Dr. Caitlin Kaliiaa discusses the Book in Common There There: Exploring Urban Indian Community & History

Dr. Caitlin Keliiaa is an Indigenous feminist historian, and her scholarship examines Indian labor exploitation, dispossession, and surveillance of Native bodies, especially in Native Californian contexts.

Her book project Unsettling Domesticity centers Native women's voices uncovered from federal archives. Dr. Caitlin Keliiaa is an Assistant Professor of Feminist Studies at UC Santa Cruz, she is Yerington Paiute and Washoe, and her Tribal communities inform her scholarship.

Meriam Library Reopening!

The Meriam Library will be reopening starting August 16th!
Library floors will be open from 7:30AM-4:45PM.

Click here for a calendar of all library hours. 

Student Workshop: Navigating (Fake) News & Social Media Influence

Ever wonder why social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are free? Why does fake news travel 6 times faster than news that is true? Join us for a student workshop to learn the answers to these questions and to better understand our news consumption and social media behaviors. We will also go over how our psychology makes us vulnerable to believing and sharing fake news. Students will discuss and learn digital media literacy techniques by completing a social media activity.

Student Workshop: Navigating (Fake) News & Social Media Influence

Ever wonder why social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are free? Why does fake news travel 6 times faster than news that is true? Join us for a student workshop to learn the answers to these questions and to better understand our news consumption and social media behaviors. We will also go over how our psychology makes us vulnerable to believing and sharing fake news. Students will discuss and learn digital media literacy techniques by completing a social media activity.

Student Workshop: Navigating (Fake) News & Social Media Influence

Ever wonder why social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are free? Why does fake news travel 6 times faster than news that is true? Join us for a student workshop to learn the answers to these questions and to better understand our news consumption and social media behaviors. We will also go over how our psychology makes us vulnerable to believing and sharing fake news. Students will discuss and learn digital media literacy techniques by completing a social media activity.