2022 CalSWEC Title IV-E Virtual Summit Series

The Title IV-E Summit is CalSWEC's largest annual event. This free child welfare conference is designed to bring social work practitioners, educators, and Title IV-E students together around a pertinent child welfare theme.  

WHO ATTENDS
  • Title IV-E Stipend Program Students & Graduates 
  • University Faculty & Staff
  • Tribal Community Partners
  • Public Child Welfare Agency Partners
  • Other Community Partners

THEME
The Impact of Intergenerational and Racial Trauma in Child Welfare

IV-E Summit Session 1 // February 9, 2022 // Watch Session 1 Here!

2:00 - 2:10 PM Welcome

2:10- 4:10 PM

Break @3pm

Impact of Intergenerational & Racial Trauma in Tribal Communities

PANELISTS -Bios
  • Vida Castaneda, MSW, Judicial Council of California
  • Robyn Gomez, MSW, Pukúu Cultural Community Services
  • Yaotl Mazahua, MSW, LA County DCFS, Tutcint Advisory Council, Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians
  • José Paez, LCSW, Ed.D, CSU Northridge
  • Pamela Villasenor, Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians
Panel moderated by MJ (Maleeka Jihad), MSW, CEO of MJ Consulting Firm Bio

Resources from our panelists

IV-E Summit Session 2 // March 2, 2022 //  Watch Session 2 Here!

2:00 - 2:10 PM Welcome
2:10- 3:00 PM

The Intersection of Racism and Homophobia in Child Welfare

  • PRESENTED by - Vida Khavar, LMFT, Family Builders - Bio

Resources from this workshop

3:00 - 3:10 PM
Break
3:10 - 4:10 PM 

Healing families with Trauma-Informed Care Practice and Cultural Humility

  • PRESENTED by - Keisha Clark, D.M., County of San Diego - Bio

Resources from this workshop

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PRESENTER AND COMMUNITY RESOURCE SHARING

  • Do you have an anti-racism and child welfare resource you would like to share with the wider IV-E community? PLEASE SUBMIT HERE

QUESTIONS?


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Partial funding for these meetings is provided by the CDSS and sponsorship through NASW-CA.  Interested in NASW-CA membership? Click here to learn more!

logo            NASW-CA                CDSS

UC Berkeley sits on the territory of xučyun (Huichin), the ancestral and unceded land of the Chochenyo speaking Ohlone people, the successors of the sovereign Verona Band of Alameda County. This land was and continues to be of great importance to the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe and other familial descendants of the Verona Band. 
We recognize that every member of the Berkeley community has, and continues to benefit from, the use and occupation of this land, since the institution’s founding in 1868. Consistent with our values of community, inclusion and diversity, we have a responsibility to acknowledge and make visible the university’s relationship to Native peoples. As members of the Berkeley community, it is vitally important that we not only recognize the history of the land on which we stand, but also, we recognize that the Muwekma Ohlone people are alive and flourishing members of the Berkeley and broader Bay Area communities today. Reference and credit for this land acknowledgement goes to the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe and Native American Student Development.