

Communities of Care
Apr 30, 2025
In this discussion, Dr. Valerie Francisco-Menchavez, an Associate Professor at San Francisco State University and an expert on Filipina migrant workers, emphasizes the urgent need for radical and decolonial care in today’s world. She shares insights from her book on how communities mobilize in times of crisis, particularly following the tragic Lapu-Lapu event in Vancouver. The conversation touches on the importance of community-centered research, personal well-being in academia, and the power of mutual support and self-nourishment within marginalized communities.
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Scholarship Rooted In Community Politics
- Valerie reframed the second book as a Critical Filipina Studies project that blends memoir and scholarship.
- She argues this interdisciplinary stance centers community politics, not just disciplinary legibility.
Writing From The 10-Year-Old Self
- Valerie describes writing from her 10-year-old immigrant self and mixing memoir with academic arguments.
- She says this felt liberating and vulnerable compared with her earlier sociology book.
Community Labor Is Scholarly Labor
- Community-centered research demands more labor than writing alone because it builds skills and data for organizations.
- Valerie insists this engagement is knowledge production as legitimate as academic outputs.