- University News Archive - 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock /news-archive/tag/paige-topping/ 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Mon, 10 Dec 2018 18:27:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock researchers study impact of faith-based community engagement in Little Rock /news-archive/2018/12/10/little-rock-congregations-study/ Mon, 10 Dec 2018 18:27:21 +0000 /news/?p=72919 ... 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock researchers study impact of faith-based community engagement in Little Rock]]> The University of Arkansas at Little Rock is researching how places of worship in Little Rock work with nonprofit organizations to promote community engagement and provide social services to vulnerable populations.聽 The Little Rock Congregations Study is part of an ongoing research project led by Dr. Rebecca Glazier, professor in the School of Public Affairs, stemming from research begun in 2012 to study the effects of religious organizations on community engagement in Little Rock. The interdisciplinary project brought together 59 student researchers from 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock who gained invaluable research experience. More than 110 clergy members from congregations across Little Rock completed the survey, while 24 clergy were interviewed. Additionally, students wrote. Undergraduate students in Glazier鈥檚 Survey Research Methods class assisted in developing the survey and distributing it to clergy members. They also wrote stories highlighting the good work done through partnerships between places of worship and nonprofit organizations. Members of Dr. Kirk Leach鈥檚 graduate Nonprofit Management class and Dr. Gerald Driskill鈥檚 undergraduate Intercultural Communication class conducted in-depth interviews with clergy members. 鈥淪ometimes, the university can feel pretty distant from the rest of the city,鈥 Glazier said. 鈥淭he Little Rock Congregations Study gets students out of the classroom and into the community to do research that really matters. We are working hard to share findings that clergy members, congregants, and the broader Little Rock community will find valuable.鈥
Dr. Rebecca Glazier stands with Little Rock Congregations Study student researchers Anet Rosas-Labrada, Anna Aguilar, Rhodes Houser, Nikki Partlow-Loyall, and Josie Keathley.

Dr. Rebecca Glazier stands with Little Rock Congregations Study student researchers Anet Rosas-Labrada, Anna Aguilar, Rhodes Houser, Nikki Partlow-Loyall, and Josie Keathley.

The researchers have found that marriage and relationship counseling is the most common service provided by congregations, with 61 percent of responding congregations providing these services, followed by 47 percent of congregations in the study providing a food bank. Partnerships between congregations and nonprofit organizations are a common occurrence. More than 50 percent of congregations with food banks have a partner to help provide that service. Meanwhile, 60 percent of congregations who provide medical screenings or other services have a partner, likely because these types of services are more resource intensive. The most common reason for a partnership between a congregation and a nonprofit is a desire to connect with the community. 鈥淧artnerships aren鈥檛 happening out of a need for resources, as we might expect, but are more often motivated by the desire of a congregation to get beyond their own members and connect with the broader community in Little Rock,鈥 Glazier said. Three of the student researchers, all political science majors, are taking the project a step further. They have received Signature Experience Awards from 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock to conduct individual research projects with the help of faculty mentors. Jordan Wallis, a Marine Corps veteran, received a grant to look specifically at veterans鈥 services provided by congregations and nonprofits in Little Rock. 鈥淚 am excited to be able to do empirical, community-based research that will further my education and allow me to do a little bit to help fellow veterans in need,鈥 Wallis said. Next, Paige Topping received a grant to study community outreach efforts to share the results of the Little Rock Congregations Study. 鈥淚 am thankful for the opportunity to not only research issues that are important to my community, but to also connect on a local level and create long-lasting relationships and positive impacts,鈥 Topping said. The third student, Madison Rodgers, received an honorary award to look at longitudinal data from the Little Rock Congregations Study and track community engagement over time. Updates on the continuing research can be found on the or. In the spring 2019 semester, the group will survey people who work at nonprofit organizations in Little Rock to get their perspectives on collaborating with congregations. Additionally, the researchers have received a $1,000 grant from the Arkansas Community Foundation to host a workshop in the spring 2019 semester to share the latest research findings with clergy members. They will also build a clergy advisory board to help prepare for the 2020 Little Rock Congregations Study. In the upper right photo,聽Dr. Rebecca Glazier (left) discusses the Little Rock Congregations Study with student researchers Anna Aguilar, Nicole Ursin, and Rhodes Houser.]]>
糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students investigate migrant crisis in Europe /news-archive/2018/07/12/study-abroad-migrant-crisis-europe/ Thu, 12 Jul 2018 15:05:24 +0000 /news/?p=71079 ... 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock students investigate migrant crisis in Europe]]> A group of University of Arkansas at Little Rock students saw firsthand how the growing migrant crisis has changed Europe in recent years.聽 Dr. Rebecca Glazier and Dr. Christopher Williams, professors in the 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock School of Public Affairs, led 10 students to Europe June 4-20, where they visited London, Paris, and Berlin to learn more about the challenges Europe faces in light of the migrant crisis. The students who attended the study abroad trip, 鈥淚dentity, Migration, and a Changing Europe,鈥 include political science majors Charlana Benefield, Jorge Gonzalez, Julie O鈥橦ara, Leon Kockaya, Elizabeth Ray, Madison Rodgers, Paige Topping, and Allie Woodville, as well as Colin Davies, a criminal justice major, and Abigail Resendiz, a business major. In recent years, Europe has seen massive increases in both intra-European migration and migration from Middle Eastern and North African countries. This has forced many Europeans to grapple more deeply with questions of national identity and with deep societal prejudices,鈥 Glazier said. 鈥淭he course was designed to provide students with firsthand experience to develop a deeper understanding of the effects that nationalism and large-scale immigration have on societies.鈥 The group first traveled to London, where they shared a Ramadan meal at the Central Mosque of London and attended a play about the crisis in the refugee camp in Calais, France. In Paris, they visited the famed Louvre museum, visited le Grande Mosqu茅e du Paris, spoke with recent immigrants, and met with French National Assembly member Pac么me Rupin. In Berlin, the group visited experts in human trafficking and migration and toured the as well as the WWII-era concentration camp and the remains of the Berlin Wall. They also took in the World Cup match between Mexico and Germany. 鈥淭he refugees that occupied this camp originated from countries all over the world, ranging from Syria and Afghanistan to Iran, Iraq, and Moldova,鈥 said Topping, a senior political science major. 鈥淩eports of the experiences of refugees around the world have been and continue to be profoundly compelling. However, seeing their experiences and living conditions face-to-face truly triggers unparalleled human emotions and responses.鈥 Asylum seekers in Germany are allowed to stay in the country if they are granted political asylum, refugee status, subsidiary protection, or if the agency declares a deportation prohibition. Refugees in Germany can apply for four different kinds of protection from the German government, including asylum protection, subsidiary protection, refugee protection, and protection from persecution if they can provide evidence that they are being persecuted in their homeland.
The study abroad students visit the Grand Mosque of Paris. The group (L to R) includes Back Row: Julie O'Hara, Elizabeth Ray, Dr. Rebecca Glazier, Madison Ray, Abigail Resendiz, Colin Davies, Leon Kockaya. Front row: Allie Woodville, Jorge Gonzalez, Charlana Benefield, and Paige Topping.

The study abroad students visit the Grand Mosque of Paris. The group (L to R) includes Back Row: Julie O’Hara, Elizabeth Ray, Dr. Rebecca Glazier, Madison Ray, Abigail Resendiz, Colin Davies, and Leon Kockaya. Front row: Allie Woodville, Jorge Gonzalez, Charlana Benefield, and Paige Topping.

鈥淲hile most refugees are thankful to Germany for taking them in, they are all, for the most part, anxiously awaiting for their homelands to become safe enough to return to,鈥 Topping said. 鈥淲hile Germany is extremely accepting of refugees and provides housing, food, recreational sports areas, playgrounds, and German classes for children and adults alike in areas such as Templehof, it does not take away from the very grim reality that most of the refugees living at Templehof had to leave their professions, homes and families behind in order to pursue a life in Germany safe from persecution鈥 In the final leg of the journey, the group returned for a few more days in London, where they toured Parliament, Palace of Westminster, and met with political leaders in the United Kingdom. Although the students read two dozen academic readings and testimonials about what it is like to be a migrant in Europe, none of that compared to the actual experience of meeting migrants and hearing their stories. 鈥淲e went to Iftar with a group of Turkish refugees living in Berlin,鈥 said O鈥橦ara, a 21-year-old senior from Little Rock. Before dinner, we sat with them in small groups and they told us their stories. The first person I spoke to had been a civil engineer when he was working in Turkey. This man has five children, all still in Turkey, and his youngest was born shortly after he fled oppression. He is able to see her and talk to her through the phone, but he has never been able to hold her in his own hands. As far as he knows, he may never meet her in person. If he had stayed in Turkey he risked becoming a political prisoner, where he would not have been allowed to meet or see his family. He said to me, 鈥楢t least in Berlin I have hope.鈥欌 O鈥橦ara heard many more memorable accounts from the migrants, and she realized that, despite talks by European countries of coming up with a solution to the migrant crisis, it is not something that will be easily solved. Meanwhile, millions of people are left struggling while the political debate continues. The refugee crisis in Europe is too deep to be coated with band-aid solutions and left to fester. Europe will change drastically in the coming years because of this migration,鈥 O鈥橦ara said. 鈥Watching them talk about their fears for the future and seeing the heartbreak they faced day in and day out because of circumstances so far beyond their control is something that I will never forget, but, beyond that, the strength and unwavering hope they showed is something that will stick with me forever.鈥 Students learned about the efforts to sustain migrant populations by the United Kingdom and European Union organizations, as well as the living conditions of displaced migrants and asylum seekers. Students also discussed migration issues and policy possibilities for alleviating tensions between residents in Europe. Throughout their busy schedules, students were asked to consider political and social policies that are currently enacted as well as their own solutions to Europe鈥檚 migrant crisis. 鈥淚 think the conversations that the students had with immigrants and refugees are experiences that will stay with them. We thought critically about migration policy, how to best integrate immigrants, and about what societies might owe to refugees fleeing violence,鈥 Glazier said. 鈥淚 don’t think we came to any easy answers, but I do think the students gained both substantive knowledge and empathy.鈥 The professors and students kept a travel blog of their journeys that can be viewed online. In the upper right photo,聽the study abroad group met with a member of the Scotland Nationalist Party, Alison Thewliss, while touring Parliament.]]>