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Saturday
Evening Feature Event:
Harry
Belafonte, Angela
Davis and David Harvey
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Imagining a World with Transformative
Justice:
Reform and/or Revolution Today
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Harry
Belafonte exposed America to world music and spent his life challenging
and overturning racial barriers across the globe. Belafonte met a young Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. on King’s historic visit to New York in the early 1950s.
Belafonte and King developed a deep and abiding friendship, and Belafonte played
a key role in the civil rights movement, including the 1963 March on
Washington. In 1985, disturbed by war,
drought, and famine in Africa, Belafonte helped organize the Grammy-winning song
“We Are the World,” a multi-artist effort to raise funds for Africa. Belafonte
was active in efforts to end apartheid in South Africa and to release Nelson
Mandela. Belafonte served as the cultural
advisor for the Peace Corps, a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and was honored as an
Ambassador of Conscience by Amnesty International. Recently, Belafonte founded
the Sankofa Justice & Equity Fund, a non-profit social justice organization
that utilizes the power of culture and celebrity in partnership with activism.
It is a space for artists to contribute their talents to build awareness and
confront the issues that negatively impact marginalized
communities. |
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Angela Y. Davis
is known internationally for her ongoing work to combat all forms of oppression
in the U.S. and abroad. Over the years she has been active as a student,
teacher, writer, scholar, and activist/organizer. She is a living witness to the
historical struggles of the contemporary era. Today she remains an advocate of
prison abolition and has developed a powerful critique of racism in the criminal
justice system. She is a founding member of Critical Resistance, a national
organization dedicated to the dismantling of the prison industrial complex.
Angela Davis is Distinguished Professor Emerita in the History of Consciousness
and Feminist Studies Departments at the University of California, Santa
Cruz. |
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David
Harvey is a Distinguished Professor of
Anthropology & Geography at the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is also the world's most cited
academic geographer and the author of many books and essays influential in the
development of modern geography as a discipline. His work has contributed to
broad social and political debate, and he is credited with helping to resurrect
social class and Marxist methods as serious methodological tools in the critique
of global capitalism, particularly its neoliberal
form
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Early registration
discounts end soon::
Register for the conference - here
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Celebrating 10
Years
Left Forum
2014,
May 30 - June
1
John Jay College of
Criminal Justice The City University of New York
524 West 59th Street, New
York, NY, 10019
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- Support Left Forum: Contribute 10 dollars or more for 10 more
years
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panel or workshop - here
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panels/workshops: Download or forward -here
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the conference - here - while early discounts last
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Please
Forward Far and Wide
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