ISPS Center for the Study of Inequality Convening: “EQUALITY RE-IMAGINED”

Event time: 
Friday, February 6, 2015 - 3:00pm through 10:00pm
Event description: 

LINK to EVENT SCHEDULERegistration is now closed.

Description: Fifty years after the nation embarked on one of its most extensive suffrage expansions, the Voting Rights Act; and in a time when many of its key provisions have been delimited; and as black and brown struggle for water in Detroit, personhood in Ferguson, to vote in many precincts, and for a legal status all over the land; we will convene to consider the prospects for minority flourishing, inclusion and equality in our nation, in our time.

We will convene on the morning of Friday, February 6th, 2015 at Yale University for a day of intellectual exchange and agenda-setting during three panels and a keynote address.  The first panel will address the question of racial equality from the perspective of political life.  Lyndon Johnson, in signing the Act, wrote that “the vote is the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men.” How should we theorize and respond to new barriers to minority voice, representation, and incorporation? The second panel will consider monetary crises and capital formation in minority communities from wealth inequalities, predatory lending and housing segregation, to credit markets and decent jobs with livable wages. The third panel will consider what for Johnson was a metaphor, but is now the civil rights issue of our time – punishment and surveillance of minority communities.  Will Ferguson be, as one scholar has written recently, a “moment or a movement?”

Please join us as we consider reform-minded proposals and prospects. How might we envision reducing racial inequality for the next generation?  What are some innovative conceptions, reforms, ideas, and coalitions to consider?  What are the possibilities of cross-racial coalitions and movements?  This is no ordinary task; we have invited a mix of academic experts, journalists, organizers, and advocates to weigh in on these core questions.

This event is open to Yale faculty and students as well as the staffs of New Haven advocacy organizations, journalists, and city residents.  Seating is limited and first-come-first-serve.  To help us in our planning, we ask that you RSVP your attendance by REGISTERING HERE.

Sponsored by the ISPS Center for the Study of Inequality at Yale University

With additional support from the Yale Center for the Study of American Politics

 


 

Event type 
Workshop