Ketchikan Fil-Am Festival
Ketchikan Fil-Am Festival






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Nigel Wrangham has been a Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor and Certified Prevention Specialist since 2000. He’s been a preschool teacher, counselor for federal prisoners on parole, parenting coach for families experiencing poverty and homelessness, and a freelance illustrator. When he worked in Uganda studying wild chimpanzees, he taught forest conservation to young people in local villages. From 2003 through 2017, Nigel taught prevention science, psychopharmacology, and media studies at the University of Oregon. He has served as the National Youth Coordinator for Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), and is a certified Master Level Trainer for CADCA, where he develops curriculum and mentors young trainers in prevention and public health. His passion is supporting young people to build the equitable, just, and healthy society they deserve. He works with groups across the United States, sharing skills in prevention, social justice, brain development, and youth leadership. Nigel also spends time at home in Eugene, Oregon with his wife, his two extremely disobedient cats, and his two young children. When he gets the chance, he listens to old punk rock music way louder than he probably should. But these days, he hardly ever gets the chance
A Philippine-born, Alaska-grown, Professor of Public Health at the University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA). He is also the Chair of UAA’s Master of Public Health Program. Dr. Garcia was the recipient of the Alaska Public Health Association’s “Short Term Service Award” in 2002 and “The Barbara Berger Excellence in Public Health Award” in 2012. At UAA, Dr. Garcia has been awarded the Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Community Service (2012), Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Diversity (2016), and the Center for Community Engagement & Learning’s Community Builder Award (2013). Dr. Garcia, along with a group of UAA faculty and students, were awarded the UAA’s Stewardship Award in 2014 and the American Lung Association in Alaska’s Breathe Easy Champion Award in 2015 for the group’s successful effort in making the University of Alaska system smoke and tobacco-free. From 2015 to 2023, Dr. Garcia served as one of the health commissioners of the Anchorage Health Department. Dr. Garcia’s research interests include health promotion and disease prevention, tobacco prevention and control, Asian and Pacific Islander health, and issues related to social determinants of health.
E. J. R. David is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Alaska Anchorage, specializing in ethnic minority psychology. He has produced five books: Brown Skin, White Minds: Filipino -/ American Postcolonial Psychology (2013), Internalized Oppression: The Psychology of Marginalized Groups (2014), The Psychology of Oppression (2017), and We Have Not Stopped Trembling Yet (2018), and “The Encyclopedia of Filipina/x/o American Studies” (2022). He was the 2012 American Psychological Association Minority Fellowship Program Early Career Award in Research for Distinguished Contributions to the Field of Racial and Ethnic Minority Psychology; the 2013 Asian American Psychological Association Early Career Award for Distinguished Contributions to Research; and in 2015 he was inducted as a Fellow by the Asian American Psychological Association for “Unusual and Outstanding Contributions to Asian American Psychology.”