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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221102T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221102T093000
DTSTAMP:20260405T191419
CREATED:20221024T194428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221024T194428Z
UID:21485-1667377800-1667381400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Public Health Consequences of the Criminalization of Abortion
DESCRIPTION:Organized by the David Geffen School of Medicine and the Iris Cantor – UCLA Women’s Health Center\nDate: Wednesday\, November 2\, 2022\nTime: 8:30-9:30 AM\nLocation: Online/Zoom \n This event will discuss the public health consequences and implications of criminalizing abortion.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/public-health-consequences-of-the-criminalization-of-abortion/
LOCATION:Online/Zoom
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Cosponsorship-DGSOM_Kligman_11.2.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221108T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221108T180000
DTSTAMP:20260405T191419
CREATED:20221024T193009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221026T181756Z
UID:21474-1667921400-1667930400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Elemental Cartographies in an Era of Climate Change
DESCRIPTION:Organized by the Department of English and the Department of Gender Studies\nDate: Tuesday\, November 8\, 2022\nTime: 3:30-6:00 PM\nLocation: Charles E. Young Research Library Presentation Room 11348 \nAs we bear witness to the wastelanding of the earth by late liberal capital\, Kānaka Maoli are recovering ancestral knowledges encoded in oli (chants) and moʻolelo (storied history) to activate the elements and transform the effects of global climate change into possibilities for renewed abundance. \nIn this talk\, Candace Fujikane begins with arguments from her recent book\, Mapping Abundance for a Planetary Future: Kanaka Maoli and Critical Settler Cartographies in Hawaiʻi\, contending that global climate change events are not apocalyptic but rather are bringing about the demise of capitalist economies of scarcity\, making way for Indigenous economies of abundance. She will present a preview of her new book\, Elemental Cartographies for a Changing Earth. Kanaka Maoli identify 400\,000 akua or elemental forms and energies\, including the 300 winds of the island of Kanaloa Kahoʻolawe. From 1941 to 1990\, the US Navy used the island as a bombing target\, with the devastating effect of cracking the water table. In the exhausted cartographies of militarized capital\, only 9% of subsurface lands has been cleared of unexploded ordnance. The PKO practitioners\, however\, have long stood to protect the island\, transforming the symbol of the target into a much more generative image of the piko\, the umbilicus that enables the people to be pili (connected) to the akua\, the kūpuna (ancestors)\, and to the pulapula (the seedling descendants to come). Ancestral archives of elemental cartographies map the winds of Kanaloa Kahoʻolawe\, enabling the greening of the island to attract and birth clouds and to manifest decolonial and abolitionist futures. \nElemental Cartographies in an Era of Climate Change looks at the relationships between the elements (lands\, seas\, skies\, clouds\, ocean currents\, wind currents) and between humans and elements as they take place in land struggles and restoration projects on Maui (making kapa for ancestral remains they are finding at a development project)\, Kahoʻolawe (greening of the island to create microclimates in the 30 years since bombing of the island by the military was halted)\, Kahuku on Oʻahu (fight against wind turbines sited too closely to Pacific Islander homes). Fujikana uses a feminist\, indigenous studies\, and critical settler-colonial lens to connect the survival of Pacific Islanders and their concepts of land and water to the realms of reproduction and social reproduction–hallmark concerns of feminist research. \nCandace Fujikane is professor of English at the University of Hawai’i. She co-edited with Jonathan Okamura Asian Settler Colonialism: From Local Governance to the Habits of Everyday Life in Hawai’i (2008). She has recently published Mapping Abundance for a Planetary Future: Kanaka Maoli and Critical Settler Cartographies in Hawaiʻi (2021). She is a Japanese settler ally who stands for lands and waters in Hawaiʻi and for Hawaiian political independence.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/elemental-cartographies-in-an-era-of-climate-change/
LOCATION:Charles E. Young Research Library\, Presentation Room
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221108T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221108T183000
DTSTAMP:20260405T191419
CREATED:20221024T190907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221024T190922Z
UID:21452-1667923200-1667932200@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Death and Dying in Diaspora
DESCRIPTION:Organized by the Department of Asian American Studies\nDate: Tuesday\, November 8\, 2022\nTime: 4:00-6:30 PM\nLocation: 10383 Bunche Hall \nREGISTRATION REQUIRED \n \nIn his new book Filipino Time: Affective Worlds and Contracted Labor\, Allan Isaac examines how contracted service labor performed by Filipinos in the Philippines\, Europe\, the Middle East\, and the United States generates vital affects\, multiple networks\, and other life-worlds as much as it disrupts and dislocates human relations. Affective labor and time are re-articulated in a capacious archive of storytelling about the Filipino labor diaspora in fiction\, musical performance\, ethnography\, and documentary film. Exploring these cultural practices\, Filipino Time traces other ways of sensing\, making sense of\, and feeling time with others\, by weaving narratives of place and belonging out of the hostile but habitable textures of labor-time. \nSignaling his current research project in this talk\, Isaac explores live-streamed funeral vigils\, a technological practice made necessary by Filipino diasporic life\, to highlight two Tagalog concept-words that map other ways to generate ecologies of communality: pakiramdam (literally\, to make oneself felt\, or to feel a presence)\, affective engagement without immediate proximity; andkapiling\, to be in someone’s proximity or vicinity without interaction between two parties. Migrant subjects harness time and the imagination in their creative\, life-making capacities to make communal worlds out of one steeped in the temporalities and logics of capital. \nAllan Punzalan Isaac is Professor of American Studies and English and Associate Humanities Dean at Rutgers University-New Brunswick\, NJ. He specializes in Asian American and comparative race studies and examines issues around migration\, postcoloniality\, gender and sexuality\, and the Philippines and its diaspora. His first book American Tropics: Articulating Filipino America was the recipient of the Association for Asian American Studies Cultural Studies Book Award. His second book is entitled\, Filipino Time: Affective Worlds and Contracted Labor. He taught at DeLaSalle University-Taft in Manila\, Philippines as a Senior Fulbright Scholar. His current research focuses on death and dying in the Filipino diaspora.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/death-and-dying-in-diaspora/
LOCATION:10383 Bunche Hall\, UCLA\, Los Angeles\, CA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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