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From Foster Youth to Advocate: An Evening with Andrew Bridge

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Educational/Awareness Career Prep Culture - Inclusion Resources

Wed, Apr 8, 2026

5 PM – 6:30 PM CDT (GMT-5)

Young Auditorium

930 W Main St, Whitewater, WI 53190, United States

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Sales Start Feb 20, 2026 at 1 PM Sales End Apr 7, 2026 at 5 PM Availability Unlimited Price FREE

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The Fostering Success and Independence Program at UW–Whitewater is excited to welcome former foster youth, child welfare advocate, and New York Times bestselling author Andrew Bridge for a meaningful and inspiring evening.

This free event will take place at the Young Auditorium on April 8th, 2026 from 5:00 to 6:30 PM. Andrew will share his lived experience, professional journey, and insights on the child welfare system and the power of advocacy.

We warmly invite aspiring and current social workers, educators, counselors, and any community members to attend. All are welcome to join this important and impactful conversation.

Where

Young Auditorium

930 W Main St, Whitewater, WI 53190, United States

Speakers

Andrew Bridge's profile photo

Andrew Bridge

Andrew Bridge spent 11 years in Los Angeles County foster care, before earning a scholarship to Wesleyan University and graduating from Harvard Law School. He is a Fulbright Fellow and a Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Writing Resident.



His work has garnered coverage in The New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Showtime, The Observer, The CBS Early Show, NBC Nightly News, Time Magazine, PBS, Psychology Today, NPR, and Observer Magazine.



He began his legal career representing children against the State of Alabama. His work resulted in the closure of one of the most notorious psychiatric institutions in the country, the Eufaula Adolescent Center. After that, he returned home to Los Angeles as CEO of The Alliance for Children’s Rights. He defended children at MacLaren Hall, where he was once confined. Under Andrew’s leadership, The Alliance successfully sued Los Angeles County over its practice of not visiting foster children. The victory gave every foster child the right to see and speak with their social worker at least once a month.



Andrew chaired Los Angeles County’s Blue Ribbon Foster Care Task Force, which called for an end to the disproportionate removal of African-American babies from their parents. He is the co-founder of National Adoption Day. He went on to lead California’s largest recruiter of LGBT+ foster and adoptive parents.



A sought-after expert in his field, he has advised senior federal and state officials on reforming our foster care system to meet the needs of families living in poverty. His educational work resulted in the establishment of New Village Girls Academy, California’s first all-girls high school for pregnant and parenting teens. He regularly consults with child welfare systems, children’s facilities, and private foundations. As a member of Arizona’s Foster Care Review Board, Andrew advises Arizona’s Juvenile Court on the safety and well-being of individual children in the state’s care.


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