Sydney Smanpongse (they/them) is a Master of Public Policy student with a concentration in labor and social policy. They graduated from UC Irvine in 2020 with bachelor’s degrees in sociology and political science. They are currently conducting research on an Asian American racial justice project with the UCLA Labor Center under Director Kent Wong. Sydney’s passions are in worker rights, housing justice, and union organizing. They have also served on the UCLA Luskin Public Policy Leadershi...| UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
Jack Kearns (he/him) is a Master of Public Policy student with a concentration in labor policy and social policy. He graduated from UCLA in 2020 with a bachelor’s in political science, and worked as a line cook in the Los Angeles area post-graduation. He currently works as a graduate student researcher at the UCLA Labor Center, focusing on child labor laws in the United States, and has previously researched the labor movement’s role in fighting the housing crisis, contributing to the L.A....| UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
Gloria Magallanes (she/her) is a Master of Public Policy student concentrating in community development and social inequality. She is currently a policy fellow at the Latino Policy and Politics Institute and a nonprofit leadership intern at StepUp. While at UCLA, she worked in the Chicano Studies Department as a teaching assistant and participated in Luskin City Hall Day, analyzing the impact of Proposition HHH. Gloria has a background in homelessness and immigrant services, mediation, and re...| UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
Andrew Rock is a Master of Public Policy student at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, focusing on labor and employment policy. Prior to starting the MPP program, he worked at MDRC — a social policy research organization based in New York City. He currently works at the UCLA Labor Center as a researcher. He is pursuing a career in strategic research for unions or in labor enforcement for government agencies. | UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies