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个人简介
Dr. William D. Lopez is a Clinical Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health and Faculty Director of Public Scholarship at the National Center for Institutional Diversity. He is the author of the book, Separated: Family and Community in the Aftermath of an Immigration Raid, published by Johns Hopkins University Press.
As a Clinical Assistant Professor, William teaches "Health Impacts of Immigration Law Enforcement in the U.S." This class focuses on the violence of immigration enforcement on the individual, family, and community levels and asks what we, as researchers and advocates, can do to address it. Themes include militarized immigration raids, ICE and local police collaboration, routinized fear, the stigma of being targeted by ICE, and the links between state violence in Latinx, Arab and Muslim, and Black communities. His current public health research considers 1) the ways in which fear of immigration enforcement impacts health service utilization in mixed-status communities and 2) community responses to large scale immigration work raids. Dr. Lopez also teaches a variety of public health classes, such as Health Program Planning and Health Communication, both residentially and online.
As the Faculty Director of Public Scholarship, William leads efforts to support the production, dissemination, and application of public scholarship, and is the managing editor of Spark, the online magazine of the NCID.
William has been fortunate to collaborate both in his research and advocacy with the Washtenaw Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights and Synod Community Services, which operate the Washtenaw County ID Program.
As a Clinical Assistant Professor, William teaches "Health Impacts of Immigration Law Enforcement in the U.S." This class focuses on the violence of immigration enforcement on the individual, family, and community levels and asks what we, as researchers and advocates, can do to address it. Themes include militarized immigration raids, ICE and local police collaboration, routinized fear, the stigma of being targeted by ICE, and the links between state violence in Latinx, Arab and Muslim, and Black communities. His current public health research considers 1) the ways in which fear of immigration enforcement impacts health service utilization in mixed-status communities and 2) community responses to large scale immigration work raids. Dr. Lopez also teaches a variety of public health classes, such as Health Program Planning and Health Communication, both residentially and online.
As the Faculty Director of Public Scholarship, William leads efforts to support the production, dissemination, and application of public scholarship, and is the managing editor of Spark, the online magazine of the NCID.
William has been fortunate to collaborate both in his research and advocacy with the Washtenaw Interfaith Coalition for Immigrant Rights and Synod Community Services, which operate the Washtenaw County ID Program.
研究兴趣
论文共 55 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PRACTICE (2024)
William D Lopez,Katherine M Collins, Guadalupe R Cervantes,Dalila Reynosa, Julio C Salazar,Nicole L Novak
Practicing Anthropologyno. 1 (2022): 31-35
Rural mental healthno. 1 (2022): 59-63
PEDAGOGY IN HEALTH PROMOTIONno. 2 (2022): 95-98
Meisui Liu,Meg Simione,Meghan E Perkins,Sarah N Price,Mandy Luo,William Lopez, Viktoria M Catalan, Szu-Yu Tina Chen,Carlos Torres,Gracia M Kwete, Molly Seigel,Andrea G Edlow,
Monika Doshi,Richard Bryce, Hannah Mesa, Marta Carolina Ibarra Avila,William D. Lopez,Maria Militzer,Spring Quinones,Ruth Kraut,Raymond Rion,Paul J. Fleming
SSM - Qualitative Research in Health (2022): 100050
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