2022-23-Emerging-Scholars
2022-2023 Emerging Scholars
Joshua Lopez
American Food History and Latinx Food Memory
 Joshua Lopez is a PhD candidate at the University of North Texas where he is specializing
                           in American food history and Latinx food memory and representation. In his research,
                           he privileges food narratives as epistemic resources that are layered with historical
                           and cultural traces. While many may not leave behind an official historical record
                           of themselves, some do leave behind their stories embedded in written, remembered,
                           and performed food narratives. This idea forms the foundation of Lopez's work. Currently,
                           he is writing his dissertation, “Joteria In and Out of the Kitchen," where he traces
                           food narratives by queer Latinx from 1980 to the present. Lopez is a co-editor and
                           contributor to El Paso Food Voices, an open-source digital archive, and he co-authored the entry on Latinos and the
                           Food Industry for the Oxford Bibliographies in Latino Studies.
Joshua Lopez is a PhD candidate at the University of North Texas where he is specializing
                           in American food history and Latinx food memory and representation. In his research,
                           he privileges food narratives as epistemic resources that are layered with historical
                           and cultural traces. While many may not leave behind an official historical record
                           of themselves, some do leave behind their stories embedded in written, remembered,
                           and performed food narratives. This idea forms the foundation of Lopez's work. Currently,
                           he is writing his dissertation, “Joteria In and Out of the Kitchen," where he traces
                           food narratives by queer Latinx from 1980 to the present. Lopez is a co-editor and
                           contributor to El Paso Food Voices, an open-source digital archive, and he co-authored the entry on Latinos and the
                           Food Industry for the Oxford Bibliographies in Latino Studies.
Evelyn Valdez-Ward, Ph.D.
Marginalized Identities in STEM
 Dra. Evelyn Valdez-Ward (she/ella) is a Mexican, formerly undocumented, Ford Foundation
                           Predoctoral and Switzer Foundation Fellow, who studied the effects of drought on plants
                           and soil microbes for her PhD. Her final dissertation chapters studied marginalized
                           scientists and their use of science communication and policy for social justice. Valdez-Ward
                           received her doctorate from the University of California in 2022 and is continuing
                           her research on marginalized science communicators as a postdoctoral scholar at the
                           University of Rhode Island. She was named one of 2020's Grist 50 Fixers and a 2018
                           UCS Science Defender; voted best of Story Collider 2018 in LA; awarded UCI's Dynamic
                           Women's Award for Outstanding Social Justice Activist; and is the recipient of the
                           Svetlana Bershadsky Graduate Community Award for her advocacy for undocumented scientists.
                           Valdez-Ward co-founded and co-directs ReclaimingSTEM Institute, the first of its kind
                           to address the need for science communication and policy training spaces for marginalized
                           groups.
Dra. Evelyn Valdez-Ward (she/ella) is a Mexican, formerly undocumented, Ford Foundation
                           Predoctoral and Switzer Foundation Fellow, who studied the effects of drought on plants
                           and soil microbes for her PhD. Her final dissertation chapters studied marginalized
                           scientists and their use of science communication and policy for social justice. Valdez-Ward
                           received her doctorate from the University of California in 2022 and is continuing
                           her research on marginalized science communicators as a postdoctoral scholar at the
                           University of Rhode Island. She was named one of 2020's Grist 50 Fixers and a 2018
                           UCS Science Defender; voted best of Story Collider 2018 in LA; awarded UCI's Dynamic
                           Women's Award for Outstanding Social Justice Activist; and is the recipient of the
                           Svetlana Bershadsky Graduate Community Award for her advocacy for undocumented scientists.
                           Valdez-Ward co-founded and co-directs ReclaimingSTEM Institute, the first of its kind
                           to address the need for science communication and policy training spaces for marginalized
                           groups.
Cynae Punch Brown
 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
 Cynae Punch Brown is a certified educator with more than 22 years of experience working
                           in public, private, and higher education institutions. Brown holds a B.A. in Spanish
                           from Howard University, an M.Ed. in Teaching English as a Second Language from Regent
                           University, and an additional graduate degree in School Leadership and Development
                           from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education. Currently, Brown serves
                           as the Director of the Center for Professional Development of Teachers at the University
                           of Houston-Downtown while pursuing her doctorate in K-12 Professional Leadership at
                           the University of Houston's College of Education. Her current research interests focus
                           on culturally responsive capacity-building practices within family, and community
                           engagement and interrupting systemic practices that marginalize communities of color.
                           She is also a co-founder of the Arts & Enrichment Conservatoire—a start-up organization
                           dedicated to amplifying the creative voices of children from historically marginalized
                           communities—and an author passionate about connecting stories of grief, loss, and
                           triumph.
Cynae Punch Brown is a certified educator with more than 22 years of experience working
                           in public, private, and higher education institutions. Brown holds a B.A. in Spanish
                           from Howard University, an M.Ed. in Teaching English as a Second Language from Regent
                           University, and an additional graduate degree in School Leadership and Development
                           from the Harvard University Graduate School of Education. Currently, Brown serves
                           as the Director of the Center for Professional Development of Teachers at the University
                           of Houston-Downtown while pursuing her doctorate in K-12 Professional Leadership at
                           the University of Houston's College of Education. Her current research interests focus
                           on culturally responsive capacity-building practices within family, and community
                           engagement and interrupting systemic practices that marginalize communities of color.
                           She is also a co-founder of the Arts & Enrichment Conservatoire—a start-up organization
                           dedicated to amplifying the creative voices of children from historically marginalized
                           communities—and an author passionate about connecting stories of grief, loss, and
                           triumph.
About Emerging Scholars
The Center for Latino Studies Emerging Scholars Program provides a forum for early career scholars from a wide variety of fields that relate to the academic discipline of Latino Studies in order to present innovative and cutting-edge research to students, faculty, and community members. 
