



Beginning with the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott, the FBI, through its COINTELPRO initiative, targeted Martin Luther King Jr., the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), and the broader Civil Rights Movement. Initially focused on alleged communist affiliations, the Bureau shifted its tactics to exploit King’s personal life, including his marital infidelity, to discredit him and undermine the movement. As the 1960s unfolded, the FBI’s fixation on King’s private life intensified, extending to other Black leaders such as Stokely Carmichael and Huey Newton. The Bureau scrutinized activists’ intimate lives, seeking compromising material and employing manipulative strategies such as embedding informants in activists’ social circles, orchestrating romantic relationships, and inciting personal conflicts. This talk explores how the FBI’s investigation into King’s marital and sexual life signaled a broader strategic shift: weaponizing attacks on Black love, intimacy, and marriage to destabilize the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements. By targeting the personal bonds that sustained these movements, the FBI sought to erode their resilience, weaken their solidarity, and perpetuate systemic oppression.


Dr. Traci Parker is a historian and author specializing in African American history, civil rights, and social justice. An Associate Professor of History at the University of California Davis, she is the author of Department Stores and the Black Freedom Movement(2019), a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title, and co-editor of The New Civil Rights Movement Reader (2023). Her forthcoming book, Revolutionary Love, examines the role of romantic love in the mid-twentieth-century Black Freedom Movement. Dr. Parker has received numerous prestigious fellowships, including the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History Faculty Fellowship at Harvard University and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship. She earned her Ph.D. in History from the University of Chicago.


Friday, February 7 | 12:00 -1:30 PM | Hart Hall 3201 | RSVP

|| Community Events ||

Wednesday: RJA Community Support Space Hosted by Ella Baker Center



Join the Ella Baker Center for a virtual Racial Justice Act Community Support Space to learn more about how the RJA is progressing statewide.


This event will be held in order to provide updates to the community on how things are progressing with the RJA statewide, as well as provide some insight and direction. We will also be joined by attorneys from throughout the state who we hope will share updates on the RJA with loved ones and advocates of those incarcerated. Please, join us to get answers to your general questions and concerns related to the law!


Contact stephanie@ellabakercenter.org with any questions you may have about this event.


 Wednesday, January 29 | 6:00 - 8:00 P.M. PT | Zoom | Register

Save-the-Date: NorCal Resist's Open Meeting



Attend our next Open Meeting! Aoki Fellow Giselle will be presenting on NCR's work for immigrants. We invite you to join us to process how we will keep each other safe in these coming days and how you can get involved in our community's efforts. More than ever we need your help!


Sunday, February 2 | 3:00 to 5:00 PM | 2775 Cottage Way #15, Sacramento, CA

Save-the-Date: Sacramento NLG's Ticket Defense Clinic Training



Volunteer with the Sacramento National Lawyers Guild Civil Rights Program for their ticket defense clinic! The Ticket Defense Clinic is a National Lawyers Guild project created to alleviate the oppressive and excessive criminalization of our city's most vulnerable unhoused members. Tickets pile up against them for simply sitting on the streets, trying to cook food, having an open container, having a dog, having no bathroom - the list goes on and on. In addition, tickets turn into "failures to appear" and warrants that may prevent access to social services, housing, and work opportunities. The clinic directly represents unhoused folx at no cost in criminal matters in which they are not entitled to an attorney from the Public Defender's Office.


Start by registering for their upcoming training on February 10th. All registration materials are reviewed and then you will be contacted directly with the link to the next scheduled virtual or in-person training. If you have any questions, please reach out to NLGSacramento@gmail.com


Feb 10 | 6:00 to 8:00 PM PST | Virtual | Register Here

|| Recommended Podcast ||

Listen: Revolutionary Love - A Conversation with Tara Brach & Valarie Kaur



In a divided, reactive, and violent world, how do we embrace love and joy? How do we genuinely include our opponents in our hearts? What gives us the courage to bring our whole being into serving and savoring? And what is our vision for a new world?


In this fresh and profoundly relevant conversation, Tara Brach and Valarie Kaur explore the challenges and potential of these turbulent times. Valarie, a Sikh activist, filmmaker, civil rights lawyer, and author, shares insights from her powerful books, including See No Stranger and her recent works, World of Wonder and Sage Warrior. Together, Tara and Valarie reflect on:


How Revolutionary Love can be a guide in times of division and despair.

Are you passionate about an issue and would love to express your thoughts and research through our Aoki Blog? We would love to collaborate with on a post!

Reach out to Giselle at gigarcia@ucdavis.edu to get started! Don't forget to check out our Aoki Blog for inspiration!
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