Dulce Vasquez On Education, Community and Latinidad
Dulce Vasquez was born in Mexico, grew up undocumented in the United States, and went on to study at Northwestern, UCLA, and Sciences Po in Paris. She served as a Los Angeles City Commissioner, ran for City Council in District 9 and State Assembly in District 57 — two of the highest-poverty districts in all of Los Angeles — and built a digital platform that turns complex policy into content that actually connects with the people it's meant to serve. She didn't wait for permission. She decided her community deserved better and showed up.This week, Dulce joins us on Behind The Work.Dulce is a Los Angeles-based content creator, education leader, and former political candidate who uses digital storytelling to break down the issues that shape everyday life — housing, public transportation, education, mental health, and the rights of women and LGBTQ+ communities. She currently serves as Assistant Vice President at Arizona State University, leading strategic partnerships and public engagement. She is a formerly undocumented LGBTQ+ Latina, a five-time marathoner, and one of the most grounded, clear-eyed voices on what civic power actually looks like when it's built from the ground up.In this conversation, we start at the beginning — what she remembers most about those early years, when she realized education could change her life, and where her sense of civic responsibility came from. We talk about what it felt like to navigate elite institutions like Northwestern, UCLA, and Sciences Po as someone who grew up undocumented, and what those spaces taught her about systems, inequality, and who gets to be in the room.We get into the campaigns — what made her decide to run, what economic justice actually looks like at the neighborhood level in South Central, and what it feels like to put yourself forward in those spaces as a formerly undocumented immigrant. We talk about how her identities shape the way she leads, where she found the permission to take up space in a world that often tells immigrant families to stay quiet and be grateful — and what gives her hope right now about Los Angeles, civic engagement, and the communities she serves.This episode is for you if:- You grew up being told to be grateful, stay quiet, and not ask for too much — and something in you has always pushed back against that.- You're a first-generation immigrant, a child of immigrants, or someone navigating systems that were never designed with you in mind.- You care about civic engagement but feel disconnected from politics and want to understand what real community leadership actually looks like.- You've thought about running for office, stepping into public service, or using your platform for something bigger — and you want to hear from someone who did it.- You're building in education, policy, or social impact and want a sharper lens on where the systems are failing and where the opportunity lives.- You need a reminder that your story — all of it, even the parts the world told you to hide — is exactly what makes you the right person to lead.Connect with Jessica:- Subscribe to the Behind The Work newsletter — link in bio- Follow Jessica on Instagram: http://instagram.com/@jessicasantana- Follow Behind The Work on Instagram: http://instagram.com/@behindtheworkshow- Follow Jessica on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@jessworldwide- Follow Behind The Work on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@behindtheworkAbout Behind The Work:Behind The Work is the show for the ambitious person looking to level up their lives, their career, and their businesses. Hosted by Jessica Santana, Behind The Work goes deep with the executives, founders, and leaders who are building from a place of power. Each episode pulls back the curtain on the real work — the strategy, the setbacks, the pivots, and the purpose — behind the people, companies, and organizations shaping what's next.