From Athlete to Activist: One Person’s Story on Finding Their Voice

Date/Time
Date(s) - September 27, 2019
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Location
University YMCA

Categories


Mia Ives-Rublee, MSW, is a civil rights activist who found her voice through adapted athletics. She will speak about her experiences growing up, getting in to wheelchair track, attending college, and working in advocacy. In a world with so much chaos and noise, it’s hard to find a way to talk about the issues. Ives-Rublee will connect storytelling to activism, showing that no matter who you are you can make a difference in your community.

 

Mia Ives-Rublee is a disabled Asian American activist who founded and coordinates the Women’s March Disability Caucus. She got her undergraduate degree in Sociology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and obtained her Master’s degree in Social Work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. For six years she worked helping disabled people gain access to employment opportunities at the NC Division of Vocational Rehabilitation Services. In 2016, she broke into the national spotlight by helping organize the first Women’s March in Washington, DC. She pushed to ensure that their platform was inclusive of disabled women and ensured that their march would be one of the most accessible in history. She was honored with the Glamour Women of the Year Award and the UNC School of Social Work Distinguished Alumni Award for her work. Currently, she contracts with numerous businesses and organizations to help them use a disability justice lens in their own work and increase the integration of disabled people.

This lecture is hosted in partnership with Conversation Café, hosted by Diversity and Social Justice Education, a unit of OIIR at the University of Illinois with additional funding from the Student Cultural Programming Fee. FREE LUNCH will be available at this talk.

 

This lecture is part of the Fall 2019 Friday Forum Lecture Series, “Womxn Rise Up.” To learn more about the Fall 2019 Friday Forum Lecture series, visit: universityymca.org/friday-forum

 

This series was made possible thanks to the generous support of our partners:

AAUW—Champaign-Urbana Branch,Asian American Cultural Center, Center for Advanced Study, Center for Global Studies, Channing Murray Foundation, College of ACES, College of Applied Health Sciences, Department of Asian American Studies, Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Diversity and Social Justice Education, First Mennonite Church, Gender and Women Studies, Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities (IPRH), La Casa Cultural Latina, LGBT Resource Center, Social Action Committee at Urbana Champaign Unitarian Universalist Church, Urbana-Champaign Friends Meeting, Wesley United Methodist Church & Student Center, and the Women and Gender in Global Perspectives Program

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