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The N-NetSeptember 27, 200501:25
When Affirmative Action Was White: “An Untold History Of Racial Inequality in Twentieth Century America” IRAAS presents a symposium in discussion of Dr. Ira Katznelson’s current book “When Affirmative Action Was White: An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth Century America” published by W. W. Norton & Company, 2005 Categories: Private
September 22, 200521:57
UNATFF 2005-United Nations Association Traveling Film Festival-September 24 and 25 - UNATFF 2005 Faces of Hope and Courage: For schedules, film descriptions and advance ticket Categories: Private
September 21, 200522:52
New-York Historical Society Unveils Plans for “SLAVERY IN NEW YORK” – – an Unprecedented, Multi-Media Exhibition of Slavery’s Central Role in the History of New York NEW YORK, NY – June 14, 2005 – In October 2005, the New-York Historical Society (N-YHS) will open a landmark exhibition on slavery and its impact on the people, landscape, institutions and economy of New York, and the nation. The extraordinary multi-media exhibit, SLAVERY IN NEW YORK, will reveal history most New Yorkers are unaware of. Categories: Private
September 20, 200515:19
Fall 2005 Business Career Fair! Friday, September 23, 2005 Bringing a variety of employers with Business positions to students! For the complete list of attendees, visit Schedule for the day: 11:00am - 12:00pm Fair open to Columbia students only Categories: Private
September 16, 200515:56
America Looking Towards Africa presentation at NYU Date: 6:00 PM Thursday, September 22. What are the choices American photographers and editors make when working in African countries? What are the stories and images they find, and which ones do they tell to America? What stories are Americans willing to hear and believe? And what do all these choices mean for American "knowledge" of Africa? Join NYU's Africa House, National Geographic and the Tisch School as photographers and editors from the National Geographic, New York University and elsewhere discuss what they think to be some of the most important images of Africa to be communicated to America. Categories: Private
September 11, 200517:07
Diaspora Covenant - As African-Americans in the United States, we have achieved much of what we have due to the grace of God and our own efforts to liberate ourselves. We would still be enslaved if many of our ancestors had not freed themselves and forced our issue of enslavement onto the agenda of Caucasians in the North and South. We would still, in fact, be enslaved if we hadn't forced segregation onto the world's stage at a time when America was trying to present a benevolent face to the world. Nonetheless, our current condition is not purely of our own making – only looking inward at ourselves to explain our condition without looking out to the wider society is short-sighted and a path to self-hatred:
Categories: Private
September 10, 200519:24
PAMBAZUKA NEWS: IN AFRICA, FOR AFRICA Pambazuka News (Pambazuka means arise or awaken in Kiswahili) is a tool for progressive social change in Africa. Pambazuka News offers a comprehensive weekly round-up of news on human rights, conflict, health, environment, social welfare, development, the internet, literature and arts in Africa. Pambazuka News is produced by Fahamu, an organisation that uses information and communication technologies to serve the needs of organisations and social movements that aspire to progressive social change. Categories: Private
September 9, 200523:04
The Center for Contemporary Black History's Malcolm X Project welcomes you to visit our newest web feature: the Malcolm XBiography Project blog. We will use this cyber-space to exhibit some of the research the Project has uncovered over the past five years. The blog currently features video excerpts from interviews with the late Ossie Davis, Columbia University historian Robin D.G. Kelley, former OAAU members Herman Ferguson and A. Peter Bailey, and Farah Jasmine Griffin, director of the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at Columbia University. The Malcolm X Project has been committed to gathering new research material about the life and times of Malcolm X / El Hajj Malik el-Shabazz. Since the inception of the Project we have undertaken two major initiatives. The first is the creation of a web-based Multimedia Study Environment (MSE), which was completed in May 2004. Developed in conjunction with Columbia's Center for New Media and Technology (CCNMTL), the MSE gives scholars and researchers the unique opportunity to interrogate Alex Haley's The Autobiography of Malcolm X from multiple angles. The MSE allows users to reexamine and reconstruct Malcolm X's Autobiography by connecting his narrative to critical annotations and a digital archive of multimedia primary source materials. visit Malcolm X Project JournalCategories: Private
06:28
Heh--saw this at Townhall by accident:
Au contraire, my foolish friends. If I recall, mere arrest was not considered good enough for looters. I do believe that the cry from the four corners was to shoot them on sight. Categories: Private
September 8, 200514:37
Human Development Report 2005 This year’s Human Development Report takes stock of human development, including progress towards the MDGs. Looking beyond statistics, it highlights the human costs of missed targets and broken promises. Extreme inequality between countries and within countries is identified as one of the main barriers to human development—and as a powerful brake on accelerated progress towards the MDGs. Available in English, Spanish, French and Russian. Summaries are available in several other languages as well. visit Human Development Report 2005Categories: Private
02:21
Heads Up:
Categories: Private
September 6, 200515:01
From Wikipedia: Due to the damage by Hurricane Katrina and subsequent flooding, a number of colleges and universities in the New Orleans metropolitan area will not be able to hold classes for the fall 2005 semester. It is estimated that 75,000 to 100,000 students have been displaced. [1]. In response, institutions across the United States and Canada are offering late registration for displaced students so that their academic progress is not unduly delayed. Some are offering free or reduced admission to displaced students. At some universities, especially state universities, this offer is limited to residents of the area. Categories: Private
September 4, 200510:43
Race and Media in the US - Entman & Rojecki research - Excerpts from Robert M. Entman and Andrew Rojecki's The Black Image in the White Mind: Media and Race in America. xx, 320 p., ... 27 tables. University of Chicago Press 2000, 2001. Studies in Communication, Media, and Public Opinion series (SCMPO). According to the Race and Media website, Entman is Professor of Communication at North Carolina State University. Rojecki is Assistant Prof of Communication at University of Illinois at Chicago. FYI regarding the book's research method - here's the link to the methodological appendix. Categories: Private
September 3, 200500:20
The Bildner Center for Western Hemisphere Studies, in collaboration with the New York Brazilian Film Festival, would like to invite you to attend this special panel, Panelists: Armando Guareño Categories: Private
August 30, 200514:48
Reel Sisters Celebrates Zora Neale Hurston at Festival 2006 "Mama exhorted her children at every opportunity to 'jump at de sun.' We Reel Sisters of the Diaspora Film Festival & Lecture Series is seeking films directed or produced by women of color. On March 10 to 12, 2006, Reel Sisters will present "Jump at de Sun: Exploring Zora Neale Hurston's Reel Life," a celebration of Zora's work as an inspiration for women filmmakers. Filmmakers are encouraged to submit films on all subjects including works on family, love, relationships, spirituality and the church, self-determination and identity, and the affects of post-slavery on our communities. Categories: Private
August 25, 200520:06
The Africana Studies Group Presents The Graduate Center of the City University of New York , 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York In the wake of the 2000 U.S. Census, the media was filled with headlines declaring that Latinos "outnumbered" African Americans, 35.3 and 34.7 million respectively, replacing them as the largest "minority" in the United States. According to these same census figures, "17.6 million Hispanics described themselves as white, 939,471 Hispanics described themselves as black, and 16.7 million checked off neither white nor black but "other." These census figures represent the manner in which some Latinos, when asked to specify their racial identity, privilege their European and indigenous ancestry over their African heritage. As historian George Reid Andrews notes in Afro-Latin America, 1800-2000, "during the period of slavery, ten times as many Africans came to Spanish and Portuguese America (5.7 million) as to the United States (560,000). By the end of the 1900s, Afro-Latin Americans outnumbered Afro-North Americans by three to one (110 million and 35 million, respectively) and formed, on average, almost twice as large a proportion of their respective populations" (22 percent in Latin America, 12 percent in the United States) (1). It is understood here that Spanish and Portuguese America also includes the Hispanophone Caribbean, as Andrews' maps of Afro-Latin America indicate. Implicit in our use of the 2000 census statistics is the awareness that a significant percentage of those 35.3 million Latina/o(s) are the descendants and immigrants of the Afro-Latin American diaspora. Categories: Private
17:45
I wonder if they'd be upset if someone's mural was a Dali? - Quote of note:
Mural or Graffiti? City Draws Line Los Angeles is often called the mural capital of the world — and no place is this truer than on the streets of Boyle Heights, where hundreds of walls at pharmacies, general stores, guitar shops and even churches have been transformed into urban artwork. [Prometheus 6]Categories: Private
August 22, 200515:22
CALL FOR PAPERS Race, Roots, and Resistance: The Black Power Movement of the 1960s was one of the most significant developments in the African American experience, perhaps second only to Emancipation in its transformation of U.S. race relations. Black Power exploded across the United States and the world, unleashing a torrent of rage and creativity, innovation and anger. Black Power transformed individual's personal lives, local communities, the nation and global relations. Succeeding the civil rights phrase of the Black Freedom movement, Black Power remapped the nation's understanding of race, challenged liberal conceptions of democracy, and established the groundwork for multiracial coalitions. Black Power's impact on African Americans was even more striking, it fundamentally transformed African Americans' consciousness and identity, culture, and strategic approach to politics, economics, and education. Black Power inspired the most broad-based and significant outpouring of cultural creativity in African American history. Black Power stimulated a renewed interest and involvement in global politics-in Pan-Africanism and black internationalism, and in the global dimensions of racial oppression. Black Power's reverberations continue to shape contemporary African American civil society and ideology. Categories: Private
August 21, 200517:53
I'm in the process of adding blogs to the site aggregator, and making some changes under the hood to make it easier to link to interesting articles. You've seen examples of this over the past few days. More later... Categories: Private
17:52
Cause du jour of the blogosphere ends sadly - When LaToyia Figueroa, the pregnant mother of a four-year-old from Philadelphia, turned up missing a month ago, the blogosphere turned out in an effort to publicize her case and publish her picture everywhere in hopes they would be able to find her. Unfortunately, the search is over as the police found her body in the woods outside of Chester. Her ex-boyfriend has been arrested. When the cops came to get him, he was wearing a bulletproof vest and carrying a weapon. Categories: Private
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