Building Community and Accountibility

Where passion meets purpose. We’re on a mission to dismantle racism, build power with communities, and create a healthier future for all. Join us in rewriting the narrative of public health with heart and equity at its core.

About ARCH Center

Led by inaugural Director Dr. Wendy E. Barrington, the ARCH Center is a community-driven academic hub focused on disrupting structural racism and discrimination across diverse populations and contexts. Sparked by concerned campus and community activists in 2016, UW administration seeded over $1 million to establish the ARCH Center which will serve as an accountability mechanism for the continued anti-racist transformation of the UW School of Public Health and beyond. We enter the knowledge and experience of those originally targeted by U.S. colonization to reveal key mechanisms of structural racism and discrimination that continue to impact all our communities across systems, sectors, and settings. From this stance, the ARCH Center is working with communities to build a data-informed resource of effective anti-racist strategies for health to serve the humanity and liberation of all people.

“We as a society are not healthy. We can do better by prioritizing change that will benefit those directly impacted by structural racism and discrimination. We can do better by centering, uplifting, and championing the strengths of communities placed at the margins by our systems. In solidarity, every community will benefit from these strategies of radical inclusion.”

Wendy E. Barrington, PhD, MPH | Director

Vision, Mission, and Values

We envision a world where health justice is prioritized to serve the humanity and liberation of all people. Our mission is to co-create and test strategies that disrupt racism in health while amplifying the knowledge and experiences of Black and Indigenous peoples in our collaborative approach to community health equity action. Our approach is guided by the following values:

• Health equity
• Cultural wealth
• Community voice and self-determination
• Systems and institutional accountability

Our Founding and Founders

It is important to share the story for how the ARCH Center was born because that narrative has shaped how we are spinning up its structure and honing its vision, mission, and values. This truth-telling also serves as a sustained call and commitment for accountability to address institutionalized racism and anti-Blackness, specifically, at the University of Washington School of Public Health (SPH) and beyond.

In 2016, campus police responded to a group of men, all either SPH members, program participants, or their guests who were standing outside while Black. The encounter resulted in one man being taken into custody and the others left without explanation or certainty of that man’s continued health and well-being. When this incident was shared with SPH leadership, the concerns were neither heard nor addressed. The dismissal of the concern heightened trauma responses which were then met with another avoidable police encounter. A departmental building was locked down and armed police were stationed inside for several days.

Students, faculty, staff, and community members rose up and demanded repair and assurances that SPH would commit to and be accountable for anti-racist transformation. The ARCH Center was the structure demanded by those constituents and the dean and provost at the time seeded over $1M for its establishment. Multiple national searches later, Dr. Wendy E. Barrington was universally selected as the ARCH Center inaugural director in 2021. 

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
In 2016, campus police responded to a group of men, all either SPH members, program participants, or their guests who were standing outside while Black. The encounter resulted in one man being taken into custody and the others left without explanation or certainty of that man’s continued health and well-being. When this incident was shared with SPH leadership, the concerns were neither heard nor addressed. The dismissal of the concern heightened trauma responses which were then met with another avoidable police encounter. A departmental building was locked down and armed police were stationed inside for several days.
Students, faculty, staff, and community members rose up and demanded repair and assurances that SPH would commit to and be accountable for anti-racist transformation. The ARCH Center was the structure demanded by those constituents and the dean and provost at the time seeded over $1M for its establishment. Multiple national searches later, Dr. Wendy E. Barrington was universally selected as the ARCH Center inaugural director in 2021.

ARCH Staff

Meet Our Team

Get to know the passionate minds driving change at ARCH Center. Our diverse team of experts bring a wealth of experience in public health, anti-racism advocacy, and community engagement. Meet the faces behind our mission, dedicated to dismantling racism and advancing community health for a brighter future.

Dr. Wendy E. Barrington

Kisna Prado

Carolyn Fan

Matthew Frank (Diné)

Alcess Nonot

Tiara Ranson

Brittany Oladipupo

Zyna Bakari

Deeqa Mah

Kenzie Locke

Dr. Wendy E. Barrington (she/her) serves as the inaugural Director of the ARCH Center...
Learn More →

Dr. Wendy E. Barrington

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a second-year MPH student in the Community-Oriented Public Health Practice (COPHP) program...
Learn More →

Kisna Prado

She is a Research Scientist at the ARCH Center, where she was previously a Graduate Research Assistant...
Learn More →

Carolyn Fan

He is Diné from the Navajo Nation. He is a graduate research assistant at the ARCH Center...
Learn More →

Matthew Frank (Diné)

She is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She graduated with degrees in Human...
Learn More →

Alcess Nonot

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center. She is Black, Cape Verdean...
Learn More →

Tiara Ranson

She is an Operations Specialist at the ARCH Center. She earned her Master of Public...
Learn More →

Brittany Oladipupo

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a Master of Public Health student...
Learn More →

Zyna Bakari

She is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She earned her MPH from the....
Learn More →

Deeqa Mah

She is a Communications Specialist within the Department of Health Systems and...
Learn More →

Kenzie Locke

she/her) serves as the inaugural Director of the ARCH Center and is a double-tenured faculty in the Schools of Nursing and Public

Carolyn Fan(she/they) is a Research Scientist at the ARCH Center, where she was previously a Graduate Research Assistant. She is a current

Alcess Nonot(she/her) is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She graduated with degrees in Human Development and Biology with a minor

Brittany Oladipupo(she/her) is an Operations Specialist at the ARCH Center. She earned her Master of Public health with a concentr ation in

Deeqa Mah (she/her) is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She earned her MPH from the University of Washington where her

Kisna Prado(she/her/ella) is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a secondyear MPH student in the Community Oriented Public Health

Matthew Frank (he/him) is Diné from the Navajo Nation. He is a graduate research assistant at the ARCH Center. He graduated with

Tiara Ranson(she/her) is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center. She is Black, Cape Verdean, and Louisiana Creole tracing her heritage

Zyna Bakari (she/her) is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a Master of Public Health student. Leveraging her background

Kenzie Lock (she/her) is a Communications Specialist within the Department of Health Systems and Population Health at the University of Washington who

Scholars in Residence

Engage with leading scholars and practitioners at ARCH Center’s Scholars in Residence program. Explore their research, insights, and contributions to advancing anti-racism in public health. Join us in learning from and collaborating with these distinguished voices in our community.
Dr. Elle Lett
Learn More →

Dr. Elle Lett

Dr. Megha Ramaswamy
Learn More →

Dr. Megha Ramaswamy

Dr. Jeanie Santaularia
Learn More →

Dr. Jeanie Santaularia

Dr. Keeonna Harris
Learn More →

Dr. Keeonna Harris

Dr. Elle Lett ( Dr./she/her) is a Black, transgender woman, statistician – epidemiologist and physician – in – training. Through her work,

Dr.Megha Ramaswamy(she/her) serves as Professor and Chair of Health Systems and PopulationHealth at the University of Washington School of Public Health. Dr.

(she/her/ella) is an interdisciplinary population health researcher. Before coming to UW she was a Postdoctoral S cholar in Population Science with the

Dr. Keeonna Harris (she/her) is Black woman, born and raised in Watts, and other parts of South – Central Los Angeles. She

ARCH Center Structure

The “flower of power” is a shared governance structure to integrate the voice and perspectives of constituent communities into the decision-making that drives the strategic direction and actions of the ARCH Center. The flower of power “petals” are: the Black Advisory Collective (BLAC), the Indigenous Advisory Collective (IAC), the Student Advisory Board (SAB), and the Community Accountability Board (CAB).

Members of BLAC and IAC include faculty, staff, students, and community members who identify as Black and/or Indigenous. Members of SAB include students from the SPH as well as from other schools and colleges across the UW Seattle campus. The CAB is in the initial formative stages and is envisioned to include leaders from community-based organizations or groups who are partnering with the ARCH Center on anti-racism projects or who are directly impacted by issues or actions related to the scholarship of ARCH Center staff or affiliates. 

Dr. Wendy E. Barrington

She serves as the inaugural Director of the ARCH Center and is a double-tenured faculty in the Schools of Nursing and Public Health at the University of Washington. She uses anti-racism and participatory principles to foster authentic community partnerships, support community-driven health equity action, and transform public health systems via policy and practice change. Dr. Barrington serves as steering committee member for the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH) Framing the Future Initiative and member of the CDC Community Preventive Services Task Force (CPSTF) where she chairs the Health Equity Committee.

Dr. Barrington approaches her work with a deep love of humanity coupled with a commitment to move in space with humility, empathy, integrity, strength, and accountability. As a biracial Black woman descendant of enslaved Africans in North Carolina, Dr. Barrington grounds her work and is inspired by critical race theory and Black queer feminist scholarship. Growing up in rural Washington and Oregon, she also loves small-towns and the smell of alfalfa in the summertime. Her joys include eating and traveling with family and friends (food-inspired trips are the best!) as well as gardening, reading fantasy or science fiction, watching snow fall, or soaking in the sun.

Kisna Prado

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a second-year MPH student in the Community-Oriented Public Health Practice (COPHP) program. She is a first-generation daughter of Central American immigrants from Nicaragua and Costa Rica and grew up in a predominately Mexican and Central American working-class, immigrant community in Southern California. As a bilingual, Latina public health professional, she grounds herself in the experiences of immigrant, working-class communities like her own and is dedicated to centering the voices of those that have been historically marginalized and silenced. She is passionate about health equity research, Latine health issues, and applying community-based participatory research and anti-racism principles to her work. Outside of work, she loves trying new restaurants, watching anime, and hanging out with her partner and their dog, Nico.

Carolyn Fan

She is a Research Scientist at the ARCH Center, where she was previously a Graduate Research Assistant. She is a current PhD student in Health Services in the Department of Health Systems and Population Health, where her research focuses on racism and discrimination across race, sexual orientation, and gender. She is passionate about applying anti-racist, intersectional, and other anti-oppressive approaches to research. Carolyn graduated with a B.A. in Global Public Health & Sociology from New York University, and has worked as a community health worker and in health research for LGBTQ+, Asian American, and other marginalized communities. She credits her passion for health equity to growing up in a Chinese immigrant family, as well as her queer and Asian American identities. Outside of work and school, she spends her free time learning pottery, exploring museums, and trying as many Seattle bakeries as possible!

Matthew Frank

He is Diné from the Navajo Nation. He is a graduate research assistant at the ARCH Center. He graduated with an MPH and MSW from the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis. He is a Ph.D. student at the University of Washington’s School of Social Work. His research focuses on Native American and Indigenous health and the role of social determinants of health, particularly how socioeconomic position and social context affect health inequalities. He has over ten years of experience in research translation for population health improvement and program development, implementation, and evaluation. Outside of his UW duties, Mr. Frank is a voracious bookworm who eats too much takeout and hangs out with his partner and their rez pup. He’s a social media doom stroller who loves watching people assemble mechanical keyboards and play slot machines.

Alcess Nonot

She is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She graduated with degrees in Human Development and Biology with a minor in Sociology from the University of Texas at Austin. She is interested in how systemic oppression shapes early life stress and ultimately, later health outcomes within underserved communities. She is passionate about working at the intersection of medicine and community-based research. Alcess was raised in a Filipino immigrant community in Texas and loves all things related to Asian cuisine. Outside of work, she loves playing guitar and going on long walks with her dog.

Tiara Ranson

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center. She is Black, Cape Verdean, and Louisiana Creole tracing her heritage to sharecroppers in Beaumont, Texas. As a second year MPH student from the Department of Global Health, her career goal is to implement community-led programs that dismantling racism for Black women in global maternal health. She recently completed her practicum in Kenya where she conducted process mapping to understand the interactions that women have with HIV providers to receive family planning counseling. In addition to her passion in maternal-child health and qualitative research, she loves all things art; In her free time, you will always find her doodling, dancing and painting.

Brittany Oladipupo

She is an Operations Specialist at the ARCH Center. She earned her Master of Public health with a concentration in Health Policy and Management from Georgia State University and Bachelor of Science in Public Administration with a concentration in Health Services Administration from California State University, Dominguez Hills. Her interest lies in dismantling health disparities, maternal and child health, and mental health. She completed her Capstone Project titled, “The Association between Mental Illness and Incarceration Among the African American/Black Population in the United States”, discussing ways to provide mental health services to mitigate people from being imprisoned due to the lack of mental health supports and the history of intergenerational trauma within the U.S. Black population. In her free time, she enjoys going to the beach and hiking, spending time with family and friends, listening to music, reading, volunteering, and practicing other methods of self-care. Brittany is Black and Nigerian and is from Southern California

Zyna Bakari

She is a Graduate Research Assistant at the ARCH Center and a Master of Public Health student. Leveraging her background in community engagement, Zyna played a pivotal role in leading vaccine outreach efforts in King County’s Black communities and informing statewide equity strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic. With an academic background in social sciences, Zyna is particularly interested in health communication, health behavior theory, and implementing public health interventions in community settings. Zyna is a first-generation American daughter of a Filipina mother and Zanzibari father, and is from Yellow Springs, Ohio. She loves reading, writing, music, spending time outside, and exploring new restaurants, coffee shops, and bookstores.

Deeqa Mah

She is a Research Coordinator at the ARCH Center. She earned her MPH from the University of Washington where her thesis was titled “Healthcare provider perspectives on the benefits and barriers of integrating PrEP into FP services in Kenya”. She is passionate about the intersection of anti-racism, reproductive health and digital health and understanding how to mitigate those barriers for her community. In her free time, she loves listening to music, playing tennis and spending time with loved ones. Deeqa is a first generation Somali-American and is from Kent, Washington.

Kenzie Lock

She is a Communications Specialist within the Department of Health Systems and Population Health at the University of Washington who helps the ARCH Center with communications efforts and initiatives. Kenzie is a public health professional using health communication and digital storytelling to create health equity. As a Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) she understands the beauty and fluidity of different forms of communication and strives to connect the academic world and communities. She specializes in qualitative research, community engagement, content creation, and digital media management. She loves reading, movies, concerts, dancing and exploring new ice cream shops and bookstores.

Dr. Elle Lett

Dr. Elle Lett ( Dr./she/her) is a Black, transgender woman, statistician – epidemiologist and physician – in – training. Through her work, she applies the theories and principles of Black feminism to measuring and mitigating the health impacts of systemic racism, transphobia, a nd other forms of discrimination on oppressed groups in the United States. To date, her work has focused on intersectional approaches to transgender health, police violence as a manifestation of systemic racism, algorithmic fairness and representation and inclusion in the healthcare workforce. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology from Harvard College, master’s degrees in Biostatistics and Statistics from Duke University and The Wharton School, respectively, and a PhD in Epidemiolo gy from the University of Pennsylvania where she is also completing her MD (anticipated 2025). She serves as the Scholar – in – Residence at the Center for Anti – Racism and Community Health and Clinical Assistant Professor in Health Systems and Population Healt h at the University of Washington School of Public Health. She also serves as an Associate Editor for Health Equity, International Journal of Transgender Health, and on the editorial boards of Transgender Health and The Bulletin of Applied Transgender Stud ies. Outside of her work as a scholar – activist, Dr. Lett is passionate about live music, makeup, sewing, and running.

Dr. Megha Ramaswamy

Dr.Megha Ramaswamy(she/her) serves as Professor and Chair of Health Systems and PopulationHealth at the University of Washington School of Public Health. Dr. Ramaswamy is a long-time teacher,mentor, and researcher in the areas of sexual, reproductive health, cancer prevention, and massincarceration (drmegharamaswamy.com). In her research, Dr. Ramaswamy takes community healthproblems, works with stakeholders who are experts of their own lives, and comes up with plans for howbest toimplement solutions at individual, practice, and policy levels. Her mentorship activities fosterdiversity and inclusion, and she has successfully leveraged federal funds to formalize and strengthen thepipeline to public health careers of students, teachers, and faculty traditionally underrepresented in thepublic health and clinical sciences. Dr. Ramaswamy is Indian-American, born in Lansing, Michigan andraised in, Starkville, Mississippi. She grew up with bedtime stories about racism and politics–whyshelived in a town with one public school and the “academy,” an all-white school established againstdesegregation. These conversations and early developmental experiences shaped her passion tobecome a keen observer of social injustice. In her life and work, she has been committed to interveningto promote social justice and health. In her free time, Dr. Ramaswamy loves being with her people–kid, family, friends, and community. She loves beautiful interiors, stylish clothes, and ease.

Dr. Jeanie Santaularia

(she/her/ella) is an interdisciplinary population health researcher. Before coming to UW she was a Postdoctoral S cholar in Population Science with the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She completed her doctoral training in Epidemiology from the University of Minnesota and Master of Public Health in Epidemiology from the U niversity of Illinois at Chicago. Prior to beginning her doctoral studies, Dr. Santaularia worked in various capacities with local and state governments in epidemiological surveillance and practice. Her primary areas of research include violence prevention , social epidemiology, health equity, social determinants of health, and analytical methods to obtain causal estimates in social epidemiology when traditional randomized control trials are either not feasible or unethical. Dr. Santaularia’s current body of research examines how: (1) social and institutional determinants influence violence; and (2) violence gets under the skin or is ‘embodied’ to impact health. She aims to expand this research to better understand the cumulative influence of violence over th e life course as well as the roles of society, community, psychosocial and family protective factors in offsetting negative outcomes due to violence. Ultimately, she will build on this research to develop and test scalable interventions in underserved popu lations informed by understanding the role of larger social structures, familial and cultural contexts. Dr. Santaularia’s education and training changed her life. As César Chávez said, “Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot un – educat e the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore.” Her goal is to create a world where people are not constrained by those in power. She is committed to these principles and believe they are central to ethical and impactful violence prevention.

Dr. Keeonna Harris

Dr. Keeonna Harris (she/her) is Black woman, born and raised in Watts, and other parts of South – Central Los Angeles. She is a postdoctoral scholar at the ARCH Center and in the department of Health Systems and Population Health. She received her PhD in Justice Studie s from Arizona State University, where her dissertation research analyzed the experiences of Black Women navigating motherhood and mass incarceration. In her writing, she focuses on the health disparities and radical organizing for women connected to syste ms of mass incarceration. Harris’ memoir Mainline Mama (Amistad Press, 2025) explores motherhood, familial relationships, and well – being for Black women in the United States. Her work has been published in various venues including Salon.com, So We Can Know : Writers of Color on Pregnancy, Loss, Abortion, and Birth and (Super)vision: On Motherhood and Surveillance. Harris has received several honors including a 2024 – 2025 Haymarket Writing Freedom Fellow and 2018 – 2019 PEN America Writing for Justice Fellowship . Beyond research and writing, Keeonna emphasizes mothering in movements for justice as a tool for organizing, and as a deeply rooted connection between women, families and communities facing similar circumstances. Keeonna is committed to community and is currently working to build a support and advocacy network for mothers and children who have incarcerated partners and parents.