10th Summer Institute on Migration and Global Health

Oakland, June 22-25, 2015 MONDAY JUNE 22 TUESDAY JUNE 23 Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607 Plenary Sessions (Laurel Room) Plenary Sessions (Laurel Room)

8:00 – 8:30 Registration 8:30 – 8:45 Welcoming Remarks Xóchitl Castañeda, UC Berkeley 8:45 – 9:00 Introductions 9:00 – 9:30 General Perspective on Migration and Health Marc Schenker, UC Davis 9:30– 9:45 Discussion 9:45 – 10:00 Break 10:00 – 10:30 US Government Efforts Addressing Migrant Health Alfonso Rodriguez-Lainz, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 10:30– 10:45 Discussion 10:45 – 11:15 Access to Healthcare for Immigrant Populations Carmela Castellano-Garcia, California Primary Care Association 11:15-11:30 Discussion 11:30 – 12:15 Migration and Global Health Awards (See page 8-9) Presented by Xóchitl Castañeda, UC Berkeley Robert Ross, President and Chief Executive Officer, The California Endowment Gilbert Cedillo, Councilman, City Council District 1 Luis Alejo, Assemblyman, Watsonville, District 30 Paula Leite, Deputy Director, Migration Studies, Secretariat of Interior, Mexico 12:15 – 1:00 Lunch 1:00 – 2:25 Simultaneous Workshops: 1. The California Health Interview Survey: A Policy Tool to Assess Immigrant Health Access, Health and Integration I Ninez Ponce, UC Los Angeles (Eastmont Room) 2. Look, Listen and Understand: Mexican Migration Project Ethno-survey Nicté Soledad Castañeda Camey and María de Lourdes García Curiel, University of Guadalajara (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Outreach and Health Promotion I Alexis Wielunski and Sonia Lee, Health Outreach Partners (Laurel Room) 2:25 – 2:35 Break 2:35 – 4:00 Simultaneous Workshops: 1. The California Health Interview Survey: A Policy Tool to Assess Immigrant Health Access, Health and Integration II Ninez Ponce and Bogdan Rau, UC Los Angeles (Eastmont Room) 2. Qualitative Research Methodologies: Focus Groups Patricia Zavella, UC Santa Cruz and Lisa Goldman Rosas, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Outreach and Health Promotion II Alexis Wielunski and Sonia Lee, Health Outreach Partners (Laurel Room)

5:00 – 7:00 Welcoming Reception at District Oakland Lounge, 827 Washington Street, Oakland

10th Summer Institute on 2 Migration and Global Health TUESDAY JUNE 23 Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607 Plenary Sessions (Laurel Room)

8:15 – 9:15 Global Perspective and Current Actions on Migration, Human Mobility and Health Davide Mosca, International Organization for Migration 9:15 – 9:30 Discussion 9:30 – 10:00 Mexican Efforts to Improve the Health of their Migrants Gaspar Orozco Rios, Institute for Mexicans Abroad, Secretariat of Foreign Affairs, Mexico 10:00 – 10:15 Discussion 10:15– 10:30 Break 10:30 – 11:00 Climate Change, Environmental Migration, Health and Human Security Cristina Tirado, UC Los Angeles 11:00 – 11:15 Discussion 11:15 – 11:45 Migration and Mental Health - Ulysses Syndrome Joseba Achotegui, University of Barcelona 11:45 – 12:00 Discussion 12:00 – 1:00 Lunch and Poster Presentations (See page 6) 1:00 – 2:25 Simultaneous Workshops: 1. Research on Working Conditions and Immigrant Health Elena Ronda, University of Alicante, Spain (Eastmont Room) 2. Community Based Participatory Research Charlotte Chang, UC Berkeley (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Mental Health: “Prodigy Daughter” Documentary Mabel Valdiviezo, Haiku Films (Laurel Room) 2:25 – 2:35 Break 2:35 – 4:00 Simultaneous Workshops: 1. Research Methodologies among Farmworkers Rick Mines, independent consultant and Coburn Ward, San Joaquin General Hospital (Eastmont Room) 2. Data Sources on Migrant Health Alfonso Rodriguez-Lainz, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Migrant Children’s Mental Health Dori Espeso, University of Barcelona (Laurel Room)

3 2015 WEDNESDAY JUNE 24 THURSDAY JUNE 25 Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607 Migration and Women’s Health Plenary Sessions (Laurel Room)

8:15 – 8:25 Overview: Migration and Women’s Health Carol Camlin, UC 8:25 – 9:00 Kafala as Buzzword: Structure and Agency in the Hiring of Migrant Domestic Workers in Lebanon Sawsan Abdulrahim, American University of Beirut 9:00 – 9:15 Discussion 9:15 – 9:45 “I want to see a real nurse!”: Indian Immigrant Nurses in U.S. Urban Safety-Net Hospitals and Implications for Health Disparities Sheba George, UC Los Angeles 9:45 – 10:00 Discussion 10:00 – 10:15 Break 10:15 – 10:55 Human Trafficking and Health Cathy Zimmerman, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine 10:55 – 11:10 Discussion 11:10 – 11:45 Sex Trafficking, Migration and Health among Adolescents in Central America and Mexico Jay Silverman, UC 11:45 – 12:00 Discussion 12:00 – 1:00 Lunch and poster presentations (See page 7) 1:00 – 2:25 Simultaneous Workshops 1. Multi-regional Participatory Qualitative Research Methods and Models Carol S. Camlin and Nicolas Sheon, UC San Francisco (Eastmont Room) 2. Methods to Reach Vulnerable Female Populations I Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, University of and Jennifer Nazareno, UC San Francisco (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Moving from Research to Public Policy I Steven P. Wallace, UC Los Angeles and Xavier Morales, Latino Coalition for a Healthy California (Laurel Room) 2:25 – 2:35 Break 2:35 – 4:00 Simultaneous Workshops 1. Understanding and Improving Workplace Health of Immigrant Workers Marc Schenker, UC Davis and Dellanira Ruiz de Chavez, University of Zacatecas / IBIZA (Eastmont Room) 2. Methods to Reach Vulnerable Female Populations II Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, University of Southern California and Jennifer Nazareno, UC San Francisco (Lake Merritt Room) 3. Moving from Research to Public Policy II Steven P. Wallace, UC Los Angeles and Xavier Morales, Latino Coalition for a Healthy California (Laurel Room) 4:00 – 4:20 Closing Event: Presentation of certificates and group picture

6:00 – 10:00 Optional Social Activity: Ferry trip from Oakland to San Francisco and dinner (not included in registration fee)

10th Summer Institute on 4 Migration and Global Health THURSDAY JUNE 25 Simultaneous Activities. Please choose one option: Option 1: 9:30 – 11:30 Site Visit “Ventanilla de Salud” Program Mexican Consulate in San Francisco Location: 532 Folsom St, San Francisco, CA (transportation not provided, meet there) Option 2: 9:00 – 4:40 UCGHI-COEMH Students and PIMSA Research Workshops Location: Preservation Park (Ginn Room) 660 13th Street, Oakland, CA Agenda Option 2:

9:00-9:30 Welcome and Introductions Heather Riden, UC Davis, UC Global Health Institute, Center of Expertise on Migration and Health (UCGHI-COEMH) 9:30-10:00 PIMSA Presentation The Ulysses Syndrome in Political and Economic Migrants from Mexico and Central America Eva Moya, University of Texas, El Paso; Oscar Esparza del Villar, Autonomous University of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico; Leticia Calderón Chelius, Research Institute Jose Maria Luis Mora, Mexico; and Itzel Eguiluz, Research Institute Ortega y Gasset, Spain Student Presentations, Faculty Discussant: Erin Hamilton, UC Davis 10:00-10:30 Health Insurance and Immigrant Youth Krissia Martinez, UC Los Angeles 10:30-10:45 Break 10:45-11:15 The Context of Obesity among Mexican Immigrants Nallely Mejia, UC Berkeley 11:15-11:45 (In)secure Communities: Mental Health Status and Counseling Service Utilization among California Adolescents of Mexican Descent Diana Rivera, UC Berkeley 11:45 -12:45 Lunch Student Presentations, Faculty Discussant: Steven P. Wallace, UC Los Angeles 12:45 – 1:15 Direct and Structural Violence, Social Suffering, and the Forced Migration of Female Afghan Refugees: Implications for Public Health Policy and Practice Valerie Smith, UC Berkeley 1:15 – 1:45 Incidence of Acute Kidney Injury in California’s Agricultural Workers Sally Moyce, UC Davis Student Presentations, Faculty Discussant: David Lopez-Carr, UC Santa Barbara 1:45 – 2:15 Transnational Alienage: Institutional Inequality and Guatemalan Refugees in Southern Mexico Oscar Gil-Garcia, UC Los Angeles 2:15 – 2:45 You just don’t understand me: Language Proficiency As a Determinant of Children of Migrants Mental Health Emerald Nguyen & Joanna Hale, UC Davis 2:45 – 3:00 Break PIMSA Presentations 3:00 – 3:30 Impact of Migration on Mental Health and Family Functioning in Mexican Men Yvette Flores, UC Davis and Ericka Cervantes Pacheco, Michoacana University of San Nicolas Hidalgo, Mexico 3:30 – 4:00 Despierta: Developing Educational Strengths. Promoting Individual Responsible Teen Awareness Nicte Castaneda, University of Guadalajara; MaryLou de Leon Siantz, Lisceth Brazil-Cruz, and Rosa Manzo; UC Davis 4:00 – 4:30 Networking & Wrap-up

5 2015 POSTER SESSION - TUESDAY JUNE 23 POSTER SESSION- WEDNESDAY JUNE 24 Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607

12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

• Adolescent Pregnancy, Depression & the Migration Experience: A Binational Analysis MaryLou De Leon Siantz, Nicte Castañeda Camey, Lisceth Brazil-Cruz, Rosa Manzo, Maria de Lourdes García Curiel. UC Davis and University of Guadalajara

• Integrated Primary Care Mental Health Services for Vulnerable Populations along the U.S.- Mexico Border Jessica McCurley, M.S., Doctoral Student, SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology

• Posttraumatic Growth and Migration Judith Lopez-Peñaloza PhD., Psychology Department, University of Michoacán, México

• Mitigation of Out-Migration in Climate Challenged Gangetic Delta Region of India Pranaya Venkatapuram, Global HealthShare Initiative, Dept. of Molecular and Cellular Biology, UC, Davis

10th Summer Institute on 6 Migration and Global Health POSTER SESSION - TUESDAY JUNE 23 POSTER SESSION- WEDNESDAY JUNE 24 Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607

12:00 pm to 1:00 pm

• Collateral Damage: The Association Between State Level Anti-Immigration Policies and Birth Outcomes Among Foreign-Born and US-Born Latina Women Aresha Martinez--Cardoso, MSPH PhD Candidate, Health Behavior and Health Education School of Public Health, University of Michigan

• How am I going to work? Barriers to employment for immigrant Latinos and Latinas living with HIV in Toronto Dr. Angel Serrano-Sánchez, faculty member, Division of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Guanajuato, Campus León, México

• Assessing the Impact of Having a Driver’s Licenses on The Mental and Emotional Well- Being of Latino Undocumented Individuals Liliana Campos, Doctoral Student, Clinical Psychology, University of San Francisco

• Undocumented Migrants and their Right to Health: Barriers in Accessing Health Care Services in Japan Herlyn Gail Alegre, Graduate School of Asia-Pacific Studies, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan

7 2015 MIGRATION AND GLOBAL HEALTH AWARDEES Location: The California Endowment, 7th Floor 1111 Broadway Oakland, CA 94607

Dr. Robert Ross Robert K. Ross, M.D., is President and Chief Executive Officer forThe California Endowment. During his tenure at The California Endowment, the foundation has focused on the health needs of underserved Californians by championing the cause of health coverage for all children, strengthening the capacity of community health centers, improving health services for farm worker and ex-offender populations, and strengthening the pipeline for bringing racial and ethnic diversity to the health professions. His passion and leadership in using philanthropy to reach those in need of healthcare in California has been consistently shown through a variety of innovative programs and initiatives that utilize multidisciplinary approaches to improving the health and well being of residents in low-income communities.

Dr. Ross has been actively involved in community and professional activities at both the local and national level. He served as a member of the National Vaccine Advisory Committee, on the board of the National Marrow Donor Program, on the President’s Summit for America’s Future and as chairman of the national Boost for Kids Initiative. Prior to taking the Endowment’s helm in 2000, he served as director of the Health and Human Services Agency for the County of San Diego from 1993 to 2000. He was Commissioner of Public Health for the City of Philadelphia from 1990 to 1993. He earned his undergraduate, masters in Public Administration and medical degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. Councilmember Gil Cedillo First elected 14 years ago in the Assembly, Cedillo has remained first and foremost, a public servant. He is currently a member of the Los Angeles City Council for District 1, succeeding Ed Reyes after his election on May 21, 2013. Cedillo was a Democratic member of both the California State Assembly and the California State Senate. He contends that the “Immigrant agenda is an American agenda”. Cedillo’s advocacy on behalf of marginalized communities is legendary. He has become the voice for society’s least, last and lost. His causes have ranged from becoming a formidable counterweight to Proposition 187 and Pete Wilson’s inhumane crusade against undocumented families, up to his unwavering support for Filipino American World War II veterans, the uninsured, low-income families, the homeless and most recently, AB 540 or the “dream students”. His Cedillo-Alarcon bill pumped $50 million into infrastructure funds for community clinics serving the uninsured, low-income, mostly undocumented patients. He has also authored close to a hundred bills that were signed and chaptered into California law by four different Governors, namely: Pete Wilson, Gray Davis, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jerry Brown. Most were groundbreaking legislation that ’s Brownfields, state oversight and fair share zoning for city transitional and emergency homeless shelters (SB 2), workers’ right to organize (AB 1889), downtown rebound (AB 2870) and more recently, the groundbreaking Act (AB 130 and 131).

10th Summer Institute on 8 Migration and Global Health MIGRATION AND GLOBAL HEALTH AWARDEES

Assemblymember Luis Alejo Luis A. Alejo was raised in Watsonville, a small agricultural town in the heart of California’s Central Valley. From an auspicious beginning, Alejo developed a sense of personal commitment to helping his community. In 2013, as California State Assembly member for the 30th District, Alejo proved his commitment by authoring landmark legislation on behalf of the disadvantaged and underrepresented throughout California.

After finishing his graduate and professional studies, Alejo began his legal career, championing the rights of working families as a staff attorney for California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation and the Monterey County Superior Court. Representing thousands of individuals who couldn’t afford private attorneys, Alejo helped disadvantaged families face a myriad of legal problems.

Alejo was first elected to the Assembly in November 2010 to represent the 28th Assembly District, which consisted of San Benito County, the , North Monterey County, South Santa Clara County and the city of Watsonville. In November of 2012, he was re-elected to the Assembly as the representative of the newly formed 30th Assembly District. Alejo’s new district now contains a greater portion of the Monterey County coast and south Santa Clara County. Currently, Assembly member Alejo sits on four standing committees. During his first term in the State Assembly, Alejo focused on bringing jobs back to California as well as authoring legislation in the areas of education, healthcare, public safety, civil rights and public access to government. In his second term, Alejo built on his success by authoring, among others, two historic pieces of legislation in 2013. In addition, Alejo managed to get AB 10 signed into law, raising the minimum wage in California to $10 an hour, the highest in the nation. Income inequality has always been a pressing issue for Alejo, whose first bill as an Assembly member proposed raising the minimum wage. AB 10 was the culmination of three years’ work and helps ensure equality and respect for our state’s minimum wage workers.

Paula Leite

General Director of the Policy Migration Unit of the Mexican Secretariat of Government. Leite is an advisory board member of the Migration and Health Research Center, University of California Berkeley and Davis. She obtained her B.S. in Human Geography from the University of Lisbon and Masters in Demography from El Colegio de Mexico. She was Director of Socioeconomic Studies and International Migration in the National Population Council and advisor to the Office for Population, Migration and Religious Affairs. She has developed and coordinated numerous research projects and publications focusing primarily on the phenomenon of migration of Mexicans to the United States and migration policies. For ten consecutive years Paula Leite has been the lead person of the Migration and Health Report; a binational collaborative effort that documents the health conditions of immigrants in the Americas.

9 2015 SPEAKERS Alexis Wielunski Alexis provides program consultation services and information services to community organizations and health centers in order to increase their capacity to provide effective outreach services to underserved populations. Prior to Health Outreach Partners, Alexis spent four years coordinating a teen pregnancy prevention program in Alameda County. The program developed the leadership of young women by utilizing popular education methods and a peer health education model. Alexis also worked for the State of California’s Sexually Transmitted Disease Control Branch to develop youth- friendly assessment tools for clinics. Alexis has volunteered at the Berkeley Free Clinic for almost 10 years. There, she provides client-centered HIV Test Counseling, served as a Certified Enrollment Counselor, and training for new volunteers. Alexis earned her Master’s in Public Health from San Jose State University where she has been a Teaching Associate for Health Communication and Technology and a Lecturer for Health Issues in a Multicultural Society at San Jose State University. Alfonso Rodriguez-Lainz Migrant Health Specialist for the CDC’s Division of Global Migration and Quarantine. Dr. Rodriguez’s main responsibilities include acting as a liaison, coordinator, planner and project lead for domestic migrant health activities. Prior to joining the CDC, Dr. Rodriguez was the senior epidemiologist for the California Office of Binational Border Health, California Department of Public Health. He has extensive experience in coordinating cross-border surveillance and public health projects between California, Mexico and Latin America. Dr. Rodriguez has a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of California at Davis. He has coauthored many peer-reviewed publications and several border and migrant health reports. He also teaches courses on migrant health, global surveillance and international epidemiology at SDSU Graduate School of Public Health.

Bogdan Rau Bogdan is the Online Dissemination Manager for the California Health Interview Survey (CHIS). He manages the development, implementation and maintenance of multiple public health surveillance tools powered by The California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), including AskCHIS, CHIS’ flagship online dissemination product, and AskCHIS Neighborhood Edition, a new health query system that provides health information and visualizations for California’s zip codes and cities. Bogdan earned his MPH with a concentration in epidemiolgy from the San Diego State University Graduate School of Public Health, andhis undergraduate degree in biological sciences from the University of California, Irvine. Carmela Castellano-Garcia, Esq. President and CEO of the California Primary Care Association (CPCA), overseeing a membership association of more than 1,100 nonprofit, community clinics and health centers (CCHCs) which serve more than 5.6 million patients a year. Ms. Castellano-Garcia has been committed to advancing multicultural health policy issues for 24 years, focusing on cultural and linguistic competency in health care delivery, ensuring the viability of safety net providers, health care reform, and access to care for vulnerable populations. During her tenure at CPCA, community health centers have had significant income growth, more than tripling their collective income. Patients served increased 100 percent during this same period from over 2 million to 5.6 million, and tot annual encounters grew by more than 8 million. Under her leadership, Federal funding to CCHCs has increased 212 percent.

10th Summer Institute on 10 Migration and Global Health Carol Camlin Assistant Professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences and the Division of Prevention Science at UCSF. She is leading an NIMH-funded K01 study to assess how women’s participation in mobility in Kenya contributes to high HIV infection risk. She is also leading smaller studies to test novel strategies to sample mobile populations of women, to explore how mobility of HIV-positive women affects their perceptions of empowerment, and their engagement in HIV care programs. She is co-investigator of two randomized controlled trials in sub-Saharan Africa, leading the qualitative evaluation of the Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health (SEARCH) trial, and the STARTs study, which tests a clinic based intervention to accelerate anti-retroviral therapy initiation among Ugandan patients. She is preparing to lead a five year NIMH R01-funded study to examine the impact of population mobility on HIV transmission dynamics and care cascade outcomes in 12 East African communities.

Cathy Zimmerman Dr. Zimmerman is a recognized expert in the area of health and human trafficking and a senior staff member of the Gender, Violence and Health Centre (GVHC). Dr. Zimmerman conducted some of the first-ever research projects on health and trafficking, including two studies in Europe with women in post-trafficking services and a recent survey of men, women, and children of post-trafficking services in Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam. She is currently leading a multi-country impact assessment of the International Labour Organization’s Work in Freedom Programme in Nepal, India, and Bangladesh; research on health and labour exploitation in South America and Central Asia; and research for the UK Department of Health on health services for trafficked people. She is also a co-author of the WHO Ethical and Safety Recommendations for Interviewing Trafficked Women and co-editor of Caring for Trafficked Persons: Guidance for Health Care Professionals. Charlotte Chang Associate Project Scientist and Coordinator of Research to Practice and Evaluation at UC Berkeley’s Labor Occupational Health Program. Dr. Chang has 15 years of experience in public health, and her interests are in research to practice, evaluation, participatory research, partnerships for health, and immigrant worker health and safety, particularly in the construction and restaurant industries. At UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, she teaches a course on Social Justice and Worker Health as well as Health and Social Behavior for the Online-On-Campus Master of Public Health program. Coburn Ward Dr. Coburn Ward grew up in Berkeley, California. He has a B.A. in Mathematics from UC Berkeley and a PhD from the University of Chicago in Mathematics. He has lived and taught in Stockton, California for over 30 years. He is a Professor emeritus of Mathematics from the University of the Pacific. For over a decade Coburn has been consulting for San Joaquin General Hospital assisting residency programs in design and analysis of research projects.

11 2015 Cristina Tirado-von der Pahlen Dr. Tirado has been working on food, nutrition, climate change and sustainable development with state and federal government agencies. She has served as a food adviser for Latin America WHO (World Health Organization) Regional Food Adviser in Europe, Coordinator of the WHO Surveillance Program and Director of the PHI’s Center for Climate and Health in California. She is also an adviser for several United Nation organizations and lectures at the UCLA Institute of Environment and Sustainability. She focuses on policy analysis and on the co-benefits of climate adaptation and mitigation. Along with her many other accomplishments she was contributing author of the health chapter of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 4AR and she has authored numerous research and policy publications and books. She is a DVM, with MS/PhD degrees in environmental sciences from Cornell University. David López-Carr Dr. López-Carr is a professor of Geography at the University of California, Santa Barbara His areas of expertise include finding associations between population, health, rural development, agriculture, and marine and forest resource in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. He has (co)authored approximately 100 scholarly publications that have received awards from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, the Latin American Specialty Group (SG) of the Association of American Geographers (AAG), the Population SG of the AAG, the Nystrom Prize and much more. He was a coordinating lead author of the United Nations Environment Program’s (UNEP) Global Environmental Outlook (Geo-5) in preparation for the Rio de Janeiro 2012 World Summit. López-Carr has lived, worked, and traveled extensively in Latin America and in over 70 countries worldwide. He speaks Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, French, and rudimentary Q’eqchí Maya. Davide Mosca A native of Taranto, Italy, Dr. Mosca specialized in Emergency Surgery at the University of Modena. Initially, he worked for the Italian Technical Cooperation as a surgeon but eventually shifted his focus towards public health. In 1994, he joined the International Organization for Migration, where he designed programs for the reintegration of internally displaced people mostly refugess and demobilized soldiers. In 1996, he relocated to Angola to aid with post conflict programs of the UNAVEM III Mission. From 1998 to 2008 he worked in Nairobi as Regional Medical Officer for Africa and the Middle East; during this time, he coordinated emergency health programs where he assisted in the medical evacuation of civilians affected by the war in Iraq. In 2008, Dr Mosca was appointed as the Director of Migration Health Department at IOM, headquartered in Geneva, where he continues providing health to migrants worldwide. Dellanira Ruiz Medical Surgeon by training, Dr. Ruiz de Chávez Ramírez received her Masters and PhD on Health Sciences in Occupational Health. She is a member of the National System of Researchers Level I in México in the field of social sciences with a specialty in the mental health of workers. She is also a Member of the Mexican Association of Public Health Education (AMESP), the Research Institute of Occupational Health (IISO) of the University of Guadalajara, México, and of the Network of Researchers on Psychosocial Factors at Work A.C.

10th Summer Institute on 12 Migration and Global Health Dori Espeso Montagud Professor at the University of Barcelona teaches the Master’s program in “Mental Health and Psychological Interventions with Immigrants, Refugees and Minorities.” She is also a Professor for Psychiatrists and Clinical Psychologists in the Public University of Catalan Health Service. She has a PHD from the University of Valencia in Spain and the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia. Dr. Espeso has been Head of Section, at the Psychiatric Clinic of the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, Child Psychiatrist in the Institute of Healthcare in Girona, Spain and a child psychiatrist at Service Psychopathological and Psychosocial Immigrant and Refugees. She is also a member of the Communitarian Program for Immigration and Health in Girona, Réseau Européen, the World Psychiatric Association -Transcultural Section (WPA-TP), and the World Association of Cultural Psychiatry (WCPA). Elena Ronda Co-coordinator of the Immigration and Health Program of the Biomedical Research Networking Centres (CIBER) in Spain. She has been involved in the start of several projects related to the health of migrants and the link between socioeconomic determinants in both Spain and Europe. She is currently the leader of the ITSAL (Immigration, work and health) project. ITSAL is an on-going project launched in Spain involving several occupationalhealth research groups. Its objective is to analyse employment and working conditions among immigrant workers and the relationship of these to health using different methodologies. Erin Hamilton Dr. Hamilton is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at UC Davis. She earned her PhD in Sociology from the University of Texas at Austin in 2009. She studies international migration, health, and social demography. She is interested in the social determinants of contemporary international migration and the health consequences of migration for migrants and their children. Jay Silverman Director of Research for the Center on Gender Equity and Health and a Professor of Medicine and Global Public Health at UCSD. He is a leading global researcher on understanding and preventing gender-based violence against adolescent and adult women (e.g., intimate partner violence, sexual violence, sex trafficking). Dr. Silverman has led multiple major federally, foundation and UN-funded studies of gender-based violence across multiple global regions regarding effects of GBV on women’s and girls’ reproductive and sexual health. These have included UN, State Department and NIH-funded studies on the prevalence and nature of sex trafficking, and consequent risk for violence and HIV, with a focus on South and Southeast Asia and Latin America. He has published over 150 peer-reviewed scholarly papers on these issues, many in top-tier scientific journals. Jennifer Nazareno Ph.D. (c) at the University of California, San Francisco’s Medical Sociology Program. Her dissertation is entitled, “The Outsourced State: The Retraction of Public Caregiving in America.” The study topic is historically contextualized within the deinstitutionalization era (1960-1980) and the U.S. government’s broken promise to provide sufficient funding for community housing and health care and mental health services. Emerging from these trends, she examined the emergence of government-subsidized immigrant-owned and operated long- term care businesses that have provided housing, custodial care and medical services to the racial/ ethnic minority, elderly poor with serious chronic mental illness, medical and physical disabilities. Jennifer Nazareno will be a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Brown University, School of Public Health starting in the Fall 2015. 13 2015 Joseba Achotegui Dr. Achotegui is a professor of the University of Barcelona, Director of SAPPIR (Psychopathological and Psychosocial Support Service for Immigrants and Refugees) at the Hospital of Saint Peter Claver in Barcelona. Since 1997, he has been the Director of the Postgraduate Course “Mental health and psychological support for immigrants, refugees and minority group members” at the University de Barcelona. He was awarded the Solidarity Award by the Catalan Parliament in 1997 for his work with immigrants groups. He is also Coordinator of the international task force on “The Ulysses Syndrome” sponsored by the European Parliament Committee on Citizens’ Freedoms and Rights. Dr. Achotegui is also Secretary General of the Transcultural Psychiatry Section of the World Psychiatric Association, and author of the online blog “Salud mental en tiempos difíciles” Mabel Valdiviezo Mabel Valdiviezo is an award winning filmmaker and alumni of the Sundance Producers Conference who crafts films on socially relevant issues. She is a winner of the omenW in Film Emerging Filmmaker Award and her film, Soledad Is Gone Forever, screened at the Cannes Film Festival’s Short Film Corner and at LALIFF. She produced Carlos Baron, Poeta Pan, a documentary for KQED Public Media. Her script, Soledad’s Awakening, was a finalist at the Sundance Screenwriters Lab. With her documentary project Prodigal Daughter, she participated in the National Association of Latino Independent Producers, Latino Media Market 2012, and in the NALIP Latino Producers Academy 2013. Mabel is a recipient of the 2013 NALIP Artist Mentorship Grant and the 2013 Dos Orillas/Two Shores Award given by ASPEM (Asociación Solidaridad Países Emergentes) for filmmaking work about the Peruvian diaspora. She has also edited the long form documentaries “Women with Altitude” and “River Webs”. Marc Schenker Professor of Medicine and Public Health at the UC Davis School of Medicine. Dr. Schenker has over 30 years of experience in medicine and public health. He is the founding director of the Davis Center for Occupational and Environmental Health, the Western Center for Agricultural Health and Safety and the Migration and Health Research Center. He is co- director of the Center of Expertise on Migration and Health of the UC Global Health Institute. His specialty is occupational and environmental disease. He is board certified in internal medicine, pulmonary disease and occupational health. He conducts epidemiologic research and teaches in these areas, with a particular focus on lung disease, reproductive hazards, and the health of immigrants and farm working populations. Dr. Schenker has published over 150 scientific manuscripts and 5 textbooks. He has conducted work on occupational health hazards in the U.S. and Latin America, and has worked on global health committees and programs with collaborators around the world. Maria de Lourdes Garcia Curiel Maria de Lourdes Garcia Curiel is a professor and researcher in the Department of Social Communication studies at the University of Guadalajara. She obtained a degree in Social Work from this same university as well as a Masters in Region Studies from the College of Jalisco-University of Guadalajara. Prior to her work in Guadalajara, Garcia Curiel was a coordinator of the Assistance Program for Migrant Families of the State of Jalisco. She was also a former scholarship holder of the US Embassy in Mexico where she studied in the US-Mexico Border Institute. Currently, she is working on a project titled, “Developing educational strengths: Promoting awareness and teen individual responsibility”—funded by the Research Program on Migration and Health (PIMSA)—as well as her PhD thesis, “The nostalgia, the distance, and forgetfulness: Changes in the nostalgic feeling of migrants according to different migration patterns.” 10th Summer Institute on 14 Migration and Global Health Nicolas Sheon Nicolas Sheon is a medical anthropologist based at the UCSF Center for AIDS Prevention since 1997, and has been an Assistant Professor since 2005. As Co-Director of the Methods Core of the UCSF Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, Dr. Sheon provides training, consulting, and mentorship to other researchers in the design of qualitative research and qualitative methods more generally. An area of specialization is in the use of collaborative coding strategies using ATLAS.ti, Dedoose, and Transana. Nicté Soledad Castañeda Camey Currently a professor of Social Sciences at the University of Guadalajara, Dr. Castaneda Camey is also involved in research. Her experience in the field is extensive, ranging in location—the United States and Mexico—and area of study. Castaneda has investigated topics such as rural child nutrition; sexuality, sexual behaviors, AIDS-sexually transmitted diseases; she also performed research in a program for indigenous regional funds. Given her vast experience, she has been given the title of “National Researcher Level 1” by the National System of Researchers (SNI in Spanish) of the National Committee in Science and Technology (CONACYT). Dr. Castaneda is a professor and researcher at the University of Guadalajara where she leads a research project on teenage health related issues.

Ninez A. Ponce Dr. Ninez A. Ponce is the director of the UCLA Center for Global and Immigrant Health. She is the principal investigator of the California Health Interview Survey (CHIS), where she also serves as the Associate Center Director. Dr. Ponce is additionally a professor at the Fielding School of Public Health in the Department of Health Policy and Management. Her research focuses on macroeconomic effects on population health/healthcare access in low and middle income countries, low-income neighborhoods, and racial/ethnic/immigrant groups in the U.S. Her work contributes to the elimination of social disparities in health and healthcare for three areas: multicultural survey research; social penalties in health and health access; and population-based cancer prevention and control studies. Currently Dr. Ponce is a faculty member of the California Immigration Research Initiative (CIRI), a UC Multi-campus Research Collaborative that will use and enhance CHIS as its premier data source to understand immigrant integration. Patricia Zavella Dr. Patricia Zavella received her Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley.Currently, she is a professor in the Latin American and Latino Studies Department at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She has been published extensively in Chicana/o- Latina/o Studies and Feminist Studies on topics such as poverty, family, sexuality, health, work, and transnational migration of Mexicana/o workers. Her publications include: Women’s Work and Chicano Families: Cannery Workers of the ; Telling to Live: Latina Feminist Testimonios (co-authored with members of the Latina Feminist Group); Women and Migration in the U.S.- Mexico Borderlands: A Reader co-edited with Denise Segura (2007), and I’m Neither Here nor There:” Mexicans Quotidian Struggles with Migration and Poverty(2011). In 2003, the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies named her Scholar of the Year. Dr. Zavella has been active in the Task Force organizing Binational Health Week in Santa Cruz County since 2006.

15 2015 Rhacel Salazar Parreñas Dr. Rhacel Salazar Parreñas is a professor of Sociology and Gender Studies at the University of Southern California. An author of four monographs and numerous articles, her research focuses on women’s labor and migration in economic globalization. Her latest book Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo (Stanford, 2011) won the Distinguished Book Award in the Labor and Labor Movements Section of the American Sociological Association. She is currently conducting a comparative study on migrant domestic workers in Dubai and Singapore, examining the intersections of human trafficking and labor migration. Dr. Salazar Parreñas will be a Member of the Institute for Advanced Study in 2015-2016. Rick Mines Dr.Mines grew up in Berkeley, California where he went to school from his kindergarten years through a doctorate program in Agricultural Economics. But Mines has also lived abroad, including stays of a year or more in Paraguay, France, Mexico, and Turkey. He has forgotten several languages but still speaks English and Spanish. Over the last 35 years he has done a series of surveys and case studies related to Mexican immigration to the United States. These included several state-level or local surveys for private foundations and government agencies in California and Mexico. Mines also began and managed one national survey, the National Agricultural Workers Survey (of the U.S. Department of Labor) from 1988 to 1999. In recent years, Mines, as an independent consultant, has continued doing case studies and surveys in both Mexico and the United States. Sawsan Abdulrahim Dr. Sawsan Abdulrahim is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at the American University of Beirut. She obtained her undergraduate degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and her PhD in 2005 in Health Behavior and Health Education from the School of Public Health at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Abdulrahim’s research focuses on social inequalities and health, the social and cultural meanings of subjective health evaluations, and the structural conditions that influence the wellbeing of immigrants and refugees. She conducted research on racial identity formation among Arab immigrants in the United States and is currently fielding a study funded by the International Labor Organization on migrant female workers in Lebanon. Dr. Abdul Rahim currently teaches courses in health promotion theory, forced migration and health, and global public health. Sheba George Dr. Sheba George was awarded her M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley. Since completing her doctorate, Dr. George has consulted on research projects for ’s Division of Research and completed a NIMH AIDS Research Training postdoctoral fellowship in the Sociology Department at UCLA. She is the published author of over 30 peer-reviewed articles and two books by the University of California Press; her sole-authored book, entitled When Women Come First: Gender and Class in Transnational Migration (University of California Press, 2005), examines immigration settlement and changes in gender relations of Indian nurses, their families, and communities. She is also a lead author on a forthcoming NIH sponsored report on “Defining and Operationalizing Culture for Health Research.” Her current research broadly centers on health communication, health literacy and the use of health information technology among underserved and marginalized populations in the U.S.

10th Summer Institute on 16 Migration and Global Health Sonia Lee Sonia Lee is the Project Manager of Health Outreach Partners where she provides trainings, technical assistance, and consultations to community-based health centers throughout the country. She holds an MPH in Global Health from Yale University and a BA in Politics from Mount Holyoke College. Prior to joining HOP, Sonia received a Leland International Hunger Fellowship from the Congressional Hunger Center. Through the fellowship, she spent a year in Uganda working with a local advocacy group on advancing health and human rights and she spent a policy year in Washington, DC as a technical advisor in health and human development for a local NGO in Haiti. From 1997-2004, Sonia served as the Director of Programs for Fonkoze, a micro-finance institution in Haiti, where she was responsible for implementing initiatives aimed at empowering women and their families through socioeconomic development. Steven P. Wallace Dr. Wallace is a professor and chairperson of the Department of Community Health Sciences, and Associate Director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, in the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. Dr. Wallace has studied immigration issues since the mid-1980s. His interest in migration issues now focuses on access to health care and services for the elderly. His work includes studies of Latin American and Asian immigrant elders, as well as analyses of access to health care and preventive services for nonelderly adults. He has published over 60 peer- reviewed articles, 25 book chapters, and dozens of policy briefs. His current research includes projects to build community-based participatory research skills among environment health science researchers and immigrant communities in Los Angeles, an analysis of the impact of health care reform on undocumented immigrants, and several studies that identify gaps in health policies for underserved elders.

Xavier Morales Dr. Xavier Morales is the Executive Director of the Latino Coalition for a Healthy California. A longtime advocate for health equity and environmental justice, Dr. Morales has worked to enable community-led initiatives to address health equity and also to promote multi-sector approaches to prevent violence. Taking an expansive view of what constitutes health, he has diligently worked to enable opportunities for youth development, workforce development, college access, supporting prisoner reentry, alternatives to detention, early childhood development, affordable housing and mentoring programming. Dr. Morales, originally from Sanger, California, studied Environmental Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley and City and Regional Planning at Cornell University.

17 2015 Our Sponsors

Funding for this conference was made possible in part by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The views expressed in written conference materials or publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.