[image is from here]
Cross posted from here @ Concurring Opinions.
Quick Reminder: Intersectionality Conference at UCLA Law, March 11-13
posted by Kaimipono D. Wenger
I blogged about it a few months ago, when the call for papers was still open. Now that the conference is just around the corner, here’s another short reminder.The UCLA Critical Race Studies program – along with a great group of co-sponsors including the Women and Law Project at Thomas Jefferson Law School, the Women of Color Collective at UCLA, the Williams Institute, LatCrit Inc., and a dozen more – is hosting a not-to-be-missed conference on intersectionality. Speakers include, just to name a few, Devon Carbado, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Angela Harris, Catharine MacKinnon, Mari Matsuda, Dorothy Roberts, and Patricia Williams, along with dozens of other leading scholars of feminist legal theory, critical race theory, intersectionality, and a variety of related topics touching on different marginalized groups.
More information, including schedule and registration information, is available at the conference website. I hope to see many of you there!
February 26, 2010 at 7:51 pm Posted in: Civil Rights, Conferences, Feminism and Gender
Here is more information about this conference from *here*:
03.11.10 @ UCLA, California, USA
Table of contents
- 1. 4th Annual CRS Symposium
- 2. Event Description
- 3. Call for Proposals
- 4. Co-Sponsors
- 5. Confirmed Participants
- 6. Registration Details
- 7. Registration Payment
- 8. If you register for the CRS symposium and need housing during your stay, you are eligible for a reduced rate at the Hotel Angeleno. Please click here for more information. The Women of Color Collective at UCLA School of Law has identified UCLA students who can offer free housing to other students who are travelling to Los Angeles for the symposium. Please contact Ayanna London at london2010@lawnet.ucla.edu for more information.
- 9. Program Schedule
- 10. Click here to access FAQ's
4th Annual CRS Symposium
Event Description
Since the publication of Kimberlé Crenshaw's formative articles - Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race & Sex (1989), and Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics & Violence Against Women of Color (1994) - the concept of intersectionality has traversed more than a dozen academic disciplines and transnational and popular political discourse, generated multiple conferences, monographs, and anthologies, and animated hundreds of articles and essays. In the twenty years since Crenshaw introduced intersectionality, critiques of identity politics and multiculturalism and, more recently, claims of a "post-racial" era have blossomed. In 2010, we will re-visit the origins of intersectionality as a theoretical frame and site of legal interventions and consider its still unfolding potential for unmasking subordination and provoking social change.
l for Proposals
Key areas of inquiry include:
a) Intersectionality Across Disciplines, with particular emphasis on research methodologies, new applications and comparative analyses;
b) Intersectional Praxis, engaging the integration of theory with advocacy and activism, and concerned with the practical dilemmas entailed in navigating intersections of race, gender, class, age, disability, religion, sexuality, citizenship, ethnicity and/or related dynamics;
c) Intersectionality and Post-racialism, particularly highlighting the contradicting ways that intersectionality has been positioned as both a precursor to post-racialism and as a critique of its symbolic content;
d) Intersectionality and Transnationalism, specifically recognizing the intersecting dynamics of subordination that sustain, transgress or delineate borders and highlighting discourses that disrupt the premises of globalization, imperialism and international law;
e) Intersectionality Embodied, interrogating how intersectionality plays out in the production of legitimate and illegitimate sexualities, the construction of normative, (de)valued, or able bodies, and the challenges in deploying discourses of rights and recognition as interventionist tools.
Please submit questions about the event and proposals to crssymposium@law.ucla.edu
a) Intersectionality Across Disciplines, with particular emphasis on research methodologies, new applications and comparative analyses;
b) Intersectional Praxis, engaging the integration of theory with advocacy and activism, and concerned with the practical dilemmas entailed in navigating intersections of race, gender, class, age, disability, religion, sexuality, citizenship, ethnicity and/or related dynamics;
c) Intersectionality and Post-racialism, particularly highlighting the contradicting ways that intersectionality has been positioned as both a precursor to post-racialism and as a critique of its symbolic content;
d) Intersectionality and Transnationalism, specifically recognizing the intersecting dynamics of subordination that sustain, transgress or delineate borders and highlighting discourses that disrupt the premises of globalization, imperialism and international law;
e) Intersectionality Embodied, interrogating how intersectionality plays out in the production of legitimate and illegitimate sexualities, the construction of normative, (de)valued, or able bodies, and the challenges in deploying discourses of rights and recognition as interventionist tools.
Please submit questions about the event and proposals to crssymposium@law.ucla.edu
Co-Sponsors
Principal Co-SponsorS
Women of Color Collective at UCLA School of Law
Women of Color Collective at UCLA School of Law
Presenting Co-sponsors:
African American Policy Forum
American Constitution Society
Columbia Law School
LatCrit, Inc.
UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment
The Williams Institute
African American Policy Forum
American Constitution Society
Columbia Law School
LatCrit, Inc.
UCLA Institute for Research on Labor and Employment
The Williams Institute
Contributing Co-Sponsors:
Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics at UCLA
UCLA Graduate Division
V-Day
Women’s Research and Resource Center at Spelman College
Co-Sponsors:ACLU Women's Rights ProjectCenter for Global Justice, Seattle University School of Law
The Center for New Racial Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara
The Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, New York University
Ms. Magazine/Feminist Majority Foundation
Poverty and Race Research and Action Council
UCLA Center for Research, Education, Training, and
Strategic Communication on Minority Health Disparities
UCLA Center for the Study of Women
UCLA Department of Women's Studies
UCLA Graduate Students Association
UCLA School of Law Alumni and External Affairs
UCLA School of Public Affairs
The Center for New Racial Studies at University of California, Santa Barbara
The Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, New York University
Ms. Magazine/Feminist Majority Foundation
Poverty and Race Research and Action Council
UCLA Center for Research, Education, Training, and
Strategic Communication on Minority Health Disparities
UCLA Center for the Study of Women
UCLA Department of Women's Studies
UCLA Graduate Students Association
UCLA School of Law Alumni and External Affairs
UCLA School of Public Affairs
Funded by the Campus Programs Committee of the Program Activities Board at UCLA
CRS at UCLA is extremely grateful to our co-sponsors for their financial support which makes the symposium possible.
For sponsorship opportunities, please contact sarabia@law.ucla.edu
For sponsorship opportunities, please contact sarabia@law.ucla.edu
Confirmed Participants
Asli Bali
Eudine BarriteauDevon Carbado
Sumi Cho
Kimberle Crenshaw
Sarah Deer
Phillip Atiba Goff
Carole Goldberg
Beverly Guy-Sheftall
Angela Harris
Cheryl Harris
Luke Harris
Melissa Harris-Lacewell
Tanya Hernandez
Nagwa IbrahimJerry Kang
Lenora LapidusGeorge Lipsitz
Catharine MacKinnon
Mari Matsuda
Leslie McCall
Charles Mills
Chandra Talpade Mohanty
Margaret Montoya
Sibongile Ndashe
Manjula Pradeep
Beth RichieDorothy Roberts
Russell Robinson
Tricia Rose Saul SarabiaNikhil Singh
Dean Spade
Alvin Starks Miguel Unzueta
Francisco Valdes
Mieke Verloo
Patricia Williams
Eudine BarriteauDevon Carbado
Sumi Cho
Kimberle Crenshaw
Sarah Deer
Phillip Atiba Goff
Carole Goldberg
Beverly Guy-Sheftall
Angela Harris
Cheryl Harris
Luke Harris
Melissa Harris-Lacewell
Tanya Hernandez
Nagwa IbrahimJerry Kang
Lenora LapidusGeorge Lipsitz
Catharine MacKinnon
Mari Matsuda
Leslie McCall
Charles Mills
Chandra Talpade Mohanty
Margaret Montoya
Sibongile Ndashe
Manjula Pradeep
Beth RichieDorothy Roberts
Russell Robinson
Tricia Rose Saul SarabiaNikhil Singh
Dean Spade
Alvin Starks Miguel Unzueta
Francisco Valdes
Mieke Verloo
Patricia Williams
Registration Details
Early Registration is encouraged and available until January 25, 2010: $150 per personGeneral Registration from January 26, 2010 - February 14, 2010: $175 per person
Late Registration from February 15, 2010 - on site registration during event: $200 per person
Registration is free to UCLA students and to law students and faculty at the Thomas Jefferson School of Law and UCLA Law, who sign-up for the event ahead of time. To sign-up, please register using the form below and provide name, department, and send your UCLA/TJSL Identification number to crssymposium@law.ucla.edu
UCLA faculty may register for a reduced rate at $70.00 for the entire event or $30.00 for partial/daily attendance.
Registration Payment
We have recently updated the symposium registration page and online payment form. If you have already registered and submitted your payment, you do not have to use the link before to do so again. If you registered without making a payment or are doing so for the first time, please use the link below to submit an online payment:
https://www.law.ucla.edu/pay/crs/
If you prefer to pay for registration by check, please mail to:
Christine Tran
UCLA School of Law - Accounting Office,
405 Hilgard Avenue - Box 951476
Los Angeles, CA 90095
If you register for the CRS symposium and need housing during your stay, you are eligible for a reduced rate at the Hotel Angeleno. Please click here for more information.
The Women of Color Collective at UCLA School of Law has identified UCLA students who can offer free housing to other students who are travelling to Los Angeles for the symposium. Please contact Ayanna London at london2010@lawnet.ucla.edu for more information.
Program Schedule
Please review the symposium agenda. All the times listed on the schedule are final. All acrtivities will take place on the UCLA campus. Panel descriptions, presenters, building locations, and room numbers for each session will be added shortly. There will be at least 50 concurrent sessions, some of which we anticipate will be eligible for additional CLE credit. Please check this page regularly for updates.- Tag page
- What links here
Files 2
File | Size | Date | Attached by | |||
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1.21.10 Updated - Intersectionality Flyer.pdf Flyer | 176.7 kB | 19:50, 21 Jan 2010 | profcrenshaw | Actions | ||
1.21.10 Updated - Symposium Postcard.pdf Postcard |