What is public scholarship? What does it generate? Who does it address? Why is it important today? This roundtable series seeks to deepen and enlarge cross-disciplinary conversations about scholarship as a public practice oriented toward social justice. Speakers discuss their diverse experiences facilitating campus-community dialogues and collaborations that promote effective, creative, and just problem-solving for social change. Who is the “Public” in Public Scholarship? Publics/Audiences Guest Speakers Sara Gonzalez (Anthropology, University of Washington) Nicole Robert, (Public Programs Manager, Museum of History and Industry) Reese Tanimua (Managing Director, Northwest FolkLife and Chair, Seattle Music Commission). |