The Cargo Chain

Making Policy Public

The Cargo Chain

Whose Art?

City Studies

Whose Art?

Trouble With Your Water Bill?

Public Access Design

Trouble With Your Water Bill?

From Shelter to Apartment

Making Policy Public

From Shelter to Apartment

Engage to Change

Technical Assistance

Engage to Change

We're Watching

Public Access Design

We're Watching
    • Friday, August  3, 2018, 12pm

Meet the 2019 Making Policy Public Jury!

Meet the 2019 _Making Policy Public_ Jury!

We're thrilled to announce our latest Making Policy Public jury! This year we are joined by Natalia Aristizabal, Tracy Ma, Raymond Audain, and Jillian Tamaki (clockwise, from top left).

Each year CUP has a jury of two people prominent in arts and design fields, and two people prominent in organizing and advocacy fields select our Making Policy Public collaborations for the upcoming year. As experts in their respective fields, having the jury determine the issue areas and collaborations for the year is also a way for CUP to ensure that our projects emerge from and are accountable to the communities we serve. For more information applying as an advocate, click here, and for more on applying as a designer, click here.

With that, we’re so excited to welcome our jury!

Natalia Aristizabal is the Co-Director of Organizing at Make the Road, New York, the largest grassroots community organization in New York offering services and organizing the immigrant community.

Raymond Audain is Senior Counsel at the NAACP LDF, where, through litigation, he works to achieve racial justice in a society that fulfills the promise of equality for all Americans. Raymond is also an adjunct professor at NYU Law School, where he co-teaches a clinic on racial equity strategies.

Tracy Ma is the Visual Editor at the New York Times Styles desk, and was formerly the Deputy Creative Director of Bloomberg Businessweek. She was born in British Hong Kong and moved to Toronto, Canada in 1996. She lives in Chinatown, New York.

Jillian Tamaki is an illustrator and comics artist living in Toronto, Canada. A professional artist since 2003, she has worked for publications around the world and taught extensively in New York City at the undergraduate and graduate level. She is the co-creator, with her cousin Mariko Tamaki, of Skim and This One Summer, the latter of which won a Caldecott Honor and Printz Award in 2015. Her first picture book, They Say Blue, which explores our perception and experience of the natural world, was released in the Spring of 2018.

Stand Up to Clean Up!

Public Access Design

Stand Up to Clean Up!

The Newtown Creek BOA

Technical Assistance

The Newtown Creek BOA

I Heart East New York

Urban Investigations

I Heart East New York

Food Stamped

City Studies

Food Stamped

Air it Out

City Studies

Air it Out

We Own It

Making Policy Public

We Own It

Engage to Change

Technical Assistance

Engage to Change

Tenants' Rights to Repairs

Making Policy Public

Tenants' Rights to Repairs