Kali Rodriguez-Peña’s Mélange

The Louis Armstrong House Museum 34-56 107th Street, Queens, NY, United States

LAHM invites you to enjoy jazz with traditional influences from around the world in the intimacy of our Jazz Room with carefully curated concerts dedicated to our community! Seats are not assigned and will be granted to ticket holders at a first come first served basis. Orders are limited to...

$7.00

The Changing Tide in Haiti: Can the Diaspora Steer the Tide?

The recent earthquakes and the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse have raised old and new questions on the sovereignty of the people living in the Black democratic republic of the Western Hemisphere. Join us for a community conversation on how the Diaspora and Haitians can work together to help steer the tide.

The Thanksgiving Sewage Backup of 2019: Infrastructural Failure and Environmental Racism in South Ozone Park, Queens

Natalie Bump Vena is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Urban Studies. She received her J.D. and Ph.D. from Northwestern University’s School of Law and Department of Anthropology. Her research and teaching interests concern environmental policymaking in U.S. cities. She is admitted to the New York State Bar. Vena’s long-term research examines the history of natural resources preservation in the Forest Preserve District of Cook County, which protects 69,000 acres of land encompassing Chicago. Vena also has an active research agenda in New York City. In addition to undertaking fieldwork and advocacy concerning a South Ozone Park community’s protracted recovery from a sewage backup that occurred in 2019, she is studying the implementation of New York’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (2019). In particular, she is examining the process of identifying the “disadvantaged communities” who are slated to receive 35% to 40% of benefits derived from the state’s green transition.