Bio
Chandra S. Bhatnagar is executive director of the ºìÐÓÊÓÆµ of Southern California.
Chandra joined the SoCal affiliate in July 2025. A leading expert on civil rights and human rights, he brings a distinguished 20-year track record as an organizational leader and changemaker spanning the nonprofit sector, federal government and higher education.
Chandra's professional background includes more than a decade of experience working with the ºìÐÓÊÓÆµ national office in the Human Rights Program as the senior staff attorney leading the program’s litigation and strategic policy on racial justice and immigrants’ rights issues.
Chandra also served in the Obama administration as the senior legal and policy advisor to the chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). In that role, Chandra oversaw the office of the chair’s strategic efforts on issues including communications; immigrant, migrant and vulnerable workers; complex employment relationships; policing and labor trafficking.
In 2017, Chandra joined UCLA as its inaugural assistant vice chancellor for civil rights, where he helped establish and lead the institution’s Civil Rights Office, a neutral and independent civil rights enforcement entity that serves all of UCLA and the UCLA Health System.
Over the course of his career, Chandra has creatively used litigation, community organizing, public education and policy advocacy to defend communities who have been historically marginalized. For instance, he was part of a legal team that successfully represented more than 500 H-2B guest workers from India who were subjected to race discrimination and exploitation in a labor trafficking scheme in Mississippi and Texas. In recognition of this effort, Chandra and co-counsel were recipients of the 2015 Public Justice Trial Lawyer of the Year Award.
Chandra began his career as a staff attorney and Skadden fellow with the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, where he directed the South Asian Workers' Project for Human Rights, a community-based project in New York City providing legal services to low-wage workers from South Asia in the post-9/11 environment.
Chandra holds a bachelor’s degree from Vassar College, a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and an LL.M. with a focus on international human rights law from Columbia Law School.
Featured work
Aug 15, 2014
The U.S. Record on Racial Discrimination is on the Whole World's Agenda
Jul 9, 2014
U.N. to Confront United States on Persistent Racial Discrimination
Dec 18, 2013
America's Broken Guestworker Program Violates Human Rights
Aug 20, 2013
Oklahoma Can't "Save" Itself from the U.S. Constitution
Jul 16, 2013
U.S. Government Must Heed Call of Human Rights Experts Worldwide to Respect Snowden's Right to Seek Asylum
Jul 11, 2013
U.S. Actions in Snowden Case Threaten Right to Seek Asylum
Jun 21, 2013
State Dept. Report Spotlights Urgent Need to Fight Modern-Day Slavery
May 17, 2013
New Push, at Home and Abroad, to Combat Modern-Day Slavery