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  <title>Muslim Inclusion and Empowerment: from Hollywood to Higher Education</title>
  <description>Since 9/11, Muslims have occupied the U.S. public and political spheres as threats to national security, as victims of hate crimes, as targets of torture and war, and as a community to be included in diversity initiatives. This insightful panel will explore Muslim inclusion and representation in a variety of contexts, including education, politics, and the entertainment industry.  Shafiqa Ahmadi&amp;amp;nbsp;is an associate professor of Clinical Education at the Rossier School of Education and the co-director for USC’s Center for Education, Identity, and Social Justice. She is an expert on diversity and legal protection of underrepresented students, including female Muslims, and is the co-editor of&amp;amp;nbsp;Islamophobia in Higher Education: Combating Discrimination and Creating Understanding. Maytha Alhassen&amp;amp;nbsp;holds a PhD in American Studies and Ethnicity from USC. She is the writer of the report,&amp;amp;nbsp;Haqq and Hollywood: Illuminating 100 Years of Muslim Tropes and How to Transform Them, and producer and writer of the&amp;amp;nbsp;Golden Globe and Peabody­–winning Hulu series&amp;amp;nbsp;Ramy. Evelyn Alsultany&amp;amp;nbsp;is the author of&amp;amp;nbsp;Broken: The Failed Promise of Muslim Inclusion&amp;amp;nbsp;and&amp;amp;nbsp;Arabs and Muslims in the Media: Race and Representation after 9/11. She is an associate professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at USC, has served as a consultant for Hollywood studios, and co-authored the Obeidi-Alsultany Test with criteria to help Hollywood improve representations of Muslims. Hajar Yazdiha&amp;amp;nbsp;is an assistant professor of Sociology, faculty affiliate of the Equity Research Institute, and a 2022–23 Ford Foundation Fellow&amp;amp;nbsp;at the USC Dornsife School of Letters, Arts, and Sciences. She is an expert on the racial politics of inclusion and exclusion and is the author of&amp;amp;nbsp;The Struggle for the People’s King: How Politics Transforms the Memory of the Civil Rights Movement. Moderator:&amp;amp;nbsp;Varun Soni&amp;amp;nbsp;is the&amp;amp;nbsp;Dean of Religious Life at USC, University Fellow at USC Annenberg’s Center on Public Diplomacy, and an adjunct professor at the USC School of Religion. His writings have appeared in the&amp;amp;nbsp;Washington Post,&amp;amp;nbsp;Huffington Post,&amp;amp;nbsp;Crosscurrents,&amp;amp;nbsp;Jewish Journal, and&amp;amp;nbsp;Harvard Divinity Bulletin.  </description>
  <author_name>IDEAS IN ACTION | USC's Podcast Series</author_name>
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