title:
Zeke Campfield
creator:
Zeke Campfield; Leif Fredrickson
description:
Zeke Campfield discusses his role as the director of the Housing Advocates Network (HAN), a program of the Missoula Interfaith Collaborative (MIC), during the COVID pandemic. Campfield relates how he got into social work. He discusses his role as an organizer of HAN volunteers who assist people facing or experiencing homelessness. And he discusses how the pandemic affected HAN by, among other things, reducing volunteers and increasing the need for HAN’s services. He also discusses some ways that both the pandemic and the pandemic response affected housing and housing assistance in Missoula. He discusses his and HAN’s approach to helping people. The interview also includes the ways the pandemic affected Campfield personally, and his broader reflection on its meaning and impact.
publisher:
Archives and Special Collections, Mansfield Library, University of Montana
contributor:
Leif Fredrickson
created:
2022-03-30
date Submitted:
2022-03-30
type:
Sound; Text
identifier:
2022_131
language:
English
rights:
3/30/2022We grant and assign to Archives and Special Collections, Mansfield Library, University of Montana (Archives) as Project repository, non-exclusive rights of every kind pertaining to this interview, including, but not limited to, reproduction, distribution, preparation of derivative works, public performance, and display, whether or not such rights are now known, recognized or contemplated. This gift does not preclude any use that we ourselves may wish to make of the information in the recording and/or subsequent transcripts of such. Future uses may include, but are not limited to, the following: printed memoirs, written publications, radio and film and podcast productions, educational tools, and public performances. Many of these futures uses may be accessible through print, visual, electronic, or other available media, and the Internet, including Project and Archives online platforms.