Radical media, politics and culture.

Announcements

anonymous kumquat writes:

On Monday & Tuesday, December 8-9, 2003 in Washington DC, the
Religious Working Group on the IMF/ World Bank will hold an
extraordinary national conference on


"Faith in Practice:
Connecting the Dots for Global Economic Justice."


For anyone who wants to develop a deeper spiritual/ religious
understanding of "globalization" from the top-down and from
the bottom up, combining knowledge of the facts with wisdom
about the choices, this could be am important education.

Shalom, Arthur

jim writes:

"Race and Labor Matters"
hosted by the Brooklyn College Graduate Center for Worker Education
Thursday, December 4th 6pm-10pm
Friday, December 5th 8am-6pm
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue (at 34th St.), New York City

Historically, labor has played an important, if under analyzed, role in the struggle against racism. However, the U.S. labor movement has never fully addressed the complex and enduring issues of race and racism. Profound and ongoing structural, political, technological, and demographic transformations have fundamentally changed the dynamics of race and labor in America and in the globalized work force. What are the new problems, opportunities, and features of labor's 21st century color barrier?

Join leading labor scholars and trade union activists for a reframing of the relationship between race and labor in America. Through interdisciplinary approaches to the subject, panelists will consider significant economic, social, historical, and political conditions affecting racial stratification in union and non-union labor. Panels will discuss U.S. labor and race matters in relation to affirmative action, immigration, labor-community relations, diversity, globalization, anti-racist union efforts, union democracy, gender and possibilities for social change.

http://www.raceandlabor.org/index.htm"

jim writes:

"American Studies Association Panel on Culture, Activism, and Power:

Social Reform and Strategies for Change"


November 11-14, 2004

This panel will investigate how social activists deploy forms of culture as tool for reform. From the nineteenth century to the present, American reformers and community activists have staffed reading rooms, held sporting events, taught literature and language, and engaged in other practices that depend upon transmitting cultural forms across class or experiential boundaries. In the process, they also engage another aspect of culture by attempting to cross the boundaries that characterize distinct ethnic, middle-class, working-class or upper-class cultures.


This panel will investigate how cultural exchange reflects social power dynamics and challenges or reinforces class, ethnic, and racial boundaries in the pursuit of social reform and/or social justice. Contributors to this panel might address, for example, community activism past or present by insiders or outsiders to the community; union organizing and the uses of culture; missionary work in the United States or abroad; or prison voluntarism.

The panel also welcomes submissions from community activists about their own experiences.

Please send a 250-word abstract of your proposed paper and a one-page vita by December 31, 2003, to Emily Mieras, American Studies Department/Box 8262,
Stetson University, DeLand, FL 32723, or e-mail to emieras@stetson.edu.

Direct Action Contingency, Miami writes

This week thousands of protestors came to Miami to oppose the FTAA. The Free Trade Agreement of the Americas is an international trade agreement that aims to extend corporate control throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Prior to the mass action there was a calculated campaign on the part of the police to intimidate and harass protestors. One officer characterized this campaign by saying "You can beat the rap, but not the ride".

As we feared, our protests were met by a massive show of state repression, backed by $8.5 million in US Government funding. Miami Police Commissioner John Timoney oversaw a massive, paramilitary assault on our constitutional and human rights

http://www.geneva03.org writes
High Noon call by geneva03 initiative!

1 Towards HIGHNOON

In recent years media activism has evolved globally from local pirate
radios, video activist groups and paper zines into complex networks of
alliances that use ICT to bridge the physical gap in txt, visual and sonic
media, as well as those of distance and feasibility. Some of these networks
(like Indymedia) have showed the way for others how to structure the
information agregation and desemination process.

Launch of "EZLN: 20 &10: Fire and Word" Campaign

Subcomandante Marcos

To the people of Mexico and the peoples of the world:

To the national and international press:

Brothers and sisters:

We are informing you that on this November 17, 2003 it will have been 20
years since the birth of the EZLN.


That is why the Caracoles of Oventic, La Realidad, La Garrucha, Roberto
Barrios and Morelia will be closed to the national and international
press, and to national and international civil society, from November 15
through the 20th of the same month. The same measures will be put into
force in those villages which are predominantly zapatista. Access will not
be allowed during those days. Without exception.

US Imperialism in the 21st Century

Conference, December 5, 2003


Casa Italiana, Columbia University


Following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, the US declared a
global "War on Terrorism" and increased its powers of repression at
home and intervention abroad.


This one-day conference aims to: explain the political and economic
causes of the perpetual US drive for global domination; assess its
impact on the US and the rest of the world, especially on Africa,
Europe, and the Middle East; and scrutinize new forms of anti-war
activism, challenge, and opposition.


Our main objective is to critically examine both the strengths and
weaknesses of 'War on Terrorism' as a strategy for US global
supremacy and the resistances it has generated.

altar_magazine writes:

Altar Magazine, a forum for critical thought, coalition building, artistic creativity, and activism, is kicking off its second issue. With more pages and better print quality, this issue will feature articles such as Myopia by Inga Muscio, Hajira: Part Two by Fawzia Afzal-Khan, Arting Up the Revolution by Jonathan Culp, Concrete Blonde Interview, Celie’s Revenge: Hip-hop Betrays Black Women by Jennifer McLune, No Justice No Peace: a critique within the peace movement, Scott Heron Interview (Prefuse 73, Savath + Savalas) and much more from writers and artists living all over the world.

"Radical Theory Forum"

A workshop at the European Social Forum, Paris

13 November 2003


As part of the European Social Forum, we are interested in assembling an
international network of intellectuals/activists who are interested in
the relationship between new theories and new forms of politics. How
can we
move beyond a simplistic opposition to representative politics? How can
the
network form contaminate the institutional spaces in which a vast
number of people live and work? How can we relate the analysis of new
forms of
power with experimentation in political practice?

"The Life of Mobile Data:

Technology, Mobility and Data Subjectivity"

April 15-16, 2004, University of Surrey, England

Revised Deadline for Submission of abstracts: 30th November 2003


Keynote Speakers include:

David Lyon, Queens University, Ontario

Charles Raab, University of Edinburgh

Simon Davies, LSE and Privacy International

The rapid adoption and diffusion of mobile devices over the past decade has
transformed the way information is generated, organized and communicated
about individuals and their lives. The construction of new mobile data
profiles and of mobile, informatic selves, hold the potential to transform
what is organizationally and interpersonally meant by privacy,
individuality, community, risk, trust, and reciprocity in a mobilizing, and
globalizing world.

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