Critical Resistance (fwd)

Jim Thomas (jthomas@sun.soci.niu.edu)
Mon, 20 Apr 1998 12:01:53 -0500 (CDT)

Here's a forwarded message from Kimberly Cook.

jt
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 16 Apr 1998 07:16:06 -0500
From: kjcook@payson.usm.maine.edu

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thought this might interest others on this list...
Kim

------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date: Wed, 15 Apr 1998 19:10:02 -0500
Reply-to: "University of Southern Maine Women's Studies List"
<USMWST-L@MAINE.MAINE.EDU>
From: "Kathleen J. Wininger" <wininger@USM.MAINE.EDU>
Subject: Critical Resistance (fwd)
To: USMWST-L@MAINE.MAINE.EDU

>PLEASE POST, ANNOUNCE AND DISTRIBUTE
>
> CALL FOR PRESENTERS, PAPERS & WORKSHOPS
>
>
> CRITICAL RESISTANCE: Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex
> A National Conference and Strategy Session
>
> September 24-27, 1998
> University of California at Berkeley
>
>Activists, scholars, policymakers, advocates, cultural workers and former
>prisoners will come together to address the contemporary crisis occasioned
>by the emergence of a prison-industrial complex in the U.S. and
>internationally. The exponential increase in imprisoned populations and
>prison construction is having a particularly injurious impact on communities
>of color and on rising numbers of women. Along with this prison expansion
>has come the dismantling of rehabilitative programs and rampant human rights
>violations. Politicians who take advantage of public misperceptions about
>crime have become increasingly influential, and punishment has become a
>profitable business in which more and more corporations are staking their
>claims. Our mission is to develop a strategy of resistance that will
>contest the mounting trend toward imprisonment as a stop-gap approach to
>systemic social problems, and encourage more effective movements for genuine
>social and economic justice.
>
>We seek to facilitate a productive exchange between a diverse range of
>individuals-- including grassroots organizers, academics, former prisoners,
>policymakers, lawyers and other advocates-- and organizations who
>traditionally have not worked together around prison issues. The goal of
>the conference is to establish a broad network of individuals and
>organizations committed to critical public discourse, effective social and
>cultural activism, further research, and dramatic policy transformation. We
>hope to create a foundation for a new movement against the prison industrial
>complex. Toward this end, we are creating task forces in the following areas:
>
> Prison as Industry: What is the prison industrial complex and what are its
>implications for working class and poor communities and communities of
>color? How does it exacerbate human rights violations within the penal
>system, and what are its long term effects on social conditions outside?
> Law and Policy: How can researchers, legal scholars, lawyers,
>policymakers, and activists work together to educate law makers regarding
>human rights issues and to transform prison law and policy?
> Research and Activism: How can academic researchers collaborate with
>grassroots activists to develop agendas for moving beyond the prison
>industrial complex?
> Abolitionist Alternatives: What is the relationship between
>decriminalization and the development of new institutions to address urgent
>social problems now under the purview of the criminal justice system?
> Human Rights and Conditions of Confinement: What role can international
>standards and bodies play in developing a human rights agenda for prisoners?
> Education: How can high school and college teachers and teachers in
>community and prison education projects collaborate to develop curricula and
>research that encourage critical analyses of the prison industrial complex?
> Media Representations and Popular Culture: What is the role of the mass
>media in fomenting anti-crime hysteria and promoting the prison-industrial
>complex, and how can cultural workers and others change this?
>
>The conference is structured to encourage participants to engage with others
>outside their own fields of expertise; thus, each panel must reflect two or
>more of the above subject areas, and include presenters from diverse
>backgrounds who are capable of addressing issues of race, gender, sexuality,
>age, etc. Proposals for presentations should indicate how the presentations
>will contribute to the overall goals of the conference. Please include a
>short description of all presenters and their organizational or
>institutional affiliations. Proposals may be no more than one page in
>length and must be postmarked by April 15, 1998. You may attach videotapes,
>photographs or other visual materials. (Materials cannot be returned
>without a self addressed, postage prepaid envelope.)
>
> Critical Resistance, P.O. Box 339, Berkeley, CA 94701
> (510)-643 2094
> critresist@aol.com www.igc.org./justice/critical
>