According to linguistics, everyone has an accent. During college I took a couple of linguistics classes and the most interesting aspect that I…
To celebrate "International Children's Day," Con Todo Press will release "I Am Enough/Soy Fuerte Ya," a bilingual children's book by artist, songwriter and first-generation Latina Heidi Rojas.
From producers to comedians, choreographers to muralists, actresses to artisans, La Artisteada provides a spotlight on a wide array of artisti…
Castro stands with other RLA and Inclusive Action leaders and community members outside of LA Board of Supervisor’s budget meeting. Photo cour…
IRLA is made up of more than 100 non-profit, community-led, health and other academic organizations, including CHILRLA, AltaMed, St. John’s Well Child & Family Center, Immigrant Defenders Law Center, UCLA Labor Center, and the USC Equity Research Institute, among others. They banded together as IRLA to advocate for immigrants in LA and proposed a county plan that would include more immigrant-related priorities to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, who would allocate the $9 billion in ARP funds given to the city.
The City of Los Angeles and the California Civil Rights Department are putting together a set of events to create awareness to the rise of hate and discrimination that have become a dangerous threat to safety and civility both locally and statewide. UAHW originated in 2017 as a poster campaign in Bay Area cities in response to white supremacist rallies that took place in North California cities like Berkeley and San Francisco. Today, UAHW has spread to about 90 organizations and cities across the country.
Mexico’s ruling party, Morena, nominated Claudia Sheinbaum and Xóchitl Gálvez was nominated by the Frente Amplio por Mexico (Broad Front for Mexico) as presidential candidates. Sheinbaum, 61, is the former Mexico City mayor and longtime political ally of the current President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. She is a scientist and an academic. She has vowed to continue the policies of López Obrador that have focused on social welfare and more state control of the economy and energy sectors. Gálvez is a former senator from the conservative PAN party. Her front party consists of three parties, the PAN, the PRI and the PRD. She is pro-business and wants to encourage more private investment. Both candidates have made recent campaign stops in Los Angeles to court votes. Mexicans living abroad have been allowed to vote in Mexican elections since 2006.