Individuals

Chicana and Chicano Studies

Dr. Armbruster-Sandoval specializes in urban and racial studies. He is the author of Globalization and Cross-Border Labor Solidarity in the Americas: The Anti-Sweatshop Movement and the Struggle for Social Justice and is currently working on a book titled Starving for Justice: Hunger Strikes, Spectacular Speech, and the Struggle for Dignity.


Sociology

Dr. Bhavnani's documentary film "Nothing like Chocolate," offers a glimpse into the global chocolate industry, where there are allegations that enslaved children are used to harvest beans in Ivory Coast, which produces 40% of the world's cacao. "Nothing Like Chocolate" focuses on the Grenada Chocolate Company founded by Mott Green, as well as on an independent farmer, Nelice Stewart, who grows organic cocoa beans. Green (deceased June 2013) created a worker-owned cooperative which brings profits back to the working shareholders, who include the farmers and all factory workers at the company. The film discusses how solar power and ethical technology can create a sustainable, community-based business, and, therefore, can undermine global unethical practices.

Women Culture and Development


Hilal Elver is a Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, part of the UN Human Rights Council. She has presented two reports to the UNHRC, one on the impact of climate change on the right to food and the other on gender and right to food. She also two book published: Headscarf Controversy: Secularism and Freedom of Religion and Reimagining Climate Change, which she co-edited. Elver is also recently working on UN Sustainable Development Goals (2030 Agenda), focusing on food systems, food security and nutrition, climate change, and human rights.

Global Distinguished Fellow at Resnick Food Law and Public Policy Program at UCLA Law School
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food


East Asian Languages & Cultural Studies

Ann-Elise Lewallen’s research and teaching engages with critical indigenous studies, gender studies, multiculturalism, and Environmental justice in the context of contemporary Japan and in Japan’s transnational relations. As a cultural anthropologist, she is also concerned with research ethics and issues of knowledge construction in relation to indigenous and research host communities. Her current book project examines models of sustainable development and Environmental justice within transnational citizen relations between Japan and India.


Sociology

Professor John Foran current areas of interest include the comparative study of 20th-century revolutions and 21st-century radical social change, development, climate, globalization, and the global justice, climate justice movements, “building better worlds,” or sustainable development. Foran was UCSB Sustainability Champion in 2013-14 and is engaged in a long-term research project on the global climate justice movement with the International Institute of Climate Action & Theory (IICAT) and the Climate Justice Project.


Feminist Studies and History

Dr. Rappaport's research considers the history of mass consumer society, with a particular focus on how large-scale businesses accrue cultural and political power. While her work inititially focused on mass-retailing and the urban Environment, her current project, A Thirst for Empire: How Tea Shaped the Modern World (Princeton University Press, 2017), examines the relationship between the global mass consumption and production of tea on agricultural labor, societies and Environments in India, South and Southeast Asia and Africa. Her book examines tea's global history from three interconnected perspectives and she argues that tea was one of the first agricultural industries to use imperial power and resources to engage in and pay for consumer and trade advertising and political lobbying in many locations over a long period of time. The model that tea developed is still used today and is critical to understanding the role of politics and publicity in shaping the geographies, power dynamics and problems in the modern global economy.