PAST
EVENTS
Spring
2006 Series
Barbara Bennett Woodhouse
Children's Rights and American Values
Thursday, April
6, 2006
6:30 to 8:00
pm, Skylight Room 9100
Many Americans distrust the concept of rights
for children as, at best, unworkable and, at
worst, a threat to American values. Yet
throughout American history, children and youth
have been active participants in the struggle
for justice and equality. Woodhouse explores
the meaning of children's rights through the
eyes and actions of American children, both
famous and anonymous. She proposes a theory
of children's rights, rooted in American values,
that acknowledges both their capacity for autonomy
and their needs for nurture and protection.
Barbara
Bennett Woodhouse holds the David H. Levin Chair
in Family Law at the University of Florida's
Fredric G. Levin College of Law and is Director
of its Center on Children and Families.
Author of numerous legal briefs, articles and
book chapters, she was recognized in 2005 as
a Human Rights Hero by the American Bar Association.
Fall
2005 Series
Joan Wallach Scott
The Politics of the Veil
Wednesday, September
28, 2005
6:30 to 8:00
pm, Skylight Room 9100
In 2003,
the French government passed a law that prohibits
Muslim girls who wear head scarves from attending
public schools. The debate about the law
raised questions that are being addressed in
many Western European countries about whether
or not- and how- followers of Islam can be integrated
into these societies. In an illuminating
and provocative talk, Professor Scott suggests
that the stark oppositions that framed the debate-
public versus private, secular versus religious,
women's emancipation or subordination- are not
the best way to understand or resolve the difficulties
that the integration of Muslims pose for French
society.
Joan Wallach Scott is Harold F. Linder Professor
of Social Science at the
Institute for Advanced Study. Among her
books are: Gender and the Politics of History;
Only Paradoxes to Offer: French Feminists and
the Rights of Man; and Parité: Sexual Equality and the Crisis of French
Universalism. Professor
Scott holds a Ph.D from the University of Wisconsin;
she has been awarded honorary degrees by SUNY
Stony Brook, Brown University, and the University
of Bergen (Norway). Her work has been
influential in defending critical approaches
to the writing of history and in theorizing
gender as an analytic category.
Spring 2005 Series
. Frances Fox Piven
Globalization
and Political Power
Wednesday, April
6, 2005
6:30 to 8:00
pm, Baisley Powell Elebash Recital Hall
The common
view is that the rise of international economic
and political institutions undermines the
possibilities for democratic influence.
The influence of this idea, that democratic
publics are helpless, is undeniable, but it
contributes to popular helplessness and resignation.
But the idea does not stand up to careful scrutiny.
Professor Piven shows that the complex and fragile
economic and political arrangements associated
with globalization are extremely vulnerable
to dissent and disturbance, and thus actually
increase the potential for popular influence.
Frances Fox Piven is Distinguished Professor
of Political Science and Sociology at The Graduate
Center of the City University of New York and
author of Regulating the Poor: The Functions
of Public Welfare and Poor People's Movements
: Why They Succeed, How They Fail (with
Richard Cloward) and, most recently, of The
War at Home: The Domestic Costs of Bush's Militarism.
. Andre S. Markovits
Why
Europe Dislikes America: Anti-Americanism in
Historical Perspective
Thursday, April
21, 2005
6:30 to 8:00
pm, Sky Light Room (9100)
There can be absolutely
no doubt that the Bush Administration's policies
have created an atmosphere in which disliking
America has become a sort of global lingua franca.
While the antipathies towards the United States
in Western Europe have -- on account of the
Bush Administration's actions -- entered a hitherto
unprecedented acuity and acerbity among many
different social groups, antipathies towards
America in Europe predate the establishment
of the American Republic. In addition
to discussing the historical dimensions of European
anti-Americanism, much attention will be given
to topics such as food, sports, weather and
other non-political phenomena, all highlighting
the fact that European anti-Americanism goes
much deeper than a legitimate criticism of,
and even welcome opposition to, the policies
of the Bush Administration, or that of any American
government.
Andrei S. Markovits
is the Karl W. Deutsch Collegiate Professor
of Comparative Politics and German Studies at
the University of Michigan and the author of
Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism
(with Steven Hellerman) and, most recently, of Amerika, Dich Hasst
Sich's Besser.
Fall 2004 Series
. Jeff Madrick
Changing
Times: The Purpose of Government
Thursday, October
14, 2004
6:30 to
8:00 pm, Sky Light Room (9100)
Change is
at the heart of successful government.
But neither the right nor the left in America
adequately recognize this. They call on
outdated views of what government should do
to solve contemporary problems like income inequality,
faltering health care, and child poverty.
In his address, Jeff Madrick will show how radically
the nation has changed in the past twenty-five
years, and how little the agendas of both the
right and the left, so mired in misleading nostalgia,
reflect this. Finally, Madrick will propose
a policy agenda suitable for these items.
Jeff Madrick is an economics columnist at The
New York Times, editor of Challenge,
and the author most recently of How Economies
Grow: The Forces that Shape Prosperity and How
We Can Get Them Working Again.
. Martha Albertson Fineman
When
We Divorce
Wednesday,
November 10, 2004
6:30 to
8:00 pm, Martin E. Segal Theatre (1218)
What does marriage mean in modern America?
One way to understand its meaning is to explore
what happens when marriage ends. Three
significant
revolutions - the sexual revolution, the no-fault
divorce revolution, and the gender-equality
revolution - have altered our way of thinking
about family and intimate relationships.
Together these seismic shifts have transformed
marriage into a relationship that is both egalitarian
and tenuous. Such a profound change also
calls into question the state's interest in
privileging marriage over other forms of family
ties.
Martha Albertson Fineman, the Robert W. Woodruff
Professor of Law at Emory University, is the
Director of the Feminism and Legal Theory Project.
She is also the author of The Illusion of
Equality: The Rhetoric and Reality of Divorce
Reform; The Neutered Mother, the Sexual
Family, and Other Twentieth Century Tragedies;
and most recently, The Autonomy Myth: A Theory
of Dependency.
|