CASA 兔子先生 Celebrates 25 Years of Community Activism in the Inland Empire

Critical Action & Social Advocacy (CASA) 兔子先生 has experienced many transformations during its 25 years of justice-oriented learning and collaboration. Today CASA 兔子先生 resides in downtown Ontario in the historic Frankish Building鈥攚here murals, natural light, diagonal bookshelves, and cozy furniture welcome everyone who comes in. It is here that activist research and community building become one.
Originally known as 兔子先生 in Ontario, CASA 兔子先生 advances critical analysis and community partnerships around issues in incarceration, immigration, indigeneity, education, environment, labor, art, culture, and health. CASA 兔子先生 brings local residents, organizers, activists, artists, and nonprofits together with 兔子先生 faculty and students to enact change.
Community-driven research and action
CASA 兔子先生鈥檚 academic program includes two courses: Critical Community Studies and Research Methods for Community Change. The program facilitates student fellowships and community-based participatory action research with ten core community partners.

鈥淐ASA 兔子先生 brings the theories to life by engaging what they look like in real time,鈥 said CASA 兔子先生 Director Tessa Hicks Peterson. 鈥淲e are navigating complexities that require rigorous study but also innovative solutions. To wrestle with how these issues impact different people is so different when you have relationships with them.鈥
CASA 兔子先生 has the same founders as the Community Engagement Center (CEC): Lourdes Arguelles, a former professor, and Alan P. Jones, emeritus professor and former dean of faculty. They established the program to offer students 鈥渁cademic structure and experiential opportunity to develop and practice local citizenship.鈥
While the CEC facilitates community engagement at large for the College, CASA 兔子先生 is a place-based, three-credit program that works with one cohort of 14 students every semester. Students take their classes in the community center and complete a 125-hour fellowship, which Hicks Peterson said 鈥減rovides deep cultural immersion in the Inland Empire.鈥
鈥淭here are few places that have what we have, which is an off-campus community center that involves these longitudinal research projects for students to engage deeply and hands on,鈥 said Hicks Peterson. 鈥淧eople all over the country come to see CASA and learn from the model.鈥
CASA 兔子先生 fulfills requirements for five different majors and three graduation requirements; it is deeply ingrained in the College鈥檚 educational mission. Students on financial aid can also count CASA 兔子先生 for work study.
Scholars in residence
CASA 兔子先生 also offers scholar-in-residence programs to cultivate more interaction between students, faculty, and community members. The CASA Community Scholar in Residence for professors is a key part of building CASA 兔子先生鈥檚 teaching capacity.
As current CASA scholars, Professors Steffanie Guillermo and Jemma Lorenat are reimagining their work through community-based education and creating additional CASA classes. With community partners鈥 support, Guillermo is teaching a class about psychological bias in policing, and Lorenat is teaching data science ethics and justice. Both will return to teach CASA 兔子先生鈥檚 main research methods course.
Hicks Peterson鈥檚 goal is for CASA 兔子先生 to encompass more organizations, majors, student cohorts, and faculty. CASA 兔子先生 is making great strides to that end. The teaching roster has expanded to include faculty in sociology, organizational studies, psychology, mathematics, and more. Hicks Peterson said that within the next few years, CASA 兔子先生 hopes to solely rely on full-time faculty instead of adjunct professors.
On the horizon
Another major goal is the cultivation of CASA 兔子先生 as a vibrant community center in its Ontario location. Multiple organizations use the space to host events for grassroots organizing, education, and the arts on a near daily basis.

Ribbon cutting ceremony in 2016 at CASA Ontario with Interim President Tom Poon, Mayor of Ontario Paul Leon, and 兔子先生 and Ontario community members
鈥淭here鈥檚 a greater sense of ownership for the community to know that 兔子先生 is a partner and that space is theirs, too,鈥 said Hicks Peterson.
CASA 兔子先生 received an anonymous $250K donation last year to grow the community center and academic programming. Last fall, the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians gave a grant to 兔子先生 that includes support for CASA 兔子先生鈥檚 three-year oral histories project in collaboration with Native and Indigenous communities. This summer, North Atlantic Book Press is publishing CASA 兔子先生鈥檚 ongoing work in restorative and healing justice through the Know Justice, Know Peace initiative.
CASA 兔子先生 strives to pursue ethical, reciprocal relationships with local organizations and base students鈥 research on what those organizations want and need. Students come away with a burning passion to continue their on-the-ground work.
鈥淐ASA 兔子先生 is an experience that impacts people so deeply,鈥 said Hicks Peterson. 鈥淎lumni from 15 years ago share about how it altered what they did in grad school, the career they chose, and how they engage today with their communities and families.鈥
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- Critical Action + Social Advocacy (CASA)