As part of the Lyllye B. Parker Women of Color Speaker series, Mia McKenzie – author and blogger of Black Girl Dangerous, will be speaking at several engagements here at the University of Oregon on Tuesday, April 14th 2015. For more information about McKenzie’s work, please visit her website.
Graduate Student Discussion Session
Discussion will be hosted by Prof. Reyes-Santos
between 4 – 5pm
Registration required – please do so by Monday, April 13th. Space is limited, so we are asking that attendees RSVP. To do so, please visit http://blogs.uoregon.edu/women/mia-mckenzie/ or contact Jouapag at jouapagl@uoregon.edu.
Keynote
at 7:00 pm
In the Global Scholars Hall room 123
ASL interpreted, Wheelchair accessible
Childcare reimbursements are available for UO students through the ASUO Women’s Center. Please contact Lorena at 541-346-4095 or nontradwc@gmail.com
The Alliance of Graduate Students for Diversity is inviting you to our Courageous Conversation this Friday, February 13 at 3PM at the Graduate Student lounge in the Susan Campbell Hall. This Friday’s conversation topic: The Pressure to Speak Out in Classrooms “When You’re the Only One”.
Please see the attached flyer for all other schedule conversations happening this term.
CSWS Film Series: The Purity Myth
October 3, 2012 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm
Screening & moderated discussion
177 Lawrence Hall
1190 Franklin Blvd.
The Purity Myth: The Virginity Movement’s War Against Women In this video adaptation of her bestselling book, pioneering feminist blogger Jessica Valenti trains her sights on “the virginity movement” — an unholy alliance of evangelical Christians, right-wing politicians, and conservative policy intellectuals who have been exploiting irrational fears about women’s sexuality to roll back women’s rights. From dad-and-daughter “purity balls,” taxpayer-funded abstinence-only curricula, and political attacks on Planned Parenthood, to recent attempts by legislators to de-fund women’s reproductive health care and narrow the legal definition of rape, Valenti identifies a single, unifying assumption: the myth that the worth of a woman depends on what she does — or does not do — sexually. In the end, Valenti argues that the health and well-being of women are too important to be left to ideologues bent on vilifying feminism and undermining women’s autonomy. “The War on Women” A roundtable discussion follows the screening and will include activist Kamala Shugar (Planned Parenthood) and UO professors April Haynes (History); Priscilla Yamin (Political Science); and Peter Laufer (SOJC). Sponsored by the UO Center for the Study of Women in Society with the Fembot Special Project.
CSWS Film Series: Private Issues, Public Conversations
Telling Amy’s Story October 17, 2012 7:30 p.m. 177 Lawrence
Hall Bi the Way January 30, 2013 Location TBA
Madame Satã April 2013 Location TBA
CSWS Film Series events are free and open to the public.
The Alliance of Graduate Students for Diversity is inviting you to our Courageous Conversations on Friday, April 13th from 2 to 3:30pm, at the Graduate Student Center, Susan Campbell Hall.
Courageous Conversations is a series of cross-cultural dialogues for graduate students and allies. We aim to create a safe and confidential space to discuss our experiences on campus.
The topic for this Conversation will be on the Graduate Student Survey. Why does the Graduate School survey all graduate students about their experiences every three years? What happens with the data? How can the voices of students about campus climate and diversity be heard? In this conversation, Sandi Morgen, Vice Provost for Graduate Studies and Associate Dean of the Graduate School, will provide us with answers to these questions and more! She will lead us in a discussion on how the survey can better serve the needs of all graduate students. Please join us. Refreshments will be served. All are welcome!
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