A Selection of Mexican Ex-Votos

A Selection of Mexican Ex-Votos - Exhibition

April 12 - October 18, 2024  Gain insight into Mexican religious folk practices through these selections from the Dr. William H. Helfand collection of ex-votos and devotional paintings on medical subjects. The display is located on the main level of the Holman Biotech Commons, outside the Holman Reading Room. 

Geographical Bias in Standardized Testing: Is Cultural and Socioeconomic Bias a Problem of the Past or Are We Simply Not Looking in the Right Space?

Sociology Conference Room, McNeil 367 |

A talk by Manuel S. González Canché, Associate Professor, Penn GSE.

“Work Is Work”: Kinship, Race, and Violence on the Human Smuggling Trail

Lightbox Film Center, 3701 Chestnut Street | to

A talk and film screening by Jason de León, Professor of Anthropology and Chicana/o Studies, the University of California, Los Angeles. Transnational gangs such as the notorious MS-13 have recently become directly involved in the human smuggling economy in Latin America. Award-winning anthropologist Jason De León is renowned for his field studies on how clandestine migration has become a complicated, often violent social relationship between smugglers and their clients. His latest work follows the daily lives of Honduran gang members in Mexico whose notions of kinship, race, and gender are crucial for understanding how smuggling systems adapt to changes in U.S. immigration security strategies, and for making sense of the seemingly senseless violence that people find themselves in.

Nikole Hannah-Jones Lecture

Penn Law, Michael A. Fitts Auditorium 3501 Sansom Street | to

Nikole Hannah-Jones, an award-winning journalist who writes about civil rights and racial injustice for the New York Times Magazine, will be discussing the ongoing segregation in public education at the biennial Steven S. Goldberg and Jolley Bruce Christman Lecture in Education Law. Her talk is entitled Why Integration Matters: The Ongoing Segregation of Schools in the 21st Century. Following her remarks, she will be joined by Dr. Rand Quinn, Associate Professor of Education, for continued dialogue. 

“Work Is Work” Kinship, Race, and Violence on the Human Smuggling Trail

Lightbox Film Center, 3701 Chestnut Street |

A talk by Jason de León, Professor of Anthropology and Chicana/o Studies, the University of California, Los Angeles.  Transnational gangs such as the notorious MS-13 have recently become directly involved in the human smuggling economy in Latin America. Award-winning anthropologist Jason De León is renowned for his field studies on how clandestine migration has become a complicated, often violent social relationship between smugglers and their clients. His latest work follows the daily lives of Honduran gang members in Mexico whose notions of kinship, race, and gender are crucial for understanding how smuggling systems adapt to changes in U.S. immigration security strategies, and for making sense of the seemingly senseless violence that people find themselves in.

La Casa Latina 20th Anniversary Celebration!

3601 Locust Walk |

La Casa Latina is celebrating 20 years at Penn!  Gilbert F Casellas, Law'77, Emeritus Trustee of the University of Pennsylvania, co-founder of La Casa Latina, and Wendy de la Rosa, Wharton'11, co-founder of Common Cents Lab, provide a personal perspective of their journeys at Penn, La Casa Latina, and beyond.

Reverberations of Inequality - Opening Conference

3501 Sansom Street Penn Law, Golkin Hall Michael A. Fitts Auditorium (Lower Level) | to

Join us for the opening conference of the Mitchell Center 2019-20 theme year, REVERBERATIONS OF INEQUALITY. Inequality has emerged as a key political issue. But more than that, there are signs that inequality harms health, diminishes political engagement, and ripples across social life throughout the world. 

Special Lecture: Dr. Nancy Gray, Gordon Research Conferences

231 South 34th Street, Department of Chemistry. First Floor, Cret Building |

Dr. Nancy Ryan Gray, President and CEO of the Gordon Research Conferences (GRC) will be visiting Penn. Dr. Gray has been in the forefront of efforts to address the challenges that women in STEM face with regard to issues of diversity and inclusion. During her visit Dr. Gray will deliver a lecture on her own professional experiences in STEM, entitled “The Keys to Success…Are Somewhere at the Bottom of My Purse.”

The Hollywood Jim Crow: The Racial Politics of the Movie Industry

Penn Bookstore 3601 Walnut Street |

The story of racial hierarchy in the American film industry featuring Maryann Erigha.

Climate Change at Home: Adaptation, Resilience and Social Equity

220 S. 34th St. Fisher Fine Arts Building, 4th Floor |

Join StateImpact Pennsylvania and WHYY in a local discussion about the intersection of environmental justice, social equity and climate change as we explore what the potential damage to infrastructure, agriculture and the environment could mean for the public — especially among vulnerable communities.

Drinks and hors d'oeuvres will be available before the event, starting at 5pm. Registration is required.

Media in Postapartheid South Africa: Postcolonial Politics in the Age of Globalization

Room 500, Annenberg School |

Book Talk by Sean Jacobs, The New School.  Lunch begins at 11:45. Space is limited, RSVP to marina.krikorian@asc.upenn.edu