2025

NWSA, A History 2025 – 45th National Conference

45th National Conference | "An Honour Song: Feminist Struggles, Feminist Victories" | November 13-16 | San Juan, Puerto Rico USA

Review President Lewis' 2025 Presidential Address

View File

Browse our 2025 Exhibit Hall Vendors 

We are proud to work with local, women and family-owned businesses based in Puerto Rico to stretch the fullness of our dollar. In these new relationships, we are also humbled to introduce them to our membership and our long-time (and sometimes new) partners who help make our Exhibit Hall vibrant!

Link here

View the 2025 NWSA Book Prizes and Award Winners

Each year, NWSA in coordination with different NWSA caucuses and publications, offers multiple awards for people who are current members of NWSA. Awardees are announced in the Annual Conference program and are celebrated in person at the Annual Conference!

Link here

NWSA Governance

Below are the 2025 NWSA Governing Council members. You can see the current Governing Council members, conference co-chairs, and staff members here.

President

Heidi R. Lewis
Vice President Stephanie Troutman Robbins
Treasurer
Hiram Ramirez
Secretary Umme Al-wazedi
Women of Color Caucus Chairs Stephanie Andrea Allen
Member at Large Dominique C. Hill
Member at Large Kristina Gupta
Member at Large Latoya Lee
Member at Large Jessica Pabón
Member Liaison Kristina Gupta

Program Highlights

Words (Still) Conjure: Honoring the Life, Work, and Legacy of Toni Cade Bambara

Speakers:

Zoe Bambara, Doula and Cultural Worker
Beverly Guy Sheftall, Spelman College
Linda J. Holmes, Independent Scholar
Aishah Shahidah Simmons, Survivor-Healer-Filmmaker-Writer

Facilitated by President Heidi R. Lewis

In 1970, 55 years ago, Toni Cade Bambara published The Black Woman: An Anthology, a now-classic Black feminist text featuring many of our revered and beloved icons, such as Kay Lindsey, Alice Walker, Abbey Lincoln, Nikki Giovanni, Gail Stokes, Grace Lee Boggs, Audre Lorde, Frances Beale, and Paule Marshall. One decade later, Bambara published The Salt Eaters, the classic novel that taught us "wholeness is no trifling matter." As NWSA President Heidi R. Lewis points out in “Feminists We Love: Toni Cade Bambara” (2014), Bambara gave us "a feminism that was unapologetically Black" from the time she began sharing her wisdom with the world until she passed away 30 years ago at the tender age of 56. She gave us "a feminism that was loud, strong, collective, vulnerable, powerful, communal, honest, and intimate." She gave us "the kind of Black feminism that wasn't afraid to look around and that refused to suffer fools."1 During this plenary, President Lewis will honor Bambara's life, work, and legacy alongside some of the women who were closest to her—activist Zoe Bambara, Toni’s granddaughter; Black feminist lesbian survivor-healer and award-winning writer-filmmaker Aishah Shahidah Simmons, Bambara's student; as well as two of Bambara's close friends, writer, curator, and women's health activist Linda J. Holmes, and Dr. Beverly Guy-Sheftall, past NWSA President and founding Director of the Women's Research and Resource Center and Anna Julia Cooper Professor of Women's Studies at Spelman College, home of the Toni Cade Bambara Papers. 
 
1 Heidi R. Lewis, “Feminist We Love: Toni Cade Bambara.” Toni Cade Bambara 75th Birthday Anniversary Forum, edited by Aishah Shahidah Simmons and Heidi R. Lewis. The Feminist Wire, 2014.

An Honour Song: Feminist Struggles, Feminist Victories

Speakers:

Shariana Ferrer-Nuñez, La Colectiva Feminista en Construcción 
Aurora Levins Morales, Writer and Poet
Heidi R. Lewis, Colorado College & 22nd NWSA President
Gina Starblanket, University of Victoria

Facilitated by President Heidi R. Lewis

Since Donald Trump's election as 47th President of the U.S. empire, many of us have understandably asked, "What do we do now?" As we pose and respond to this question and similar ones, we should make space for our anxieties, frustrations, and fears. We should allow our sadness, disappointment, and rage to breathe. We must also make space for remembering. This is the spirit in which we are gathering this year. Our annual conference is an honour song, a space where we will remember our feminist struggles and feminist victories. In addition to asking "what do we do now," we NWSA encourages us to ask, what might become possible when we remember who we are and who we've been? What can we (re)learn by remembering the places and spaces from where we come, the places and spaces who made us who we are? What might become possible when we remember the people and communities who taught us how to resist? President Lewis will explore these and related questions during this year's presidential address. Following the address, President Lewis will continue the conversation alongside Shariana Ferrer-Nuñez, Aurora Levins Morales, and Gina Starblanket in order to breathe into memory and give way to a louder, stronger feminist honour song.


Seguimos: Honoring the Lineage, Legacy, and Leadership of Puerto Rican Feminisms

Speakers:

Zoán T. Dávila Roldán, La Colectiva Feminista en Construcción 
Mayra Ivette Díaz Torres, Colectivo Ilé
Iris Morales, Activist, Writer, & Independent Scholar
Yamilin Rivera-Santiago, Activist, Writer, and Community-Based Communications Specialist

Facilitated by Jessica N. Pabón, Independent Scholar & NWSA Member at Large

Puerto Rican feminisms emerge within and develop under the material conditions in the “world’s oldest colony.” Rican feminist struggles against extractivist white settler colonial systems are also struggles against the violent logics of cisheterosexism, ableism, and capitalism. They’re struggles for landback, bodily autonomy, climate justice, and food sovereignty. As colonial subjects of the US since 1898, the Rican feminist struggle continues. In this plenary, Jessica Pabón joins Rican feminists of the diaspora and archipelago to discuss how and why these ongoing struggles dis/appear in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies classrooms, research, advocacy, and activism. In doing so, we invite the NWSA membership to a collective honoring of the legacies, lineages, and leadership of Puerto Rican feminists. 

Participant Highlights

  • Over 1,500 people registered and attended our 45th Annual Conference;
  • 160+ people participated in our four (4) Pre-Conference programs;
  • Attendees represented 460+ universities and colleges
  • Our Conference Program highlighted over 340 individual paper submissions for a total of 431 General Conference Sessions;
  • 29% of conference attendees identified as students (both undergraduate and graduate levels);
  • Attendees represented 42 continental USA states as well as 20 nations and territories;
  • More than 20 Masters and Doctoral degree granting Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality studies participated in our Annual MA/PhD Meet and Greet;
  • We are honored to have supported 20+ San Juan small businesses and organizations as well as 15+ women-owned businesses!

See the Full Program

Link here

Thank you to our 2025 Sponsors!

Support NWSA

Have any pictures, stories, or fun facts from past conferences? Let us know! Email us at nationaloffice@nwsa.org.

If you'd like to help us keep making NWSA history, consider donating!

DONATE

NWSA Conference Program Archives (1979-2023)

View the Full History Project

Our 2025 Conference Program Co-Chairs

We’re proud to share that our 45th Annual Conference Co-Chairs are Zoán T. Dávila Roldán, Shariana Ferrer-Nuñez, and Alexandra Pagán Vélez! Our Conference Co-Chairs serve as thought partners in designing a conference experience that attends to the contours of place/space - leveraging their leadership in the radical tradition of Black feminist, Queer, antiracist, anticolonial, political struggle as well as transformative pedagogy in naming, resisting, and dismantling systemic oppression.

Discover More

Explore our 2025 Annual Conference Resources

Our Annual Conference is the Association's core program - we bring together over 1,500 members to support the work of women's studies practitioners, amplify and disseminate research on the field, and cultivate multi-racial, multi-ethnic programs, services, and operations that align with our investments in feminist world making.

We strive to keep the conversations that arise at our annual gathering flowing; it is vital that we provide resources that augment the discussions we are able to have on-site; I invite you to review the companion resource lists for every Plenary and Presidential Session featured in our 45th Annual Conference program. These resources were curated by members of the Governing Council in an effort to align with my (Kristian Contreras) and our President, Heidi R. Lewis’ visioning for the future of NWSA. 

Learn More

Download the 2025 NWSA Local Resource Guide

In collaboration with our Local Program Committee - chaired by our Operations & Infrastructure Manager, Courtney Carroll - we've curated a number of resources to assist conference attendees throughout the duration of our 45th annual convening in San Juan. You'll find details on nearby parking facilities, gastronomy, invitations to consider how we show up as visitors to Borikén and more!

Download the Guide

Supporting our Borikén-Based Attendees

The National Women’s Studies Association holds an immense privilege in hosting our 45th Annual Conference, An Honour Song: Feminist Struggles, Feminist Victories, in San Juan this upcoming November. In our growing work with our Conference Co-Chairs, we recognize the necessity of actualizing our commitments to the local community of feminist artists, activists, disruptors, educators, emerging scholars, possibility models, and trouble makers that continue to enrich movement work throughout Borikén. Therefore, the NWSA waived our required membership and registration fees for a number of presenters and interested attendees who live in Puerto Rico.