Agenda & Presenters*
Day 1 - November 7, 2019
Session 1 Opening remarks and charge to participants: Overview of the US Binary and Latin American Multivalent narratives.
Presenter:
David Hayes-Bautista, PhD, UCLA
Session 2 Racially ambiguous babies in the 2010 California birth cohort.
Presenter:
David Hayes-Bautista, PhD, UCLA
Session 3 Are Latinos a race, an ethnicity or something else? View from Genomics
Presenters:
Esteban G Burchard, Stanford: Latin American multivalent genomics
Michael Montoya, UC Irvine: US Binary genomics
Session 4 Panel of racially ambiguous adults and their lived experience.
Session 5 How is Blackness constructed under US Binary and Latin American Multivalent narratives?
Presenters:
Keosha Partlow, Charles Drew University
Cynthia Gonzalez, Charles Drew University: Blaxican identity
Ben Vinson, Johns Hopkins: Afro-Mexican constructs
Session 6 How is indigeneity constructed under US Binary and Latin American Multivalent narratives?
Presenters:
Kevin Terraciano, UCLA
Edward Telles, UCSB, Pigmentocracy in Latin America
Maylei Blackwell, UCLA, Transnational indigeneity, UCLA
Day 2 - November 8, 2019
Session 7 Recap and charge
Session 8 Social Determinants of Health: Proxy Measures for Race/Ethnicity?
Presenter:
Paul Hsu, PhD, UCLA
Session 9 How is Asian-ness constructed under US Binary and Latin American Multivalent narratives?
Presenters:
Roberto Chao Romero, UCLA
Paul Hsu, PhD, UCLA
Session 10 Panel of parents of racially ambiguous children: responding to queries about their children’s race.
Session 11 Hospital efforts in population health with racially ambiguous populations.
Presenters:
Apurva Shah, Lead Coding/CDI, Adventist Health White Memorial
Mara Bryant, COO, Adventist Health White Memorial
Session 12 Consensus panel 1: research areas on limitations of the US Binary racial narrative to identify and track health disparities in an increasingly racially ambiguous population.
Session 13 Consensus Panel 2: research areas in problems the consensus panel foresees if the current racial categories continue to be utilized for research with racially ambiguous populations.
Session 14 Consensus Panel 3. Research opportunities on how racially-ambiguous millennials and postmillennials are defining their racialization experience.
*Subject to change