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Rufus 2016
Rufus 2016







This site highlights some of the most exemplary films exploring lived experiences of those who have all too frequently been missing from those narratives, even as queer culture and queer media move closer to the mainstream. In the vast majority of LGBTQ+ themed films, QTPOC are sidelined, one-dimensional, comic relief, or simply invisible. MM: The website presents an annotated bibliography (or, really, filmography) of the very best American films that center on stories of queer and trans people of color (QTPOC). She holds an MLIS from Dominican University and a BA in journalism from Roosevelt University.ĪRB: Can you tell us more about " An Intersectional Lens: Towards a Queer and Trans People of Color (QTPOC) Film Canon"? She is currently a part-time Reference/World Languages Librarian at Prospect Heights Public Library District (IL) as well as a member of several local, state, and ALA committees, including the ALA Publishing Committee, which administers the Carnegie-Whitney Grant. He is interviewed here by Anjelica Rufus-Barnes (she/her/hers), a 2016 Spectrum Scholar and member of the Spectrum Advisory Committee. Mungin is a recipient of the 2018 Carnegie-Whitney Grant for his project An Intersectional Lens: Towards a Queer and Trans People of Color (QTPOC) Film Canon.

#Rufus 2016 professional

He completely missed the boat on Spectrum 10 years ago and says it’s one of his greatest professional regrets, but he makes sure to mention it to all PoC thinking of entering the profession. Mungin's professional interests include virtual reference assessment, EDI assessment and accountability in the library profession and, of course, media librarianship. His core librarian duties include instruction, outreach, collections and reference. He received his MLIS from the University of Washington in 2010 and was Psychology Librarian/Associate Professor at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, VA from 2011 to 2017 before returning to the Pacific Northwest. rufus and raising awareness of its local threats will allow the communities to identify, monitor and tackle the threats to its survival.Michael Mungin (he/him/his) is a Research and Instruction Librarian serving University of Washington-Bothell and Cascadia College in Bothell, WA, about 15 minutes north of Seattle. SEED anticipates that highlighting the importance of P. SCRP staff and volunteers conducted environmental education sessions in the two schools in Sainte Luce and conducted mass mobilisation events across the community. Project Rufus also supported environmental education as a method of conservation. These tours provided an alternative source of income to logging and hunting for the local community, and enhanced ownership of the conservation effort within Sainte Luce.

rufus 2016

This allowed guided tours to be run by local guides to view the bats whilst causing minimal disturbance to the colony. Our Community Development volunteers were also involved with Project Rufus, building and erecting a bat hide in the protected area.

rufus 2016

With the endorsement of local organisations, a ban on hunting and logging was enforced, limiting the threats to the population.

rufus 2016

Whilst volunteers conducted this research, SEED staff worked with the local community and key stakeholders to develop a locally enforced protected area around the colony’s roost tree. rufus, to advise on a unique conservation strategy for the colony. Our Conservation Research Programme volunteers collected data on the feeding habits of the Sainte Luce colony of P.







Rufus 2016