Events for May 27 - Apr 12

  • Alumni Regional Reception – New York

    Arup 77 Water Street, 4th floor, New York, NY, United States

    NY area alumni are invited to to join fellow alumni & Dean Gary Segura for an evening of Luskin camaraderie.

  • PPASS: Sandy Black

    Cornell Hall, D-313, Anderson School of Management 110 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, United States

    Speaker: Sandy Black, Professor of Economics, University of Texas at Austin

  • How Wildfire Will Shape Our Future

    Join the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation in welcoming Edward Struzik to discuss his book Firestorm. The evening event will include a reception, presentation, panel discussion, author Q&A, and book signing.

  • ‘Freedom Dreams,’ a Special 2-Day Event

    'Black, Brown, and Powerful: Freedom Dreams in Unequal Cities' will shine a light on organizing frameworks and resistance strategies that challenge exclusion and refuse subordination.

  • PPASS: Aaron Panofsky

    Room 5391 Luskin School of Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr E, Los Angeles, CA, United States

    Speaker: Aaron Panofsky, Associate Professor of Public Policy; Society and Genetics; and Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles

  • California Goes Green

    Join the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation in welcoming Michael Peevey and Diane Wittenberg to discuss their book California Goes Green. The evening event will include a reception, presentation, panel discussion, author Q&A, and book signing.

  • PPASS: Melanie Wasserman

    Room 5391 Luskin School of Public Affairs Building 337 Charles E Young Dr E, Los Angeles, CA, United States

    Speaker: Melanie Wasserman, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Conference on International Water Issues

    UCLA Covel Commons, Grand Horizon Room De Neve Drive, Los Angeles, CA, United States

    "Water in the Middle East and Africa: A Nexus of Cooperation and Conflict" is an international forum about challenges linked to water resources.

  • The South Los Angeles Homeownership Crisis

    Discussion of findings from study by the Center for Neighborhood Knowledge. Our panelists will examine what progress has been made in South LA, if any, in the domain of housing since the 1960s.