Just Societies Highlights - November 2019

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November 2019   Columbia Just Societies Highlights
Whose Voices Are Heard?
 
Watch as President Lee C. Bollinger and Agnès Callamard, director of Columbia Global Freedom of Expression, discuss protecting journalists on the one-year anniversary of Jamal Khashoggi's murder.
Women Front and Center

By adding the names of eight female-identifying writers to those of the men on the facade of Butler Library, student organizers of the Butler Banner Project raise issues of representation in Columbia's curriculum, collections, and community. Sponsored by the Libraries, the project evokes past protests and includes events as well as an exhibition on inclusion.

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Attend
Tech Giants, Monopoly Power, and Public Discourse

On November 14 and 15, join the Knight First Amendment Institute for a symposium with legal scholars, economists, and technologists on how a few tech companies wield enormous influence over the digital public square.

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Attend
Blackness and Disability Book Talk

Join a November 12 roundtable on Black Madness :: Mad Blackness, Therí Alyce Pickens' book on how Black science fiction authors craft new worlds to reimagine Blackness and disability. We must, Pickens argues, read "more madly, more Blackly."

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A New Take on Probation and Parole

Columbia's Justice Lab launched EXiT: Executives Transforming Probation and Parole, bringing 60 former and current parole and probation officials together to reduce the size and punitiveness of community supervision systems, which impact over four million adults in the US.

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Volunteer
Be a College Success Mentor

Alumni can lend two hours a week to help young people in the Harlem and Washington Heights community prepare for college with Columbia's Double Discovery Center. Learn how to volunteer tutor high school or middle school students.

Get Involved

Fund People over Programs, Study Suggests

Direct cash support is hardest to get in states with large Black populations, according to new research from the School of Social Work's Center on Poverty and Social Policy. In Columbia Magazine, read about how the study reveals racial biases in cash welfare distribution.

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A 'Queen' at Barnard

I Am Queen Mary, a human-size monument to colonial resistance in the Caribbean, was installed on the Barnard College campus this fall. The eye-catching sculpture, a collaboration between artists La Vaughn Belle and Jeannette Ehlers, opens dialogue on representations of Black women and the legacies of colonialism as well as slavery.

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Our commitment to Just Societies renews and emboldens efforts to build an equitable, inclusive world. Just Societies is part of The Columbia Commitment campaign, which builds partnerships with donors and volunteers sharing an urgent sense of what Columbians can do for our students and the world. 
 
 
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