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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230413T130000
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UID:23547-1681390800-1681394400@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:Data Borders: How Silicon Valley is Building an Industry to Know Immigrants
DESCRIPTION:View the flyer. \nUCLA Center for Critical Internet Inquiry Presents\nData Borders: How Silicon Valley is Building an Industry to Know Immigrants \nThis lecture investigates the emerging state of borderland technology that brings all people into an intimate place of surveillance where data resides and defines inclusion and exclusion to citizenship. Detailing biologically mapping undocumented people through biotechnologies\, Villa-Nicholas shows how Latinx immigrants are the focus and driving force for surveillance by Silicon Valley’s industry within defense technology manufacturing. This murky network gathers data on marginalized communities for purposes of exploitation and control\, implicating law enforcement\, border patrol\, and ICE\, and pulls in public workers and the public\, often without their knowledge or consent. Enriched by interviews of Latinx immigrants\, this work argues that to move beyond a heavily surveilled state that dehumanizes both immigrants and citizens\, we must push for immigrant and citizen privacy information rights along the border and throughout the United States. \nPlease RSVP here. \nFor more information: \nContact Stacy E. Wood (swood@c2i2.ucla.edu).
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/data-borders-how-silicon-valley-is-building-an-industry-to-know-immigrants/
LOCATION:Online/Zoom
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230414
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230416
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SUMMARY:Connecting Art and Law for Liberation: Art and Law Festival
DESCRIPTION:When: April 14-15\, 2023 \nWhere: Fowler Museum\, UCLA Campus \nConnecting Art and Law for Liberation (CALL) is an art and law festival hosted by UCLA School of Law’s Prison Law and Policy Program\, Criminal Justice Program\, and the Prison Education Program at UCLA. \nThis year’s conference is a CALL to action to imagine abolitionist futures. The festival will bring together visionary artists\, activists\, attorneys\, advocates\, legal scholars\, and community members to share innovative\, cutting-edge collaborations at the intersection of ART and LAW – aimed at imagining a world without prisons\, policing\, and surveillance. \nFree and open to the public. \nSign up for CALL workshops. \nView the event website. \nView the festival schedule.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/connecting-art-and-law-for-liberation/
LOCATION:Fowler Museum\, UCLA
CATEGORIES:Cosponsorship
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230421T120000
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DTSTAMP:20260425T174559
CREATED:20230322T224914Z
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UID:23278-1682078400-1682082000@csw.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:CSW|Streisand Center Research Affiliates Brown Bag with Carol Bensick
DESCRIPTION:“Practical Uses of Philosophy”: Julia Ward Howe as Public Philosopher \nby Carol M. Bensick \nWhen: Friday\, April 21\, 2023\, 12–1 p.m. \nWhere: On Zoom. \nREGISTER HERE \nThe American Philosophical Association maintains a Committee on Public Philosophy inspired by “the belief that the broader presence of philosophy in public life is important both to our society and to our profession.” It aims “to find and create opportunities to demonstrate the personal value and social usefulness of philosophy.” Julia Ward Howe was not intent on receiving recognition or admiration as a philosopher herself. In an undated late-life poem called “To Philosophy\,” she is quick and apparently proud to assert “With thy holy robes of state I my meanness did not mate.” But if she eschewed making a name as a philosopher herself\, she was highly intent\, to “demonstrate the personal value and social usefulness of philosophy.” In promoting public philosophy\, she exemplified public philosophy herself. \nCarol M. Bensick completed her PhD at Cornell University in American literary and intellectual history\, specializing in puritanism and transcendentalism. She was an assistant professor at the University of Denver\, the University of Oregon\, and UC Riverside and gained tenure at University of Oregon. She taught summer school at Cornell and UCLA and Extension at UCR. Her revised dissertation was published as La Nouvelle Beatrice: Renaissance and Romance in “Rappaccini’s Daughter.” She edited and wrote the headnote for Jonathan Edwards for the first Heath Anthology of American Literature. As research affiliate at CSW|Streisand Center\, she roams the nineteenth-century archives turning up women philosophers wherever she goes.
URL:https://csw.ucla.edu/event/cswstreisand-center-research-affiliates-brown-bag-with-carol-bensick/
CATEGORIES:CSW originated
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