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Pitt junior Connor Diaz was named a 2024 Newman Civic fellow

Tags
  • Community Impact
  • Innovation and Research
  • David C. Frederick Honors College

Four hours into a bus ride to present his research alongside fellow Atlantic Coast Conference undergraduates at the annual Meeting of the Minds, Connor Diaz drifted in and out of sleep. Then, his phone buzzed with an email notification that eliminated any semblance of exhaustion. 听

鈥淚 learned I was听a Newman Civic fellow, and it was the most amazing feeling,鈥 said Diaz, a junior double majoring in history and law, criminal justice and society. 鈥淚t put听wind in my sails before the conference and was a nice thing to come out of a stupor to.鈥

Diaz is one of 142 student problem-solvers selected for the 2024-25 , a yearlong program designed to help fellows enact positive change on their college campuses and听in their听communities.听

Ron Idoko, a research assistant professor, director of the Office of Social Innovation in the Frederick Honors College and the founding director of the听Racial Equity Consciousness Institute, nominated Diaz for his work as the chief content officer and outreach and engagement assistant on听, a mobile application designed to increase civic engagement among college students.

鈥淭here are innumerable problems facing every community. It takes individual actors to begin changing and fixing them,鈥 said Diaz, a recipient of Pitt鈥檚 full-ride Chancellor鈥檚 Scholarship. 鈥淚 want people to see CivWiz as a tool itself, but also as a tool to establish the baseline knowledge, vocabulary and awareness needed to start movements, better communities and evoke changes they want to see.鈥

Diaz wears many hats on the project, including that of research mentor. In this role he oversees a team of five undergraduate research assistants responsible for testing and developing content for the quiz-based tool, which is combatting an increasing lack of civic knowledge among American and global populations. while has regressed by more than a decade.

鈥淐onnor is an incredible student,鈥 said Idoko, associate director of the Center on Race and Social Problems and CivWiz鈥檚 advisor. 鈥淥n this project, which is one of the initiatives housed in the Office of Social Innovation, he鈥檚 coordinated our student team on this project, applying for grants, and is leading us into the future. The Newman Civic Fellowship speaks to students鈥 ability to be powerful agents for change, and that is Connor.鈥

David C. Frederick Honors College Dean Nicola Foote said Diaz鈥檚 efforts are positioning himself and the school as global leaders.

鈥淐onnor鈥檚 work on CivWiz is reimagining civic education on a global scale and makes learning about civics accessible to a broad public audience in a fun and engaging way,鈥 said Foote. 鈥淚 could not be prouder of his success and recognition听补苍诲听consider his selection for this award is a powerful reflection of his emergence as one of our nation鈥檚 most innovative public leaders.鈥

Pitt, Diaz said, has given him not only a platform to pursue his interests, but also a dream team of collaborators. He praised Idoko as well as听听补苍诲听 for showing him he can be a force for good as a lawyer and undergraduate instructor.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 overstate my gratitude and couldn鈥檛 be happier to bring this award back to my office,鈥 said Diaz. 鈥淚t鈥檚 relatively new and small but doing more significant, impactful work than anyone could imagine with the听,听Ian Kehinde鈥檚 podcast, the听听补苍诲听my project. All are creating frameworks to inform scalable and accessible social action.鈥澨

A future inspired by the past

Diaz is the child of an immigrant mother 听and the first in his immediate family to attend a traditional four-year college. Having grown up attending schools with minimal diversity where 鈥渃asual racism,鈥 was standard, two instances set him on a course for social and civil justice: George Floyd鈥檚 murder and participation in the National Constitution Center鈥檚 .

Following Floyd鈥檚 death, protests regarding Confederate monuments erupted in Diaz鈥檚 hometown of Richmond, Virginia, and showed him that lack of knowledge can lead to lack of respect. That experience helped lead him to We the People, which Diaz said, 鈥渙pened my mind to the constitution鈥檚 power when used for good with respect to ensuring civil rights, and to how pervasive constitutional legal parameters are in society.鈥

He compared the program to putting glasses on for the first time: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a feeling I hope to give other people; to see how these structures you didn鈥檛 even know were there affect you.鈥

Diaz鈥檚 flair for history, his 鈥渂read and butter,鈥 began in high school. Though his initial interest was in European history, his experiences led him to take a more critical look at American history. As a Brackenridge Fellow last summer, he researched Antebellum American history, homing in on American Indians鈥 experience right before the Civil War.

For Diaz, the intersection between history and law is essential to achieving his goal of practicing civil rights law. 鈥淚鈥檓 a firm believer that historians are well-served by a baseline understanding of legal history because it affects everything in American life,鈥 he said.

On this path, he aims to meld history and practical discipline with his passion for people. 听

鈥淎s Ron (Idoko) says, we鈥檙e trying to end racism, save America, save democracy. Lofty goals, but I think we鈥檙e moving toward them through our work.鈥

Photography by Aimee Obidzinski