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Collective Prosperity convening #2: Reclaiming and Rebuilding

  • Community Room 606 South Maynard Street Seattle, WA United States (map)

Join us on July 11th for the second session in the Collective Prosperity learning series, Reclaiming and Rebuilding. This offering from the Communities of Opportunity (COO) Learning Community is designed to learn from the efforts of community driven programs, projects, initiatives and organizations. This series will highlight efforts in community organizing and power building, solidarity work and working towards a just transition and communities of health and well-being.

This 3-part series is designed and produced by La Roxay Productions.

Register here to join us on July 11th! Space is limited!

We will be recording the event.

About the event

How do we support one another as we work to reclaim, relearn and rebuild within our communities? We will hear from folks who have been building capacity to actively transform the material conditions in their communities as well as the philosophies that guide their work.

Event information 

Register here to join us! Masks required for all attendees. We will have masks available, as well as dinner. 
Interpretation and childcare stipends available for those that RSVP by 7/3. 
We will be recording the event and posting later to the COO website. 
Series produced by La Roxay Productions in partnership with the COO Learning Community

Panelists:

JM Wong (they/them) is a queer child of the Chinese diaspora living on Duwamish lands (Seattle) via Malaysia/Singapore and many cities in between. They believe that the point is not to interpret and philosophize the world, but to act to change it

Nina Nobuko Wallace is a writer and community organizer who is passionate about public history, empowered communities, and the stories that connect us. As a core member of the CID Coalition, she works to build intergenerational, collective power to fight displacement in the Chinatown-International District (CID) and beyond.

Moderator: 

Karen (she/they) is a policy professional who is passionate about racial, gender, and disability justice. They worked for ten years in various roles in the criminal justice reform field including consulting state governments on criminal justice reform, working to advance reform legislation and policy implementation in Hawai'i, Washington, and Montana. Karen now staffs the Seattle HIV Planning Council, a governing board responsible for determining the service needs of people living with HIV in King, Snohomish, and Island County. She serves on the board of API Chaya, a survivor-led organization serving survivors of sexual violence, human trafficking, and domestic violence. She is also part of a decolonial artist collective of queer Koreans in the Puget Sound called Hansoom.