- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/chancellors-committee-on-race-and-ethnicity/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Mon, 11 Sep 2017 18:45:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Joel Anderson returns to 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock as Scholar in Residence /news-archive/2017/09/11/joel-anderson-scholar-residence/ Mon, 11 Sep 2017 18:45:01 +0000 /news/?p=67810 ... Joel Anderson returns to 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock as Scholar in Residence]]> This fall, the faculty, staff, and students of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock will see a familiar face on campus. Chancellor Emeritus Dr. Joel Anderson, who retired in June 2016 following a 45-year career at the university, has returned to 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock to work as a part-time Scholar in Residence at the Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity. 鈥淚 should say that I don鈥檛 intend to give up the joys of retirement,鈥 said Anderson, who has spent his first year catching up on reading the newspaper, traveling with his wife, Ann, and visiting his three sons and five grandchildren. 鈥淩acial and ethnic justice has been a concern of mine for a long time,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f by working in the Institute on Race and Ethnicity I could make a contribution on that front, I would like to do so.鈥 While volunteering at the institute which bears his name, Anderson will focus on development and grant writing and will work on community outreach programs. These programs include the Racial Attitudes in Pulaski County Conference and the. “We are delighted to welcome back Dr. Anderson to campus as our Scholar in Residence, not least since the Anderson Institute is his creation and his legacy,鈥 said Dr. John Kirk, director of the Institute on Race and Ethnicity. 鈥淒r. Anderson’s community standing and passion for issues of race and ethnicity make him the perfect ambassador for the institute.” Anderson plans to mentor a group working with the institute. 鈥淚 want to have a regular discussion meeting with a set group of students on various issues of race and ethnicity,鈥 he said. 鈥淏efore launching such a project, I want to get students involved in choosing the focus and shaping the approach. Conversations become more comfortable and honest when people get to know and trust each other.” Anderson became interested in the Civil Rights Movement as a college student at Harding University in Searcy, which was segregated during the time Anderson attended in the early 1960s. 鈥淒espite the official position of the administration, there were a few faculty members that quietly and privately would say segregation is not right,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat got my attention.鈥 During his tenure as chancellor, Anderson created the Chancellor鈥檚 Committee on Race and Ethnicity in 2006. Out of the committee鈥檚 work, the Institute on Race and Ethnicity was created in 2011 to work with Arkansas communities to end racial and ethnic injustice.
Chancellor Emeritus Dr. Joel Anderson is working as a Scholar in Residence at the Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity. Photo by Lonnie Timmons III/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock.

Chancellor Emeritus Dr. Joel Anderson is working as a Scholar in Residence at the Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity. Photo by Lonnie Timmons III/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock.

鈥淭hat group recognized that race was the No. 1 issue in Arkansas,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the major issue that inhibits progress in the community and the state. The issues that are related to race and ethnicity are not going to just disappear.鈥 In 2016, the institute was renamed after Anderson to honor his 鈥減ivotal role in pursuing racial and ethnic justice in Arkansas.鈥 In 2016, the Arkansas Historical Association honored the institute for its work. The institute received the Diamond Award for the in recognition of excellence in public history engagement. It also received an award of merit for the Arkansas Civil Rights History Tour App created with the city of Little Rock. The app offers residents and visitors a new way to explore the city鈥檚 rich civil rights history. Anderson is glad to return to campus. 鈥淏esides seeing old friends and making new ones, few places are as stimulating and full of interesting people as a university campus,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you retire, you find yourself interacting mostly with people your own age. I love the wisdom of the old, but I miss hearing those younger voices.鈥]]>
糖心Vlog传媒LR Institute on Race and Ethnicity helps bring unity to Camden /news-archive/2016/07/26/ualr-institute-on-race-and-ethnicity-helps-bring-unity-to-camden/ Tue, 26 Jul 2016 20:33:21 +0000 /news/?p=64788 ... 糖心Vlog传媒LR Institute on Race and Ethnicity helps bring unity to Camden]]> An Arkansas town has embraced an open dialogue about race and ethnicity that participants hope can serve as a strong example to the rest of the nation. On Tuesday, Aug. 2, the residents of Camden, Arkansas, celebrated the results of a five-year partnership between the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Joel E. Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity and Camden鈥檚 Unity in the Community Committee (UIC) aimed at improving race and ethnic relations in the community. 鈥淚n the Delta and the southeast and southcentral part of Arkansas, there is little dialogue on race relations in general,鈥 said John Kirk, director of the 糖心Vlog传媒LR Institute on Race and Ethnicity. 鈥淭here are even fewer forums and a greater need for a dialogue in these smaller rural communities.鈥 Providing open forums where residents can discuss these issues developed a community that is more understanding to race and ethnicity, Kirk said. The staple of the Camden campaign is the annual celebration, a community-building campaign that promotes police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie with live music, food, and games.聽This year鈥檚 Camden event was held from 6-8 p.m., Aug. 2, in Camden鈥檚 Carnes Park. Camden hosted its first National Night Out in 2014 with more than 300 people. The event grew to over 500 people in 2015, and this year鈥檚 goal is to host more than 1,000. To the people of Camden, a picturesque town of 12,000 residents that lies along the shores of the Ouachita River two hours south of Little Rock, this event provides a place where neighbors can get to know one another and build the trust necessary to keep a community strong. 聽 鈥淥nce you meet somebody, and you have someone looking out for your best interests, it develops relationships,鈥 said Matt Stone, a business owner who is celebrating his 30th anniversary of moving to Camden. 鈥淲hen people know each other, they can develop a rapport and trust and help each other. You are less likely to jump to conclusions with someone you know.鈥

Forming a partnership for Camden

When the news of riots in Ferguson, Missouri, reached Camden, the members of the Unity in Community Committee realized they were on the right track, Stone said.
Matt Stone (left) and Janice White (right) serve as co-chairs of Camden's Unity in the Community Committee.

Matt Stone (left) and Janice White (right) serve as co-chairs of Camden’s Unity in the Community Committee.

By 2014, the committee had already been meeting for three years. With images of communities such as fresh in their minds, Camden citizens wondered what might happen to their town if underlying issues of racial tensions were not addressed. 鈥淲e wanted to be proactive in promoting racial healing in Camden,鈥 Stone said. 鈥淲hen you look at what happened in Ferguson, Missouri, we knew we were headed in the right direction by creating a forum where problems could be addressed through the legal system instead of spilling into the streets.鈥 With help from the Institute on Race and Ethnicity, Camden residents banded together to make sure their town is not torn apart by the racial divides that have rocked other communities. Camden鈥檚 Unity in the Community Committee is made up of community members and civic leaders who want to heal racial division and foster unity among the citizens of Camden. More than five years ago, Stone heard former 糖心Vlog传媒LR Chancellor Dr. Joel Anderson, who retired on June 30, speak about the efforts of the Institute on Race and Ethnicity. 鈥淭he institute hoped to come into a community and help people heal and grow. I asked what would be involved in getting Camden to be the first community that the institute helped,鈥 Stone said. So Stone called former Camden Mayor Chris Claybaker, Bishop Chester Thompson, and Dr. Larry Braden to see if they were interested in exploring the opportunity. The Institute on Race and Ethnicity has been working with Camden residents since 2011. Under the leadership of Dr. John Miller, a member of the Chancellor鈥檚 Committee on Race and Ethnicity, a forerunner of the institute, Camden formed a committee to organize the effort. Members held focus groups and analyzed the results, organized town hall meetings where issues of race and ethnicity could be discussed openly, and helped residents form goals for unity. The institute facilitated the original town hall meetings in Camden and trained the committee members to set objectives and handle the dialogue during the meetings. 鈥淒r. John Miller was an inspiration to the whole group, and then Dr. John Kirk has been great to work with. The whole experience has been positive,鈥 Stone said.
Camden will hold its National Night Our from 6-8 p.m., Aug. 2, in Camden鈥檚 Carnes Park.

Camden will hold its National Night Out event from 6-8 p.m., Aug. 2, in Camden鈥檚 Carnes Park.

Facing the issues

Some of the challenges the institute discovered were that people in Camden avoided discussing issues of race and also felt divided along poverty lines. 鈥淐amden faces the same issues as a lot of rural towns 鈥 depopulation, a history of strained race relations, a lack of employment. If you don鈥檛 have a forum for dialogue and a place to talk about those things, those small communities can be fairly isolated,鈥 Kirk said. 鈥淭hey can break up into different racial areas and enclaves, and it can be difficult to facilitate conversation across those lines. It is important to break those barriers to open up conversations to handle those more pressing community issues,鈥 Kirk said. Members of the Camden committee confronted these deep-seated issues with an awareness campaign. As part of the campaign, they hosted community meetings where these topics could be discussed openly and honestly. They also held community events to foster resident relationships. 鈥淲e had to bring these issues to the forefront for awareness,鈥 said Janice White, a fourth-grade teacher and co-chair of the community committee. 鈥淧eople were not aware that these personal feelings were actually there. Whether racism or the division actually existed was one thing, but how people felt about it was another. Perception is so important. We were trying to close the gaps for the feelings of the people.鈥

Coming together as a community

One of the largest gaps committee members faced was the perception of Camden between black people and white people.
Janice White (right) and a police officer prepare for the 2015 National Night Out event.

Janice White (right) and a police officer prepare for the 2015 National Night Out event.

鈥淲hen we talked to white people, we asked them how was Camden? How have things changed for the betterment of Camden since the 1970s?鈥 White said. 鈥淪ome white people would say it鈥檚 an 8 or 9. When we posed that same question to black people, they would say 4, 5, or 6. So right there we knew the perception was different for blacks than whites. That is when we started having dialogue. What can we do to change that?鈥 聽 Camden residents responded that the people did not spend enough time together as a community. 鈥淧eople said we don鈥檛 do anything together. We work together, our children play sports together, but there was not any coming together outside the few interracial churches we have. For the most part, Camden鈥檚 churches are still divided. Our goal is to continue to hold more events that will bring people together to socialize and communicate. We want to break down some stereotypes that cause division,鈥 White said. In addition to National Night Out, the committee holds monthly meetings where members discuss ongoing issues. Committee members also speak with church congregations to raise awareness about issues of diversity and how to unify the community. To the members of the committee, the changes since the Institute on Race and Ethnicity first visited Camden are abundant. 鈥淏efore, these issues were like the elephant in the room that no one wanted to recognize or acknowledge,鈥 White said. 鈥淣ow, people in Camden can openly talk about these issues and bring resolutions without feeling threatened.鈥]]>
Institute on Race and Ethnicity to be renamed in honor of Chancellor Anderson /news-archive/2016/05/27/institute-renamed-honor-chancellor-anderson/ Fri, 27 May 2016 18:52:14 +0000 /news/?p=64468 ... Institute on Race and Ethnicity to be renamed in honor of Chancellor Anderson]]> The University of Arkansas at Little Rock Institute on Race and Ethnicity will be renamed in honor of retiring Chancellor Joel E. Anderson, who was instrumental in the establishment of the institute in July 2011. 鈥淚 am truly honored,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚t pleases me that my name will be associated with an ongoing work to understand and eliminate racial and ethnic prejudice and discrimination in Arkansas.鈥 Institute Director John Kirk requested the name change, which was approved by the institute鈥檚 advisory council. The University of Arkansas System Board of Trustees approved the request at its May 26 meeting. 鈥淒r. Anderson鈥檚 45 years at 糖心Vlog传媒LR, with some 39 of those years spent in various leadership positions, has allowed the young man from Swifton to live out his commitment to see 糖心Vlog传媒LR achieve a pivotal role in pursuing racial and ethnic justice in Arkansas,鈥 Kirk said. 鈥淚 can think of no more fitting and rightful tribute to this distinguished career than for the Institute to be renamed the Joel E. Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity.鈥 Anderson is retiring from 糖心Vlog传媒LR at the end of June after a 13-year tenure as chancellor. He created the Chancellor鈥檚 Committee on Race and Ethnicity in 2006. Out of the committee鈥檚 work, the Institute on Race and Ethnicity was created to work with Arkansas communities to end racial and ethnic injustice. The institute has recently been recognized for its work by the Arkansas Historical Association. It received the Diamond Award for the in recognition of its excellence in public history engagement and an award of merit for the Arkansas Civil Rights History Tour App created with the City of Little Rock, which offers residents and visitors a new way to explore the city鈥檚 rich civil rights history. In addition, the institute also oversees the annual Racial Attitudes in Pulaski County Conference. In the upper right photo, Chancellor Joel E. Anderson walks to the stage during the 2016 spring commencement at Jack Stephens Center. Photo by Lonnie Timmons III.]]>