February 15, 2021 - RCAH Communications
Four Michigan State University students have received Martin Luther King Jr. Advancing Inclusion through Research Awards for research projects focusing on topics related to diversity and marginalized populations.
Winners will be recognized at the virtual Martin Luther King Jr. Advancing Inclusion through Research Awards Program at 5:15 p.m. on Wednesday, February 24, 2021. The awards ceremony immediately follows the MSU Excellence in Diversity Award Program.
“This year’s prize winners were selected from a collection of competitive and engaging submissions,” said Dr. Kevin Brooks, RCAH academic specialist for diversity and civic engagement and the chair of the MLK Jr. Advancing Inclusion through Research Awards. “Their research projects expressed a dedication to the principles of diversity, equity, and inclusion and exemplified MSU’s renewed commitment to inclusive excellence.”
Students who completed projects in 2020 and were enrolled during the Fall 2020 semester were eligible to submit projects for the award.
The first prize winner is Janet Ibarra, a senior in James Madison College, Honors College, and the College of Social Science, whose research project was “How the Trump Presidency Has Affected Latinx Undergraduates.” Hailing from Bangor, Michigan, Ibarra is a social relations and policy and political science pre-law major with a minor in Chicano/Latino Studies.
The second prize winner is Matthew Miller, a junior in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, Honors College, and the College of Arts and Letters, whose research project was “Reflections on Symbolic Repair for the Black Community in the United States.” Miller, majoring in arts and humanities and Russian, is from Buffalo, New York.
The third prize winner is Madison Nacker, a senior in James Madison College and the Honors College, whose research project was “Queering Migrant Communities: Identity Building and Activism for LGBTQI+ Migrants.” Nacker is a comparative cultures and politics and social relations and policy major with minors in educational studies and peace and justice studies from Shelby Twp., Michigan.
Kaylee McCarthy, a senior in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, Honors College, and the College of Arts and Letters, received honorable mention. Her research project was “Useful and Temporary Art: Redefining Art’s Role in a Commodified World through Tania Bruguera’s Immigrant Movement International.” McCarthy is a Woodridge, Illinois, native with majors in arts and humanities, art history and visual culture, and German.
The awards are cosponsored by the MSU Honors College and MSU’s three residential colleges—James Madison College, Lyman Briggs College, and the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities.
The Martin Luther King Jr. Advancing Inclusion through Research Awards were established in 2010 to recognize students from MSU’s residential colleges whose research and creative projects support MSU and Martin Luther King Jr.’s ideals of inclusive excellence.
Original piece posted on the RCAH website