UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM 491 Staten Avenue, #17 Oakland, CA 94610 510-593-5522 [email protected] Mimi E. Kim EDUCATION: Ph.D. Candidate Expected: May 2014 University of California, Berkeley, School of Social Welfare Dissertation Title: Contesting feminisms: The anti-domestic violence movement and the pursuit of criminalization, 1973-1986. Dissertation Committee: Julian Chow (Chair); Susan Stone; Henry Brady (Goldman School of Social Policy); Calvin Morrill (Berkeley Law and Jurisprudence and Social Policy) M.S.W. 2003 New York University, School of Social Work Graduate Studies 1984-1987 University of Wisconsin, Madison, Sociology Graduate Studies 1983-1984 Stanford University, Economics B.S., Economics 1983 University of Minnesota, Minneapolis RESEARCH INTERESTS: Race and gender; gender and community violence; social movements; immigrants; community practice and intervention; community organizing; community-based organizations; critical criminology TEACHING INTERESTS: Social work practice; community practice and intervention; social work research; qualitative research; race, gender and social justice; immigrants and immigration; gender and community violence; social movements; community-based organizations AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS: Project Grant Awards (selected): Office on Violence against Women, Department of Justice, Grants to Enhance Culturally Specific Services for Victims of Sexual Assault, Domestic Violence, Dating Violence and Stalking Program for “Asian & Pacific Islander Culturally Competent Services.” Submitted on behalf of Korean Community Center of the East Bay. 2-year, 2012-2014. $300,000. Consultant. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Evaluating What Works for “Korean Faith-Based Organizing Project.” Submitted on behalf of Korean Community Center of the East Bay. 2-year, 2009-2011. $175,000. Consultant. The California Endowment, “Creative Interventions: StoryTelling & Organizing Project.” Submitted on behalf of Creative Interventions. 2-year, 2008-2010. $200,000. Executive Director. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Vulnerable Populations, Fresh Ideas Grant for “CommunityBased Interventions Project.” Submitted on behalf of Creative Interventions. 3-year, 2006-2009. $300,000. Executive Director. Office on Violence against Women, Department of Justice, Technical Assistance Grant for “Asian & Pacific Islander Whole Family Responses to Domestic Violence.” Submitted on behalf of Korean Community Center of the East Bay. 2-year, 2004-2006 ($250,000); 2007-2009. $225,000. Consultant. Academic Awards and Fellowships: Center for Research on Social Change Graduate Fellowship, University of California, Berkeley (August 2012-May 2014) Dean’s Normative Time Fellowship. University of California, Berkeley (August 2011-May 2012) The Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America Dissertation Grant 2011-12 (July 2011-June 2012) University of California Center for New Racial Studies Graduate Student Research Grant 201112 (July 2011-June 2012) Berkeley Legal Empirical Studies Fellowship (August 2010-May 2011) Joint World Conference on Social Work and Social Development, June 10 - 14, 2010. Best Abstract Award (Practitioner) Social Science Research Council (SSRC) – Pre-Dissertation Summer Research Fellowship (Social Movements) (May-September 2010) University of California, Berkeley, School of Social Welfare Fellowship (2009-2011) Chancellor’s Fellowship. University of California, Berkeley (2007- 2009) New York University Social Work Fellowship. New York University (2001-2003) Demography Fellowship. University of Wisconsin, Madison, Department of Sociology (1984) Stanford University Graduate Fellowship. Stanford University (1983) Other Awards and Fellowships: Echoing Green Social Entrepreneurship Fellowship (2004 - 2006) Community Awards: Community Service Award, Korean Community Center of the East Bay, Oakland, CA (2006) Community Hero Award, KQED Public Broadcasting Service, San Francisco (2000) Korean Domestic Violence Special Recognition Award, Korean American Family Center, Los Angeles (2000) Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM PUBLICATIONS: Journal Articles and Book Chapters: Kim, M. and Rhee-Menzie, A. (Forthcoming) Models of collaboration between community service agencies and faith-based institutions. In Johnson, A. (Ed.), Religion and men's violence against women. NY: Springer. Kim, M. (2012). Challenging the pursuit of criminalization in an era of mass incarceration: The limitations of social work responses to domestic violence in the U.S. British Journal of Social Work. Advance online publication. doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcs060. Bierria, A., Kim, M. and Rojas, C. (2012). Introduction. Community accountability: Emerging movements to transform violence. Social Justice 37(4), 1-11. Kim, M. (2012). Moving beyond critique: Creative Interventions and reconstructions of community accountability. Social Justice 37(4), 14-35. Kim, M. (2010). Alternative visions. Standpunkt Soczial, 1/2010, 32-36. Kim, M. (2010). Alternative interventions to intimate violence: Defining political and pragmatic challenges. In Ptacek, J. (Ed.), Restorative justice and violence against women (pp. 193217). New York: Oxford University Press. Kim, M. (2010). Alternative interventions to violence: Creative interventions. In G. Kirk & M. Okazawa-Rey (Eds.), Women’s lives: Multicultural perspectives (pp. 291-296). New York: McGraw Hill. Reprint of Alternative interventions to violence: Creative Interventions, The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work, 2006(4), 45-52. Kim, M., Masaki, B. and Mehrotra, G. (2010). A lily out of the mud: Domestic violence in Asian & Pacific Islander communities. In L. Lockhard & F. Danis (Eds.), Domestic violence: Intersectionality and culturally competent practice (pp. 100-126). New York: Columbia University Press. Pennell, J. and Kim, M. (2010). Opening conversations across cultural, gender, and generational divides: Family and community engagement to stop violence against women and children. In Ptacek, J. (Ed.), Restorative justice and violence against women (pp. 294319). New York: Oxford University Press. Kim, M. (2009). The political economy of immigration and the emergence of transnationalism. Journal of Human Behavior and the Social Environment, 19(6), 675- 689. Kim, M. (2006). Alternative interventions to violence: Creative Interventions, The International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work, 2006(4), 45-52. Reprint in A. Yuen and C. White (Eds.), (2007). Conversations about gender, culture, violence & narrative practice (pp. 31-42). Adelaide: Dulwich Centre Publications. Edited Journals: Bierria, A., Kim, M., and Rojas, C., (Eds.). (2012). Special Issue. Community accountability: Emerging movements to transform violence. Social Justice 37(4). Manuscripts/Reports: Kim, M. (Forthcoming). Moving forward with integrity: Asian Women’s Shelter’s transition from a founding Executive Director. San Francisco: Asian Women’s Shelter. Sponsored by Blue Shield against Violence. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Kim, M. (2005). The community engagement continuum: Outreach, mobilization, organizing, and accountability to address violence against women in the Asian and Pacific Islander communities. San Francisco: Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. Kim, M. (2002). Innovative strategies to address domestic violence in Asian and Pacific Islander communities: Examining themes, models and interventions. San Francisco: Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. Chung, C., Kim, M. and Masaki, B. (1999). The Multilingual Access Model: A model for outreach and services in non-English speaking communities. Philadelphia, PA: National Resource Center on Domestic Violence. ACADEMIC RESEARCH EXPERIENCE: Graduate Student Researcher, Center for Social Science Research, University of California, Berkeley, 2010-2011 Graduate Student Researcher, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Political Sociology, 1985 TEACHING EXPERIENCE: Instructor of Record, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley; Immigrants: Identity, Conflict and Adaptation, SW174, Summer 2013 Graduate Student Instructor, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley; Research Methods, SW282A/B, 2012-2013 Graduate Student Instructor, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley; Social Work Practice, SW114, 2009-2010 Graduate Teaching Assistant, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison; Statistics for Sociologists, 1986-1987 OTHER ACADEMIC SERVICE: Conference Planner, New Historiographies and Violence against Women, February 28-March 3, 2013. Center for Race and Gender, University of California, Berkeley and the Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law. Co-initiator and planning committee member. Convener, Community Interventions Working Group, School of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley, 2008-2010. Organized and coordinated special graduate seminar on community interventions. PROFESSIONAL/CLINICAL PRACTICE EXPERIENCE: Founder and Board Member, TORCH, Training and Organizing Resources for Community Health, Oakland, CA, 2012-present. Founder of a center promoting community organizing and capacity building models, tools and approaches to community health through technical assistance, training, piloting of innovative programs and research. Primary issue focus is on domestic violence, sexual assault and community conflict. Priority communities are communities of color including immigrant and LGBTQ communities. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Founder and Executive Director, Creative Interventions. Oakland, CA, 2004-2012. Founder and Executive Director of resource center developing, piloting, documenting and publicly disseminating innovative social network and community-based interventions to domestic violence, sexual assault and other forms of interpersonal violence. Projects include Community- Based Interventions Project and StoryTelling & Organizing Project. Responsible for all aspects of program development, management, staff supervision (3 staff), policy advocacy, collaboration and networking, publicity, financial management of $200,000 budget, fund development and administration for non-profit organization. Priority communities are communities of color including immigrant and LGBTQ communities. Consultant. 2001-present. Research and writing on community engagement and organizing; Asian & Pacific Islander domestic violence advocacy and community-based alternatives to criminalization; evaluation of community-based programming related to domestic and sexual violence; program and organizational development; leadership and organizational transition; grant writing and fund development including federal, state, local and foundation grants. Clients include Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence, Asian Women’s Shelter, Korean Community Center of the East Bay, Asian Women’s Shelter, Marin Abused Women’s Services and National Korean American Service & Education Consortium (NAKASEC). Social Work Intern. Astor Child Guidance Center. Bronx, NY. 2002-2003. Provided individual and family counseling for children, ages 4 to 12, and their families. Social Work Intern. Beth Israel Hospital, Substance Abuse Rehabilitation Unit. New York, NY. 2001-2002. Provided individual and group counseling for adults with histories of substance abuse in a 28-day hospital rehabilitation setting. Co-Founder and Consultant. Shimtuh: Korean Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Program, a program of Korean Community Center of the East Bay, Oakland, CA. 2000-2012. Cofounded and provided ongoing program development and fund development consultation to the only Korean domestic violence and sexual assault program in Northern California. Project Coordinator, Multilingual Access Model. Asian Women’s Shelter. San Francisco, CA. 1996- 2001. Developed and coordinated multilingual access program for Asian domestic violence shelter including program development; recruitment, management and supervision of 40 on-call advocates; development and implementation of 70 hour domestic violence and language interpretation training; national technical assistance on multilingual access; co-authorship of nationally distributed multilingual access manual. Coordinated multilingual crisis line. Provided crisis intervention for survivors of domestic violence. Authored various informational pamphlets and manuals, training materials, needs assessment, and program evaluation. Assistant to the Director. Asian Women’s Shelter. San Francisco, CA. 1991-1996. Coordinated financial and administrative activities of Asian domestic violence shelter including budget, financial management and grants management for $800,000 agency; developed personnel and program policies; coordinated private fundraising. Coordinated community education. Provided crisis intervention for survivors of domestic violence. Co-Founder. Korean American Women in Need (KAN-WIN), Chicago, IL.1989-1990. Co-founder of Korean language hotline and domestic violence advocacy center. Community Educator/Counselor. Edgewater Uptown Community Mental Health Center, Rape Victim Services Program. Chicago, IL. 1988-1990. Provided community education on sexual assault awareness and prevention for Asian and broader communities. Co-founded Korean domestic violence and sexual assault hotline, Korean American Women in Need Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM (KAN-WIN). Provided individual and group counseling for adult victims of sexual assault and child sexual abuse. PRESENTATIONS (SELECTED): Peer-Reviewed Academic Conferences: Carceral Logics, Anti-Violence Politics, and Abolitionist Practices. Panelist. American Studies Association Annual Meeting, November 21-24, 2013. Abolitionist Futures, Community Accountability & Emerging Movements to Transform Violence. Roundtable presentation. Critical Ethnic Studies Association Conference. Chicago, IL. September 19-21, 2013. Building Community Capacity within Immigrant Communities: Identifying and Engaging Multiple Stakeholders in Intimate Partner Violence Prevention. Symposium presentation. Society for Social Work and Research Annual Conference. San Diego, CA. January 1620, 2013. Abolitionist Futures, Community Accountabilities, & Emerging Movements to Transform Violence. Roundtable presentation. National Women’s Studies Association Annual Conference. Oakland, CA, November 8-11, 2012. Social Network Interventions to Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault: Pilot Study Results and Policy Implications. Paper presentation. Society for Social Work and Research Annual Conference. Washington, D.C. January 11-15, 2012. Prevention of Domestic Violence in Immigrant Faith-Based Communities: The Multiple Dimensions of a Culturally Competent Model. Poster presentation. American Public Health Association Conference. Washington, D.C. October 29-November 2, 2011. Author Meets Reader: Restorative Justice and Violence against Women, edited by James Ptacek (November 2009). Author. The 2011 Annual Meeting of Law and Society. San Francisco, CA. June 2-5, 2011. The Anti-Violence Movement and Demands for Safety: The Emergence of the Criminalization Strategy. Paper Presentation. The 2011 Annual Meeting of Law and Society. San Francisco, CA. June 2-5, 2011. Building Community Capacity in Immigrant Faith-based Communities: How Can We Tell? Paper Presentation. American Evaluation Association Conference. San Antonio, TX. November 10-13, 2010. Bringing Popular Education Approaches to Social Work. Skills Workshop Presentation. Council on Social Work Education Conference. Portland, OR. October 14-17, 2010. Gender-Based Violence and Criminalization: Transnational Challenges to a Western Dominant Model. Paper Presentation. Joint World Conference on Social Work and Social Development. Hong Kong. June 10-14, 2010. Challenging Gender-Based Violence: Contesting Feminisms across the Korean Diaspora. Paper Presentation. Asian American Studies Conference. University of Texas, Austin. April 10, 2010. Challenging Gender-Based Violence: Contesting Feminisms across Communities of Color. Paper Presentation. 4th Annual Critical Race Studies Symposium. University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law. March 11, 2010. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Creative Interventions: Community Accountability in Communities of Color. Presenter. 4th Annual Critical Race Studies Symposium. University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law. March 11, 2010. Invited Public Conferences, Presentations and Trainings: Moving Communities to Action. Plenary organizer and moderator. National Summit of the Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. San Francisco, CA. June 30-July2, 2013. Shifting Interventions from Direct Services to a Community Accountability Model: The Vision and Practice of Creative Interventions. Workshop presenter. National Summit of the Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. San Francisco, CA. June 30July2, 2013. Community Accountability and Transformative Justice. Presenter. New York, NY. May 11, 2013. Transformative Justice and Community Accountability. Guest lecturer. Introduction to Feminist Studies, Stanford University. March 7, 2013. Contesting Feminisms: The Anti-Domestic Violence Social Movement and the Pursuit of Criminalization, 1973-1986. Panelist. Race, Domestic and Sexual Violence: From the Prison Nation to Community Resistance. Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice and the Center for Race and Gender, UC Berkeley. March 1, 2013. Community Organizing for Social Change: Role of Culture in Promoting Health Restoration and Recovery. Workshop presenter. Transforming Communities: Defending Childhood Initiative Grantee Meeting, Office of Juvenile Justice Delinquency Prevention. Washington, D.C. May 15, 2012. Another Safety. Presenter. This Is How We Do It. A Festival of Dialogues about Another World. Cooper Union, New York, NY. April 22, 2012. Life after the PIC. Presenter. Critical Resistance. Oakland, CA. February 15, 2012. Queer & People of Color Perspectives: Domestic Violence in the 21st Century. Panel presenter. Center for Race & Gender. Berkeley, CA. October 25, 2011. The System Is Not Working for Us. Panel presenter. Preventing Violence, Promoting Justice: A Summit. Sakhi. New York, NY. October 10-11, 2011. Talking Story about Cultural Interventions. Workshop presenter. Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence Summit. From Gender Violence to Gender Democracy: What Will It Take? San Francisco, CA. July 24-26, 2011 Moving Beyond Critique: New Social Movement Responses to Gender-Based and State Violence. Presenter. Forum on Cooptations & Cross-Movement Alliances: Feminist Anti-Violence Organizing & the Prison Crisis. Center for Race & Gender. University of California, Berkeley. April 8, 2011. Injury and Repair in Group Settings. Presenter. On Injury and Repair Conference. Women’s Therapy Center. Oakland, CA. January 22, 2011. Preparing Our Communities to Confront Violence: The Continuum of Engagement 2 Years Later. Presenter. National Coalition against Domestic Violence Conference: Changing Faces of the Movement. July 31-August 4, 2010. Responding to and Preventing Violence. Keynote Speaker. International Narrative Therapy Conference. Toronto, July 7-9, 2010. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Working with Violence: New Directions. Presenter. International Narrative Therapy Conference: Pre- Conference Workshop. Toronto. July 6, 2010. Story Telling as Organizing. Presenter. Talk Story Gathering. Oahu Domestic Violence Task Force. Honolulu, HI. June 29, 2010. Crossing Fault Lines of Family Violence with New Narratives of Community Accountability. Presenter. Families on the Fault Lines: Re-Imagining Race, Kinship, & Care Conference. Center for Race and Gender, University of California, Berkeley. April 29-30, 2010. Story Telling as an Organizing Tool for Survivors. Keynote Presenter. National Audio Conference. Civil Legal Institute Project. March 9, 2010. Contesting Feminisms across the Korean Diaspora. Presenter. Gender & Politics in Contemporary South Korea Workshop. The University of British Columbia, Vancouver. August 12-13, 2009. System Accountability Using Community-Based Responses. Presenter. New Directions for Your Coordinated Community Responses: Innovations in Theory and Practice. Battered Women’s Justice Project. Minneapolis, MN. June 22-24, 2009. Building Towards Community Accountability to End Violence: Continuum of Engagement. Presenter. National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Washington, D.C. July 18-23, 2008. Anti-Violence Workers and Academics Working Together. Presenter. National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Washington, D.C. July 18-23, 2008. The Community Engagement Continuum. Presenter. Summit of the Asian and Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. Asian and Pacific Islander Domestic Violence. San Francisco, CA. November 5-7, 2007. The Community Engagement Continuum. Amokura: Family Violence Consortium. Whangerei, Aotearoa. September 21, 2006. Back to the Future: Can We End Violence against Women: A Focus on Community Organizing and Community Accountability. Keynote. DePaul University. Chicago, IL. February 23, 2006. The Community Engagement Continuum: Outreach, Mobilization, Organizing, and Accountability to Address Violence against Women in Asian and Pacific Islander Communities. Presenter. The Color of Violence III: Stopping the War on Women of Color. Incite! Women of Color Against Violence. New Orleans, LA. March 11-13, 2005. Naming the Injustice: Building Accountability within Communities of Color to Prevent and Intervene in Child Sexual Abuse. Presenter. The Color of Violence III: Stopping the War on Women of Color. Incite! Women of Color Against Violence. New Orleans, LA. March 11-13, 2005. Restorative Justice. Plenary speaker. National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Denver, CO. July 11, 2004. Safety and Justice for All: Examining the Relationship Between Women’s Anti-Violence Movement in the Criminal Legal System. Panel speaker. 2004 International Research & Action Conference: Innovations in Understanding Violence Against Women. Wellesley Centers for Women. Wellesley, MA, April 25, 2004. Domestic Violence/Domestic Silence: The Activist Response to Shaming Rituals. Panel speaker. American Studies Association Annual Meeting. Hartford, CT, October 18, 2003. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM The Same But Different: Developing Models to Address Violence Against Women of Color. Presenter. Western States Center’s Community Strategic Training Initiative. Portland, OR, August 2, 2003. Multilingual Access Model. Presenter. Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence Midwest Regional Meeting. University of Michigan. Ann Arbor, MI, March 23, 2003. Women of Color and Militarism. Panel speaker. Responding to Violence Colloquium. Barnard College. New York, NY, October 25, 2002 Innovative Strategies to Address Domestic Violence in Asian and Pacific Islander Communities. Panel speaker. Summit on Domestic Violence in Asian and Pacific Islander Communities. Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence. San Francisco, CA, June 28, 2002. Family Violence in the Asian Family. Presenter. Different People, Same Problem: Myths and Realities of Family Violence. Connecticut Department of Social Services, Division of Social Work & Prevention Services. Groton, CT, April 17, 2002. Women on the Frontlines. Panel speaker. The Institute for MultiRacial Justice, Shades of Power Festival 2001, San Francisco, CA, January 27, 2001. Cultural Competency in Domestic Violence Services. Panel speaker. 8th Annual Domestic Violence Conference. Santa Clara County Domestic Violence Council and the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors. San Jose, CA, October 6, 2000. Challenging the Depoliticization of the Anti-Violence Movement. Panel speaker. The Color of Violence: Violence Against Women of Color Conference. Incite! Women of Color Against Violence. University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, April 29, 2000. Strategies for Organizing Responses to Domestic Violence from within Communities of Color. Presenter. Creating Coalition for Prevention: Domestic Violence Across Racial, Ethnic and Cultural Contexts. San Jose, CA, March 11, 2000. Korean Domestic Violence Services. Presenter. Second Annual Asian American Mental Health Conference. San Francisco Department of Mental Health. San Francisco, CA, August 15, 1998. Building Bridges: Collaborating Toward Wellness in Asian American Communities. Keynote speaker. Asian American Community Services. Columbus, OH, December 4, 1998. ADDITIONAL TRAINING (selected): Graduate student workshop on social movement and social change. Law & Society Association. May 28-29, 2013. Competitive selection. Junior Colleague on issues of implementation and dissemination Seattle Implementation Research Collaborative. May 16-17, 2013.. Competitive selection. Victim Offender Dialogue for Victims of Severe Crimes. Oakland, CA. March 16-17, 2013. Summer Institute on Community Based Participatory Research for Health Equity. University of California, Berkeley and San Francisco State University. August 8-12, 2011. Controversies and Issues in Mixed Methods Research. International Qualitative Inquiry Congress. June 3, 2011. SSRC Pre-Dissertation Workshop on Contentious Politics. Social Science Research Council. June 2-6 and September 16-19, 2010. Competitive selection. Summer Institute in Survey Research Techniques. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research. July 7-11, 2008. Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM Summer Evaluation Workshops in Theory-Driven Evaluation, Qualitative Evaluation and Empowerment Evaluation. Claremont Graduate University, School of Behavioral and Organizational Sciences. Summers 2006, 2007 and 2008. Advanced Oral History Summer Institute. University of California, Berkeley, Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library. August 14-18, 2006. AFFILIATIONS: Professional Leadership and Service: Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence, San Francisco, CA. National Steering Committee; Evidence-Based Practice Advisory Committee; Intervention and Prevention Committee Co-Chairperson. 1998-present Blue Shield Against Violence. National Advisory Group. 2011-2013. Battered Women’s Justice Project. National Steering Committee Member. 2008-2011. Incite! Women of Color Against Violence, National. Founding Member and National Steering Committee. 2000-2004. Korean Community Center of the East Bay, Oakland, CA. Executive Board Member. 1999-2001. Just Economics, Berkeley, CA. Economic Justice Trainer. 1999-2001. Institute for Multiracial Justice, San Francisco, CA. Coordinating Committee Member. 19981999. Professional Membership: American Evaluation Association American Public Health Association American Sociological Association Asian American Studies Association Council on Social Work Education National Association of Social Workers Social Welfare Action Alliance Society for Social Work and Research REFERENCES: Julian Chow (advisor) School of Social Welfare University of California, Berkeley 209 Haviland Hall Berkeley, CA 94720-7400 (510) 643-9288 [email protected] Mimi E. Kim | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | BERKELEY SOCIAL WELFARE | DOCTORAL PROGRAM
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