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DESCRIPTION:The Practical Activism Conference is a daylong, student led conference 
 which features a keynote speaker, ten workshops, various on and off campus 
 organizations, performances, and a variety of hands-on activism 
 activities.\n\nThis year's conference will take place on Saturday, October 
 20, 2012 in the College Nine & College Ten Multipurpose Room.\n\n\nKeynote 
 Speaker:\n\nANGELA DAVIS\nRenowned educator, activist, author, and 
 Professor of History of Consciousness at UCSC.\n\n\nSchedule of the 
 day:\n\n10:30-11:45\nRegistration, Refreshments, Tabling, Creative Activist 
 Activities, & Music\n\n11:45-12:50\nOpening Session including Spoken Word 
 and Keynote Speaker\n\n1:00-2:15\nFirst Concurrent Workshop Session (Choose 
 one of five workshops)\n\n2:25-3:40\nSecond Concurrent Workshop Session 
 (Choose one of five workshops)\n\n3:30-5:00\nRefreshments, Tabling, 
 Creative Activist Activities, & Spoken Word Performances\n\n  	 \nWorkshop 
 Topics:\nUCSC Budget Cuts and Retention\nEducation Not 
 Incarceration\nSustainable Agriculture: Think Global, Act Local\nFrack Off: 
 An Illustrated View on Resource Extraction\nTransgender 
 Healthcare\nSomewhere Over the Rainbow: Exploring LGBT Legislation\nStop 
 the Devastation: Anti-Immigrant Legislation\nSocial Media for Social 
 Justice\nReproductive Rights\nBeyond Stereotypes: Mental and Psychological 
 Disabilities\n\nHands On Activities, Displays, & More!\n\nGet 
 Involved!\nVisit the tables of local groups for opportunities to get 
 involved both on and off campus.\n\nBullying Stops Here\nLearn about the 
 impact of bullying and what you can do to stop this dangerous trend in your 
 school, community or workplace.  Take a Pledge Against Bullying,  Stand 
 Strong Against Hate!\n\nPractical Activism History\nCheck out the displays 
 highlighting the past ten years of this powerful community.\n\nRace and 
 Education\nWhat are the issues preventing students of color from achieving 
 higher education?  What is the history of Ethnic Studies at UCSC?  How does 
 immigration law impact education?  Come learn about this and more - spin 
 the wheel, take the quiz, win a prize!\n\nGaga for Gadgets\nHow do you know 
 if you are using or abusing facebook? Is texting dangerous to your health? 
 How has social media such as facebook, twitter and tumbler affected your 
 friendships, academics, and overall outlook on life? This booth explores 
 the impact of technology on individuals and 
 communities.\n\nButton-making\nCome make a button to show your passion and 
 practical activism! Design one to make a statement, highlight an election 
 issue, honor an Artist-Activist, and more!\n\nFair Trade “Store”\nStop 
 by the trading post and check out the merchandise brought to us by Trade As 
 One. Fair Trade is essentially the exchange of goods based on principals of 
 economic and social justice. The Fair Trade model seeks to challenge 
 injustices in trading structures and practices that so often lead to the 
 exploitation and marginalization of poor people.\n\nBeehive 
 Collective\nStop by to experience The Beehive Design Collective’s 
 larger-than-life banner version of “The True Cost of Coal” graphic and 
 talk with one of the bees. This elaborate narrative illustration 
 interweaves anecdotes, statistics, and history to explore the complex story 
 of mountaintop removal coal mining and the broader impacts of coal in 
 Appalachia and beyond. The Beehive’s mission is to “cross-pollinate the 
 grassroots” by creating images that educate the public and deconstruct 
 complex geopolitical issues.\n\nUCSC Farm Cart\nCome purchase fresh, local, 
 organic, seasonal produce and find out about how to get involved with the 
 UCSC Farm.\n\nWater Crisis & Recycling Info Table\nLearn about water 
 quality and lack of access to safe water in developing countries. Find out 
 what you can do to help.\n\nElection 2012\nDrop by to learn more about some 
 of the propositions and issues that will be on the ballot November 6th. If 
 you are eligible to vote and haven’t yet registered, the deadline is 
 Monday, Oct. 22nd – you can fill out a form at this table.\n\n	 
 \nWorkshops\n \nBlock 1 (1:00-2:15)\n\nUC Budget Cuts and Retention\nLearn 
 how UC budget cuts disproportionately effect retention programs, though 
 these programs exemplify the University’s mission. Take a closer look at 
 the root of the problems, learn how cuts in retention programs impact the 
 student experience, and gain tools to join a growing activist community 
 striving to save retention programs.\n\nSpeaker:\n\nTerisa Tinei Siagatonu 
 is a spoken word artist, arts educator, and community organizer from the 
 Bay Area. She has worked with Youth Speaks, One Love Oceania, the Samoan 
 Community Development Center of San Francisco, Empowering Pacific Islander 
 Communities of Los Angeles, and Engaging Education at UC Santa Cruz, where 
 she was affiliated with College Ten.\n \nEducation Not Incarceration\n\nThe 
 connections between educational inequity and incarceration are prevalent 
 and growing. The workshop will present an overview of funding realities for 
 both the educational and prison systems, along with an examination of the 
 social factors that impact both of these systems and perpetuate the cycle 
 of oppression evident in both.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nCraig Haney is Professor of 
 psychology at UCSC.  His research concerns the application of social 
 psychological principles and data to various legal and civil rights issues. 
 He has specialized in the assessment of institutional environments, 
 especially the psychological effects of incarceration, as well as study of 
 the social histories of persons accused or convicted of serious violent 
 crimes.  Professor Haney's work is highly applied and policy oriented, and 
 he tries to involve his students in examining issues that have real-world 
 legal significance.\n\nDr. Craig Reinarman is a sociologist with over 20 
 years of experience in researching and writing about drugs, addiction, and 
 the politics which surround both. His recent work has focused on the 
 political, public policy, and sociological issues surrounding crack/cocaine 
 in the United States, as well as the way crack cocaine has been presented 
 in the media and political discourse. Dr. Reinarman is an editorial board 
 member of both the International Journal on Drug Policy and Drug and 
 Alcohol Dependence; is presently the Associate Journal Editor of 
 Contemporary Drug Problems, and was the Book Series Editor of the New 
 Social Studies on Alcohol and Drugs series (SUNY Press, 1988-1994). He has 
 also served as consultant to the World Health Organization Program on 
 Substance Abuse based in Geneva, Switzerland. He served as a member of the 
 Board of Directors of the College on the Problems of Drug Dependence, an 
 organization established in 1929 by the National Academy of Sciences. He 
 received his Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of California, Santa 
 Barbara (1983).\n\n\nSustainable Agriculture: Think Global, Act 
 Local\n\nConversations in the United States and around the world are 
 brewing regarding agriculture and sustainability. Examine the continuing 
 importance of raising consciousness around sustainability and food systems 
 and look at specific programs and opportunities where community members can 
 play an important role in moving our food system forward towards a more 
 sustainable framework.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nDamian Parr joined the Center for 
 Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems at UC Santa Cruz in 2011. He began 
 mixed vegetable organic truck farming in high school in 1989, was a UCSC 
 Farm & Garden Apprentice in 1991, and an Environmental Studies/Agroecology 
 undergrad at UC Santa Cruz in 2000. Damien completed a M.Sc. in 
 International Agricultural Development, and a Ph.D. in Agricultural and 
 Environmental Education at UC Davis. He was recently a Postdoctorol Fellow 
 at UC Davis Agricultural Sustainability Institute and the Executive 
 Director and co-founder of the Sustainable Agricultural Education 
 Association.\n\nRobin Somers is a Bay Area native and received her 
 literature degree at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She worked 
 several years as a freelance journalist and substitute teacher was active 
 in several different community organizations. Later, she completed her MFA 
 in creative writing at San Jose State University and has been teaching 
 writing courses with a focus on food systems and politics for the last 
 eight years.\n\n \nFrack Off: An Illustrated View on Resource 
 Extraction\n\nExplore the complex environmental and social issues related 
 to resource extraction and interact with the larger-than-life narrative 
 illustrations of the Beehive Collective that interweave anecdotes, 
 statistics, and history of mountaintop removal coal mining while addressing 
 the broader impacts of resource dependence. Professor Jeff Bury will then 
 tie this in to the controversial and increasingly common practice of 
 fracking, a significant local and international 
 concern.\n\nSpeaker:\n\nZeph Fishlyn, artist and activist with The Beehive 
 Collective, will present on these issues inviting the audience to interact 
 with the large-scale artwork the group is known for. The Beehive’s 
 mission is to cross-pollinate the grassroots, by creating collaborative, 
 anti-copyright images that can be used to educate the public and 
 deconstruct complex geopolitical issues.\n\nJeff Bury is a professor of 
 Environmental Studies at UC Santa Cruz. Bury’s current research is 
 centrally concerned with the transformation of natural and social 
 environments in Latin America by the forces of globalization, neoliberalism 
 and geopolitical change. His research has recently focused on extractive 
 industries, development and social movements in Latin America.\n 
 \n\nTransgender Healthcare\n\nThe medical field is driven by a cisgender 
 view, classifying people based on the field’s two identified sexes and 
 providing health care based on the assumption that an individual’s gender 
 identity matches the societal expectation for their sex. Learn about the 
 various limitations this poses, especially to medical access for 
 transgender people and those who do not fall into the standard categories 
 of the gender binary.\n\nSpeaker:\n\nDafna Wu has served since 1994 as 
 staff nurse at the Castro-Mission Health Center, where she works with a 
 substantial number of queer and transgender youth and was on the founding 
 team of Dimensions Queer Youth Health Clinic. Her ongoing advocacy work is 
 dedicated to providing a nurturing and safe space where LGBTQ youth can 
 seek and receive quality primary care.    A trilingual, Jewish, Chinese, 
 Brazilian, lesbian mother, Dafna graduated from the University of 
 California Santa Cruz in English Literature with a minor in Biology and 
 completed her graduate studies in Nursing from San Francisco State 
 University.\n\n \n \nBlock 2 (2:25-3:40)\n\n\nSomewhere Over the Rainbow: 
 Exploring LGBT Legislation\n\nIn this workshop, we will explore different 
 perspectives and legislation around the globe that impact the rights of the 
 LGBT community. We will focus on Iran, Russia, Uganda, Mexico, Argentina, 
 Canada, and the United States.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nCarter Wilson is a former UC 
 Santa Cruz Community Studies professor and has been an ‘expert witness’ 
 in about 40-50 different immigration cases spanning over the last 15 years. 
 He has a background in gay rights and has devoted a significant amount of 
 his time to researching US-Mexico relations regarding gay rights and the 
 struggles that gay people face when they come to the United States without 
 a visa. His research and experience have given him credibility to serve as 
 an expert eyewitness in court hearings. These cases are hearings in which 
 people have applied for asylum against return to Mexico on the basis that 
 the LGBT community suffers from severe risk of persecution on return to 
 their home country. Carter is also interested in issues surrounding 
 government recognition of gay marriage in the United States as such would 
 same sex couples to stay together regardless of visa status.\n \n\nStop the 
 Devastation: Anti-Immigrant Legislation\n\nThis workshop will focus on 
 current and proposed legislation that specifically targets and dehumanizes 
 immigrants. We’ll explore how civil rights are being compromised in 
 states like Arizona, Alabama, and Missouri and discuss Santa Cruz 
 County’s involvement in the federal Secure Communities initiative, and 
 find out how to engage in activism around this local 
 issue.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nKarina Cervantez is a doctoral student in the 
 Psychology Department at UCSC and a local activist.\n\n\nSocial Media for 
 Social Justice\n\nLearn how new social media tools have allowed citizens to 
 report news and expose cases of social injustice. We will discuss how the 
 internet has made it possible to amplify suppressed voices by connecting 
 areas that have been subject to censorship with other parts of the world. 
 Topics will also include censorship, bias in the mainstream media, and the 
 safety of citizen journalists in areas that lack press 
 freedom.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nBradley Stuart Allen is a photographer, Indymedia 
 volunteer and website developer living in Santa Cruz, California. Since 
 2001, Bradley has been contributing coverage to Indymedia websites. Most of 
 that coverage has been of events that took place in the city of Santa Cruz 
 or at UC Santa Cruz. Bradley has also published reports from many other 
 locations such as Miami during demonstrations against a free trade 
 agreement, Houston and New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and the 
 barricaded streets of Oaxaca, Mexico. He completed his degree in 
 environmental studies at UC Santa Cruz, co-founded the Student 
 Environmental Center, and later returned to participate in the school’s 
 new Social Documentation program and graduated with a Master’s Degree in 
 2008.\n\nLeslie Lopez is a UCSC faculty member, currently teaching for the 
 Latin American Latina/o Studies Department, The Writing Program, and the 
 Education Department, where she directs the “Corre La Voz,” an 
 after-school program. Lopez received her PhD in socio-cultural anthropology 
 with an emphasis in alternative communication and education strategies in 
 Latin America and the Southwest United States.\n\nMaria Sutton is an 
 International Outreach Coordinator  for Electronic Frontier Education: 
 Defending Your Rights in Digital World. Her role involves working along 
 with EFF's International Team blogging, framing policy, and monitoring 
 emerging trends and developments in international freedom of expression, 
 privacy, digital consumer rights and innovation. Sutton earned her BA at 
 UC-Santa Cruz in Politics and Global Information and Social Enterprise 
 Studies. Also, during her time at UC-Santa Cruz Sutton was a Fellow and 
 Coordinator for the Global Information Internship Program otherwise known 
 as GIIP, a program dedicated to  train undergraduate students to become 
 enterprising IT-literate activists for social justice. \n\n\nReproductive 
 Rights\n\nThis workshop seeks to create a safe environment in which to give 
 workshop participants the knowledge, resources, and tools to become active 
 in issues of reproductive rights. Learn about rallies, petitions, 
 organizations, and more that you can be a part of in order to work towards 
 reproductive justice. We will focus on the history of the reproductive 
 justice movement as well as recent legislation limiting individual choice, 
 and discuss the proposed bills on the November 
 ballot.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nHillary Berk is a lawyer and Ph.D. Candidate in 
 Jurisprudence and Social Policy at the University of California Berkeley. 
 She studies the sociology of law and gender, with an emphasis on 
 reproductive technology. Her research examines the role of law in managing 
 emotions in the context of surrogacy agreements, and its larger impacts on 
 social institutions like family and work. She came to Berkeley having 
 created and taught seven courses for the Law and Society Program at UC 
 Santa Barbara, including Gender and the Law; Jurisprudence; and Lawyers and 
 the Legal Profession, and currently teaches Legal Rights, Science and 
 Society for the Legal Studies department at UC Berkeley. She holds a J.D. 
 and Natural Resources Law certification, in addition to her professional 
 experience as a mediator, family law policy analyst, and attorney licensed 
 with the California and Oregon State bars.\n \n\nBeyond Stereotypes: Mental 
 and Psychological Disabilities\n\nThis workshop will explore the experience 
 of people living with mental illness and psychological/cognitive 
 disabilities, address the stereotypes and stigmas faced by these 
 individuals, and explore privilege and oppression. Join us to gain tools to 
 be an advocate for these concerns and help to build a more just 
 community.\n\nSpeaker:\n\nAmy Mandell is a licensed marriage and family 
 therapist. Prior to beginning work at UCSC Counseling & Psychological 
 Services, she worked as a therapist and case manager at multiple community 
 mental health settings including a foster and adoption care agency in 
 Oakland, and a GLBTQ therapy center in San Francisco. \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/10/19/18724104.php
SUMMARY:10th Annual Practical Activism Conference at UCSC
LOCATION:College Nine & College Ten Multipurpose Room\nUC Santa Cruz
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2012/10/19/18724104.php
DTSTART:20121020T180000Z
DTEND:20121021T000000Z
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