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A Decent Home Documentary Screening

UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Room 2343
los angeles, united states
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Thu, Feb 6, 6pm - 8:30pm PST

Event description

The UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies and Luskin Center for Innovation invite you to a screening of A Decent Home, a feature-length documentary addressing class and economic inequity that features the lives and challenges of mobile home park residents in securing affordable housing. We will provide food and light refreshments for our guests during the movie. Afterward, we will hold a moderated discussion and Q&A with Director Sara Terry, Policy Director Miguel Miguel of Pacoima Beautiful, and Assistant Professor Jose Loya. The conversation will touch upon the film's contents and Miguel and Loya's research on equitable home financing, mortgage disparities, and barriers to homeownership for communities of color in Los Angeles.

About the Moderator:

Greg Pierce (he/him) is faculty in the Department of Urban Planning, the research and co-executive director of the Luskin Center for Innovation, and the director of the Human Right to Water Solutions Lab. He is also an affiliate of the Lewis Center for Regional Studies. Greg’s research examines how infrastructure planning and policy efforts perpetuate or address service inequities and demonstrates how communities cope with and overcome them. One of his focus areas is environmental inequities in U.S. mobile home parks.

About Our Speakers:

Sara Terry is the director and producer of the award-winning PBS documentary, A Decent Home, about mobile home parks and the wealth gap. A Sundance Documentary Fellow and a Guggenheim Fellow in Photography, her films have been supported by Ford Foundation, Sundance, Cal Humanities, IDA/Pare Lorentz, Jonathan Logan Family Foundation and many others. She is a mid-career director whose work explores how we define our humanity and the role community plays in helping us understand how we live that humanity. Her first film, Fambul Tok, premiered at SXSW in 2011 and her second film, FOLK, premiered at Nashville Film Festival in 2013.

José Loya is an Assistant Professor in Urban Planning at UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs and faculty affiliate with the Chicano Studies Research Center. His research addresses Latino issues in urban areas by connecting ethno-racial inequality and contextual forces at the neighborhood, metropolitan, and national levels. His research discusses several topics related to stratification in homeownership, including ethno-racial, gender, and Latino disparities in mortgage access. José received his PhD. at the University of Pennsylvania in Sociology and holds a master’s degree in Statistics from the Wharton School of Business at Penn. Prior to graduate school, José worked for several years in community development and affordable housing in South Florida.

Miguel Miguel is a Policy Director for Pacoima Beautiful, where he manages policy operations, staff training and development, and research on new policies supporting residents in the Northeast San Fernando Valley. He graduated from the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs in 2023 with a Master's degree in Urban and Regional Planning, where he conducted research under Assistant Professor Jose Loya. Preparing housing and Census data, he organized relationships between the mortgage and housing markets to investigate for homeownership disparaties in communities of color. He was previously an environmental intern for the City of Los Angeles and received a Bachelor's degree from California Lutheran University in Geological and Earth Sciences/Geosciences/Paleontology. 

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