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Daniel Oliveras de Ita

Pronouns: He/His/Him

Digital Storyteller

Communications

Bio

Daniel Oliveras de Ita is a Mexican anthropologist, filmmaker and documentary photographer, who joined the ACLU of Florida staff in August 2019 after working with the organization for two years as a freelancer.

He has dedicated more than ten years to the ethnographic research of indigenous peoples, peasants, farmworkers and immigrants. His work is featured in books and journals, and research results released in documentary films.

He completed a degree in Ethnology at the National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH), and a master's degree in Amerindian Studies at the Complutense University of Madrid. He is a PhD candidate in the Institute of Anthropological Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).

In his documentary filmmaking, he focuses on allowing the people to tell their own stories using video as a tool to showcase the diversity of our world and make it a more just and inclusive place to live.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
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  • Racial Justice|
  • +1 Issue

Justice Archives: Dr. Tameka Bradley Hobbs

Historian Dr. Tameka Bradley Hobbs discusses the importance of learning, sharing, defending, and preserving Black history, amid ongoing efforts to censor it.
News & Commentary
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  • Racial Justice|
  • +1 Issue

Justice Archives: Dr. J. Michael Butler on MLK's Last March for the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Dr. J. Michael Butler of Flagler College discusses MLK’s last march for passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in St. Augustine, and its legacy in the struggle for equal justice under law.