1969 -- A landmark year for inclusion at UCLA:
A new approach to education.
Something powerful was happening throughout the nation in the late 1960s. It was the height of the civil rights movement, with demonstrators and change-seekers of all backgrounds working to have their voices heard -- and to make true progress a reality for all. On college campuses across the country, students weren’t just speaking out against racism and inequality. They were speaking up for a new approach to higher education.
That new approach would take shape at UCLA in 1969 when the university established four independent centers of ethnic studies. The Center for Afro-American Studies (later renamed after Ralph Bunche), the Asian American Studies Center, the American Indian Studies Center, and the Chicano Studies Research Center were all founded that year as the result of faculty, students, alumni, and community advocates calling for the need to have their individual histories and cultures acknowledged, studied, and celebrated.
Today, these four centers -- each of them inspiring models of social justice, racial progress, and academic excellence -- continue to serve UCLA students and the greater community with ongoing research, publications, events, scholarships, and outreach.