Activist Video Archive

Preserving progressive, multicultural voices of Los Angeles area activists, and philanthropists.

Preserving progressive, multicultural voices of Los Angeles area activists and philanthropists.

Victor Narro

Part One

Part Two

Victor Narro is a nationally known expert on the workplace rights of immigrant workers. He has been involved with immigrant rights and labor issues for many years, and is currently Project Director for the UCLA Downtown Labor Center. At the Labor Center, Narro’s focus is to provide leadership training and workshops for Los Angeles’s immigrant workers, and internship opportunities for UCLA students. Narro is core faculty for the UCLA Labor Studies Program where he teaches classes on immigrant workers and the labor movement. He is also core faculty for the Public Interest Law and Policy Program at UCLA Law School. In August 2017, the Mayor of Los Angeles appointed Narro to serve on the five-member commission for the new Department of Cannibis Regulation.

Narro was formerly Co-Executive Director of Sweatshop Watch. Prior to that, he was the Workers’ Rights Project Director for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA) where he was involved with organizing day laborers, domestic workers, garment workers, and gardeners. His work in multi-ethnic organizing led to the creation of the Multi-ethnic Immigrant Workers Organizing Network (MIWON) in collaboration with KIWA, Garment Worker Center and Pilipino Worker Center. 

Through Narro’s leadership, the day laborer project has grown into the National Day Laborer Organizing Network that today includes 40 community-based worker centers around the country. Over the past few years, Narro has worked with the Los Angeles Labor Movement on major immigrant worker organizing campaigns with janitors, hotel workers, laundry workers, sanitation workers, port truckers, and the CLEAN Carwash Campaign. Before his tenure at CHIRLA, Narro worked in the Los Angeles Regional Office of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF). From 2005-2010, Narro was appointed by L.A. Mayor Villaraigosa to the Police Permit Review Panel of the Los Angeles Police Commission, and he served on the Board of Commissioners of the Community Redevelopment Agency of Los Angeles in 2011. In 2017, L.A. Mayor Garcetti appointed Narro to a five-year term on the Cannabis Regulations Commission.

Narro is the author of many law review and journal articles. He is co-author of “Broken Laws, Unprotected Workers: Violations of Employment and Labor Laws” in America’s Cities (2008), and “Wage Theft and Workplace Violations in Los Angeles” (2010). He is also co-editor of Working for Justice: The L.A. Model of Organizing and Advocacy (Cornell University Press, 2010). Narro published Living Peace: Connecting Your Spirituality with Your Work for Justice(CreateSpace Publishing 2014), and the Spanish language version, Paz en Accion: Conecta tu espiritualidad con tu trabajo por la justicia social (2015). More recently, Narro is co-editor and contributing author of No One Size Fits All: Worker Organization, Policy, and Movement in a New Economic Age (Cornell University Press, 2018).


“Everything that is tearing us down today will become a memory, and this memory will be shared as an anecdote or a story or a poem or a play or a warning. It will be shared with another human being, who will then understand that he is not alone in his sadness. This is why we show up for others and tell our tales and listen to others. The great congregation meets daily, and you are someone’s angel today.”

-Tennessee Williams/Interview with James Grissom

info@activistvideoarchive.org

©2024 Sundays Well Productions