“Free Angela and All Political Prisoners!” Film Screening
Tickets required. Seating is General Admission. Doors open 5:00pm. Tickets for this event are for UCLA students. Tickets are first come first serve.
Tickets required. Seating is General Admission. Doors open 5:00pm. Tickets for this event are for UCLA students. Tickets are first come first serve.
Zachary Price is the Bunche Assistant Researcher on the Race & Hollywood/Hollywood Advancement Project. His work looks at performance as a strategy for political survival and transformation. Dr. Price has a Ph.D. from the University of California, Santa Barbara in Theater and Dance, an M.F.A. in Playwriting from the New School University, a B.S. in […]
Critically acclaimed author, activist, and intellectual Angela Y. Davis is this year's UC Regents Professor and Professor of History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary PhD program, and Professor of Feminist Studies at University of California, Santa Cruz. The event is sponsored by the Gender Studies Department and will be held at 5:30pm in Royce Hall.
For more information or to register for this event please visit the 2014 Critical Race Symposium homepage.
Rosa Clemente: Doctoral student, W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, UMASS-Amherst 008 VP Candidate-Green Party
A Faculty Discussion Featuring: Leah Boustan, Sarah Haley, Keith Camacho, Kelly Lytle Hernandez and Peter James Hudson Moderated by Cheryl I. Harris For articles by the panelists please click on the titles below. "Was Postwar Suburbanization "White Flight"? Evidence From the Black Migration by Leah Boustan "Who Killed Robert McCulloch's Father?" by Peter James Hudson […]
Chris Lebron (Assistant Professor Philosophy & African American Studies, Yale University) is the author of The Color of Our Shame: Race and Justice in Our Time. The book received the American Political Science Foundation Award for Best First Book in Political Theory. He will be workshopping his paper, "The Sense and Sensibility of Equality." This is […]
"Thick Depiction: Anxiety, Anthropology, and Film/Video" presented by John L. Jackson, Jr., Dean of the School of Social Policy & Practice and the Richard Perry University Professor of Communication, Anthropology, and Africana Studies, University of Pennsylvania. More about the lecture.
This interactive campus forum will examine issues which have not been a substantial part of the national conversation, including root causes of police violence, policing as it relates to women, best practices with law enforcement and emotional wellness. Please RSVP and join us for this dynamic event!