When they began their work as Community Fellows-in-Residence at the University of Virginia last year, Myra Anderson, Libby Edwards-Allbaugh, Tanesha Hudson and Destinee Wright each had a set of goals for the year, all aimed at addressing racial and economic inequality in some way.
When it hit the United States in March, the coronavirus pandemic affected some of those goals, and forced the fellows to switch to largely virtual operations. However, the fellowship’s purpose – building better relationships between UVA and the Charlottesville community to tangibly redress racial and socioeconomic inequality – remained more important than ever, especially as protests and calls for racial justice again swept the U.S. the summer.

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