From Cultural Survival <[email protected]>
Subject Live in 1HR: Realities of Indigenous Migrant Farmworkers
Date August 26, 2020 4:59 PM
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August 26 webinar: Understanding Realities of Indigenous Migrant Farmworkers During COVID-19
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**
Advancing Indigenous Peoples' Rights and Cultures Worldwide, since 1972
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** Understanding Realities of Indigenous Migrant Farmworkers During COVID-19
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Wednesday, August 26, 2020
2:00 PM – 3:15 PM EST
Facebook live ([link removed])

This panel held by Cultural Survival in partnership with International Funders for Indigenous Peoples ([link removed]) will spotlight and analyze the intersections of Indigenous and migrant farmworker experiences and forms of organizing during COVID-19 and its impact on livelihoods and identities. Indigenous Peoples are heavily represented among migrant farmworkers in the United States, and they are highly impacted by COVID-19, due to the exclusion of undocumented people from most benefits, as well as other structural inequities in access to health and other resources that affect both documented and undocumented people.

Cultural Survival representatives Galina Angarova (Ekhirit Nation, Buryat People) and Avexnim Cojtí (K’iche’ Maya) will discuss some of the root causes of migration that force Indigenous Peoples to leave their homelands. Panelist Arcenio López (Mixteco) from Mixteco.org ([link removed]) (based in the Central Valley, CA) and Crispín Hernández (Mixteco) of the Workers' Center of Central New York will speak about the unique challenges farmworkers face in each of these regions during the COVID crisis, the work their organizations do, and how they are moving through this crisis through local and regional organizing.

Arcenio J. López (Mixteco) is from Oaxaca, Mexico. In 2006, Arcenio was hired as MICOP’s first Community Organizer and promoted as the first Indigenous Executive Director in 2014. Arcenio received his Bachelor of Science degree with a major in Accounting from Cal Lutheran University in 2019.

Crispín Hernandez (Mixteco) is from southern Mexico, where corn was born. He worked as a farmworker for three years and is an organizer for the Workers' Center of Central New York.

Avexnim Cojtí (Maya K'iche') is Cultural Survival Community Media Program Manager. Avexnim is from Chuwila, Guatemala. She is a sociologist with a Master’s degree in Public Administration. Her experience is in the delivery and management of projects/programs that strengthen Indigenous self-government. She enjoys and learns about Indigenous art and music, self-government systems, media and Indigenous philosophies on health.

Galina Angarova (Ekhirit Nation, Buryat People), Cultural Survival Executive Director. Galina served as program officer at the Swift Foundation, and prior to that, as policy and communications advisor for Tebtebba. She has represented the Indigenous Peoples’ Major Group at the UN on issues such as the Sustainable Development Goals and the Post-2015 Development Agenda, and has led Indigenous experts to review safeguards for Indigenous Peoples for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change’s Green Climate Fund. Previously, Galina was the Russia program director at Pacific Environment, where she organized direct actions to block pipeline construction in the Altai region of Siberia, to close a toxic paper mill on Lake Baikal, and to stop a hydro-dam from flooding Evenk Peoples’ lands. Galina holds a Master’s degree in Public Administration from the University of New Mexico and served on the board of International Funders for Indigenous Peoples for seven years.


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Cultural Survival advocates for Indigenous Peoples' rights and supports Indigenous communities’ self-determination, cultures and political resilience since 1972. We envision a future that respects and honors Indigenous Peoples' inherent rights and dynamic cultures, deeply and richly interwoven in lands, languages, spiritual traditions, and artistic expression, rooted in self-determination and self-governance.

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