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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210203T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210203T133000
DTSTAMP:20260502T155725
CREATED:20201119T223603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210422T223333Z
UID:15922-1612354500-1612359000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Gender\, Race\, and Age Behind Bars: Impacts of Long-term Sentencing
DESCRIPTION:This event has passed. Watch the discussion on CSW’s YouTube channel!\n\n  \nThe parole suitability rate for the elderly incarcerated is 10 percent BELOW the average suitability rate\, even though research indicates seniors are the safest population to release. \n— Jane Dorotik \nCo-hosted by the Criminal Justice Program at the UCLA School of Law and the Los Angeles County Public Defender’s Office\nDATE: Wednesday\, February 3\, 2021\nTIME: 12:15 PM-1:30 PM\nLOCATION: Zoom Webinar (View Livestream) \nView event flyer. \nJoin us for a rare opportunity to hear from two formerly-incarcerated women activists on the compounded adverse impacts of long-term sentencing on the elderly incarcerated\, women and transgender people\, and people of color in prison and beyond. Jane Dorotik was incarcerated for almost 20 years on a wrongful conviction. She was released in April 2020 due to COVID-19 concerns\, and her conviction was reversed in July 2020. Romarilyn Ralston was incarcerated for 23 years\, and is now the Program Director of Project Rebound at the California State University-Fullerton. Both are organizers with the California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP). Dorotik and Ralston will be in dialogue with LA County Public Defender\, Ricardo Garcia\, and moderator Alicia Virani\, Gilbert Foundation Director of the Criminal Justice Program at the UCLA School of Law. \nThis event is free and open to the public with registration. \nThis activity is approved for 1 hour of general MCLE credit. UCLA School of Law is a State Bar of California approved MCLE provider. \nCo-Sponsored by\n\nThe Promise Institute for Human Rights at the UCLA School of Law\n\n\nRequired readings for MCLE credit:\nAll Zoom registrants will be contacted after the event with instructions for how to receive MCLE credit. \n\nCSW Policy Brief 2020\, “Confronting the Carceral State: Reimagining Justice” (please note: this links to all 2020 Policy Briefs\, but only the briefs listed below are required reading):\n\n“Release Elderly Lifers to Reduce Mass Incarceration” by Jane Dorotik\n“Long-Term Incarcerated People Need Retirement Benefits” by Romarilyn Ralston with Ginny Oshiro and Fidelia Santos-Aminy\n\n\nLegislation on elderly parole: Assembly Bill No. 1448\nWhat Prisoners Need to Know by the Social Security Administration\n\n\nPANELISTS\n\nJane Dorotik is a Registered Nurse and healthcare professional who worked in community mental health administration for many years. She had been incarcerated for almost 20 years on a wrongful conviction that she relentlessly works to overturn. She was released in April 2020 due to COVID-19 concerns\, and her conviction was reversed in July 2020. She is a member of the California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP)\, a current member of the Board of Directors of Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB)\, and a former board member of Justice Now. She also founded Compassionate Companions\, an organization within the California Institution for Women (CIW) that provides care and companionship for terminally ill incarcerated people\, and founded and published the CIW newsletter Strive High for eight years. She advocates for prison abolition as well as dignity and compassion for her fellow prisoners\, especially those who are terminally ill. \nRomarilyn Ralston is the Program Director of Project Rebound at the California State University-Fullerton (CSUF)\, which provides formerly incarcerated students with tools and opportunities to help them thrive as scholars. She is also an organizer with the California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP)\, and an alumna of California’s Women’s Policy Institute. Ralston holds a BA with honors in Gender and Feminist Studies from Pitzer College and an MA in Liberal Arts from Washington University. \n  \n  \nRicardo D. García currently serves as Los Angeles County’s Public Defender\, the oldest and largest public defender agency in the United States. Born in Los Angeles to immigrant parents from Mexico\, Mr. García is a first-generation college graduate. He received his Juris Doctorate in 1995 from the University of California\, Berkeley\, Boalt Hall School of Law\, and his Bachelor of Art in Politics in 1991 at the University of California\, Santa Cruz. He began his legal career in 1995 with the San Diego Public Defender’s Office. Mr. Garcia is known as a noteworthy leader in the field of criminal defense. He has handled several high-profile cases in the San Diego County Public Defender’s Office\, including the longest and most complicated death penalty trial in state history\, and was awarded Trial Lawyer of the Year by the Criminal Defense Association of San Diego. \nAlicia Virani (Moderator) is the Gilbert Foundation Associate Director of the Criminal Justice Program at UCLA School of Law. She was previously a Deputy Public Defender in the Orange County Public Defender’s Office where she represented indigent clients in criminal matters and parents navigating the dependency system. She currently teaches a clinical course where students represent clients in felony bail hearings as well as a course on trauma informed lawyering and restorative justice. Her work and expertise is in developing alternatives to the criminal legal system.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/gender-race-and-age-behind-bars-impacts-of-long-term-sentencing/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://csw.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Gender-Race-and-Age-Behind-Bars_JPG-1-e1611265102951.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210211T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210211T130000
DTSTAMP:20260502T155725
CREATED:20201119T223908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210114T163437Z
UID:15925-1613044800-1613048400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CSW Research Affiliates Brown Bag: Counternarratives and “Copy Cats”: Alma Whitaker
DESCRIPTION:Counternarratives and “Copy Cats”: Alma Whitaker\, Newspaper Women and Place Making in Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles\nA Talk by Julie Cohen\, PhD\nDate: Thursday\, February 11\, 2021\nTime: 12-1 pm\nLocation: Zoom \nRSVP Online \nAs part of a larger project on women journalists in US Western cities in the early twentieth century\, Julie Cohen will discuss writer Alma Whitaker—feminist\, reporter\, and columnist for the Los Angeles Times from 1910 to 1944. Widely known in her time but almost totally forgotten today\, Whitaker employed wit\, satire\, and sarcasm to advance a strong feminist perspective with an emphasis on economic independence for women. Like so many “copy cats” in the region\, her message both bolstered the white settler campaign to create Los Angeles as a “white spot” and challenged patriarchal norms. Situating Whitaker within the emergence of the mass-circulating urban newspaper industry\, Cohen will analyze Whitaker’s prolific writings and the way in which they promoted and re-defined notions of women’s selfhood in the “frontier” space of Los Angeles. \nJulie Cohen is a Research Affiliate at the UCLA Center for the Study of Women and a lecturer in the Department of History at Cal State Los Angeles.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/csw-research-affiliates-brown-bag-julie-cohen/
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210224T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210224T100000
DTSTAMP:20260502T155725
CREATED:20210209T214948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210219T173724Z
UID:16639-1614157200-1614160800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:"Since U Been Gone”: What Needs to Happen Post-Trump to Restore and Expand Reproductive Rights
DESCRIPTION:Organized by the UCLA Bixby Center on Population and Reproductive Health\nDate: Wednesday\, February 24\, 2021\nTime: 9:00 – 10:00 AM\nLocation: Online/Zoom (password: 711038) \nThis is a Bixby lecture featuring Katherine Gillespie\, Senior Federal Policy Counsel at the Center for Reproductive Rights\, that focuses on restoring reproductive rights in a post-Trump era.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/since-u-been-gone-what-needs-to-happen-post-trump-to-restore-and-expand-reproductive-rights/
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210227T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210227T180000
DTSTAMP:20260502T155725
CREATED:20210209T223953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210209T230556Z
UID:16648-1614438000-1614448800@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Visions of Fire: LGBTQ+ Voices (Weekend 2 of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center Film Festival 2021)
DESCRIPTION:Organized by the UCLA Asian American Studies Center and the UCLA Film & Television Archive\nDate: Saturday\, February 27\nTime: 3:00 PM\nLocation: Online/Zoom \nFREE EVENT WITH RSVP \nEvent Details | RSVP \nThe Visions of Fire: LGBTQ+ Voices program will feature:\nFRUIT FLY (2009)\n10TH ANNIVERSARY SING-ALONG EDITION! \n\nFabulous. Fantastic. Fierce. Clear your living room\, so you can sing and dance along in our celebration of this musical extravaganza’s 10th anniversary! Learn a few new moves and a whole lot of tunes as you follow our protagonist\, a Filipina American performance artist\, making a home for herself in her world and ours. Fruit Fly celebrates those who might feel marginal but are indispensable to community formation. This romp through San Francisco is brought to you by the team behind the indie hit Colma: The Musical. This screening will be an unforgettable party with queer Asian Americans and those who love them. You don’t want to miss it!\nColor\, 94 min. Directors: H.P. Mendoza.\n\nShu Mai Online (2020)\n\nWhat’s a drag queen to do in the middle of a pandemic? Enter Jeffrey Liang\, aka Miss Shu Mai\, who teaches others to display the butt butt. This is UCLA EthnoCommunications alum and current UCLA Theater\, Film and Television graduate student\, Emory Chao Johnson’s contribution to Asian American Documentary Network’s #AsianAmCovidStories micro doc series.\nColor\, 2 min. Director: Emory Chao Johnson.\n\nRazor Tongue\, Episode 1 (2019)\n\n\nIf you don’t have the privilege of having a transgender Guamanian in your life\, get ready! Rain Valdez will provide you with an education through this collaboratively created web series.\nColor\, 5 min. Director: Natalie Heltzel. Screenwriter: Rain Valdez. Cast: Rain Valdez\, Shaan Dasani\, Sarah Parlow.\n\n\nUnspoken (2019)\n\nThis poignant short explores coming out to immigrant parents through what might be described as an epistolary genre. The audience bears witness to recitations from a group of diverse Asian Americans that might forever alter family dynamics.\nColor\, 18 min. Director: Patrick G. Lee.\n\n\nProgram will be introduced by UCLA Film & Television Archive Director May Hong HaDuong. \nConversation to follow with filmmaker H.P. Mendoza and actress\, filmmaker\, producer Rain Valdez. \nModerated by UCLA School of Theater\, Film\, and Television associate dean and professor Sean Metzger.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/visions-of-fire-lgbtq-voices-weekend-2-of-the-ucla-asian-american-studies-center-film-festival-2021/
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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