Celiany Rivera-Velázquez (she/they) is a bilingual queer Afro-Puerto Rican scholar, higher education administrator, facilitator, and community organizer. She serves as Manager of the Center for Belonging and Inclusion at Borough of Manhattan Community College (CUNY), where she establishes the strategic programming across the Elizabeth Margaritis Butson Women’s Center, the Immigrant Resource Center, and the LGBTQIA+ Resource Center. In this role, she leads initiatives focused on student leadership development, campus climate, and equity-driven institutional programming within one of the largest urban public university systems in the United States. She also serves on several CUNY-wide councils, including the Migrant Liaisons Council, the LGBTQIA+ Council, and the Women’s Council, contributing to system-level coordination on student belonging and support services.
Rivera-Velázquez remains active in national scholarly and professional networks focused on equity in higher education. She joined the Governing Council as Member-at-Large for the National Women’s Studies Association (NWSA) in 2026 and has been a faculty member of the Sex Liberation Track of the National LGBTQ Task Force’s Creating Change Conference since 2015, contributing to interdisciplinary dialogues on immigration policy, gender equity, and inclusive campus practices.
She holds a Ph.D. in Communication from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2011) and has held student affairs leadership positions at both the University of Illinois and New York University. She has also held faculty appointments in Communication and Gender Studies at the Universidad de Puerto Rico and Universidad del Sagrado Corazón, teaching during Hurricanes Irma and María, the 2019 national protests, the 2020 earthquakes, and the COVID-19 pandemic.
From 2021 to 2024, Rivera-Velázquez served as Research Associate at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) at Hunter College, CUNY, where she developed public humanities initiatives, organized symposia, and mentored undergraduate researchers. Her publications include “Jayaera: The Multimedia Joy of Afro-Caribbean ‘Cuir Bliss’ (2008–2024)” in Feminist Media Histories and her role as co-editor, alongside Rutgers University scholar Carlos Decena, of the Special Issue In Caudal: Rasanblaj of Contemporary Feminist & Queer/Cuir Perspectives on Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic (CENTRO Journal, 36(2): 7–20), in which they also published the article “Caribbean Kiki: Dominican Draguéalo and Puerto Rican LaBoriVogue.” Their scholarship examines Caribbean social movements, performance cultures, and queer community formation across transnational networks.
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