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Archive for November, 2010

I am very excited that I have been asked to participate in this event. I will be focusing my presentation on independent media making and the role that gender, class, and race play in activist social media. I hope some of you can watch and please feel free to send me ideas, suggestions or love letters of encouragement.

KU journalism students to host virtual summit on diversity and social media

LAWRENCE – Students from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications (http://www.journalism.ku.edu/) at the University of Kansas will host an online virtual summit entitled “Telling Stories of Diversity in the Digital Age” on December 4 in Stauffer-Flint 100 on the University of Kansas campus.

The summit begins at 11 a.m. CST/ 12 p.m. EST with an introduction by Associate Professor Simran Sethi (http://simransethi.com/), who teaches Diversity in Media, a course cross-listed in the schools of journalism and social welfare. “I wanted to highlight the ways in which journalists and non-journalists alike are participating in a broader range of storytelling through the use of Twitter, blogs, Facebook and other digital platforms like the iPad. This course, culminating in the digital summit, is the ideal format for a deep exploration of participatory media and opportunities for the democratization of storytelling.”

Sethi will be followed by a series of guest lecturers covering topics including Social Media and the Notion of a Post Racial America; Women in New Media; Global Social Media: Giving Us a Voice, Or Limiting Whose Voice is Heard; and Different Voices, Same Technology.

The summit is co-presented with UNITY: Journalists of Color (http://www.unityjournalists.org/index.php), a strategic alliance advocating fair and accurate news coverage about people of color, and will include concluding remarks from Executive Director Onica Makwakwa. The event will be streamed live via Ustream on the UNITY homepage (http://www.unityjournalists.org/index.php) and the University of Kansas School of Journalism homepage (http://www.journalism.ku.edu/). The summit will be liveblogged on Twitter under the hashtag #digitaldiversity. Twitter participants will be given the opportunity to ask questions directly to the speakers and are eligible for a free HD Flip video camera courtesy of UNITY.

Those interested in participating are encouraged to do so via the UNITY website, the KU School of Journalism website, or by attending in person.

A complete schedule of events follows and can also be found on the summit fan page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/pages/KU-Journalism-Telling-Stories-of-Diversity-in-the-Digital-Age/169849916372666?v=wall):

11-11:10 a.m. CST / 12-12:10 p.m. EST – Welcome from KU William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications Dean Ann Brill.

Summit Introduction by Simran Sethi, Associate Professor, KU School of Journalism.

11:10 a.m.-12:20 p.m. CST / 12:10-1:20 p.m. EST – Social Media and the Notion of a Post Racial America

Chris Rabb – A visiting researcher at Princeton and a nationally recognized thought leader on the intersection of social identity, entrepreneurship, politics and media, and the author.

LaToya Peterson – Editor of Racialicious.com.

Shawn Williams – Award-winning president and editor of DallasSouthNews.org, which began as DallasSouthBlog.com.

12:30-1:40 p.m. CST / 1:30-2:40 p.m. EST – Women in New Media

Maegan la Mala Ortiz – Managing Editor and Co-Publisher of VivirLatino.com who considers herself a radical Rican media maker.

Marcia Yerman – Writer and co-founder of cultureID, a social community dedicated to creating a connection between activism and the arts.

Pat Lynch – Experienced, charitable media maven focused on strengthening women’s media voices, and the CEO and Founder of Women’s Online Media and Education Network (W.O.M.E.N.).

Shelby Knox – Feminist blogger, writer and activist, who according her blog The Ms. Education of Shelby Knox, is “an Upper East Side girl via Lubbock exiled to the West Village – a lover of animals, a women’s history geek and a policy wonk in training.”

Erin Vest – Former award-winning reporter turned blogger, now the Social Media Strategist at the largest women’s blogging network: BlogHer.

1:50-2:50 p.m. CST / 2:50-3:50 p.m. EST – Global Social Media: Giving Us a Voice, Or Limiting Whose Voice is Heard.

Nick Valencia – National Desk Editor for CNN, who has extensively covered Mexico’s drug related violence for CNN.

Vicky Lu – TV news reporter for Chinese State Operated News Press, who has first-hand experience living in a government with heavy social media restrictions.

Sekombi Katondolo – Dancer, artist, filmmaker, community organizer, journalist, and center director for Yole! Africa Goma in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Goran Sabah Ghafour – Reporter, editor and author from Kurdistan. Currently studying at the William Allen White School of Journalism at the University of Kansas.

3-4 p.m. CST / 4-5 p.m. EST – Different Voices, Same Technology

Shannon Des Roches Rosa – Writer, editor, autism advocate who writes fearlessly and compassionately about parenting, autism, and geekery.

Robin Deutsch – Chief executive manager for PsychMoo, a networking site for the “mentally interesting.”

David Morrison – 23 year-old disabilities columnist with StarNewsMedia in Wilmington, NC, currently attending school and living with a disability.

Maria Holter – Entrepreneur and proud mom with a documentary film background on a quest to put mainstream equipment, smart software and new media in the hands of non-verbal people for communication, learning, fun and social networking.

4-4:10 p.m. CST / 5-5:10 p.m. EST – Conclusion by Onica Makwakwa, Executive Director of UNITY: Journalists of Color.

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Documents recently declassified and released to the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Chile’s capital, Santiago, confirm that the U.S., specifically then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, were behind the 1973 coup that violently overthrew the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende and threw Chile into 17 years of dictatorship marked by summary disappearances and deaths.

Peter Kornbluh, director of the Chile Documentation Project of the National Archive, from George Washington University said:

These documents should contribute to advance justice and dignity in Chile. Obviously these documents have a special value in terms of official investigations into open cases. Now there is a base of information that could help those who seek more details.

Translated from : La Prensa Latina

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Steve Li was supposed to be released from ICE custody in Arizona yesterday after California Sen. Dianne Feinstein introduced a private bill seeking to block his deportation to Peru.

It should be noted that his deportation has not been canceled. just put on hold. In the meantime, Li is subject to a supervisor release program where he’s going to have to check in with ICE.

Via / SF Gate

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Sorry for the last minute notice gente. I didn’t catch this event till late last in the VivirLatino inbox gracias to BAAD! night pero I wanted to share it for those who are in the Bronx, NYC area.

COMMUNITY LEADERS AND ELECTED OFFICIALS MARCH AND RALLY TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST THE LGBTQS COMMUNITIES

Gay and straight leaders march and rally to combat violence against the gay community in New York. Called the LGBTQS United As One March and Rally, this non-political event is being organized by community leaders in the wake of devastating violence against the gay community, including an attack against a gay man in the restroom of the Stonewall Inn, the birthplace of the gay rights movement, and the abduction, unlawful imprisonment and sodomy of gay men by a gang in the Bronx. The LGBTQS United As One March and Rally also comes on the heels of suicides by young LGBTQ people related to their sexuality and targeted violence against straight residents for “looking” gay.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

March Assembly Time: 11 AM
March Begins: Noon
Unity March Route : Starting the march at Bronx Community College (University Ave and West 181 Street) to 1910 Osborne Place, Bronx, NY (site of the attack) for a prayer. Then, walking to the steps of the Bronx County Courthouse (161 Street and Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY)
Route Length: Approximately 2 miles

Unity Rally: Bronx Courthouse (East 161 Street and Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY)
Approximate Rally Start Time: 2pm

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I have been meaning to write about Alexandra Reyes for about a week now and in that week I am surprised (well kind of) that more attention hasn’t been given to her.

Alexandra Reyes was granted asylum earlier this month that will allow her to stay in the United States. Reyes , like so many others, came into the United States without documents. She came escaping violence from her family in Mexico and from Mexican society because she is a transgender woman.

“It would be physically dangerous for her to walk down the street,” said her attorney, Bryon Large. “She could be sexually assaulted.”

Read more…

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VivirLatino is proud to be one of the partnering organizations supporting Breakthrough‘s I AM THIS LAND contest.

What made me want to support this contest which asks you and other people from around the United States to create a video that reflects and celebrates the true make up this country, is the language behind it. The contest isn’t “I own this land” but rather reflects what I interpret as a deeper connectivity to a long history of people of color here. This about who was on this land before the Europeans. Depending on your background, it may have been your ancestors, herman@s : Indigenous peoples. Your familia may have been this land when it belonged to Mexico or another country. As a poet and writer, the name of this contest invoked an emotional response that really resonated with me. Being this land for me is about Puerto Rico, New York City and the struggles that I have chosen to take on in this life.

Y pa ti / For you?

How Can You Participate?

Read more…

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Thanks to many generous donations (handwritten thank you cards to go out as soon as we meet our goal), we are so close to having all the money we need to move to a better hosting service that will work with us, respond to our needs and hopefully not have so much downtime/ site outages. As many of you know, the site has been down way too much this year. It has been incredibly frustrating and has hindered our ability to report on issues in a timely manner.

Please consider an early navidad regalito to push us that much closer to be able to provide a better service to all of you, our readers and supporters.

Gracias

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We don’t have to wonder anymore with how the DREAM Act will be brought to a vote in this 111th Congress . Late yesterday, Senate Majority Harry Reid (D-NV) announced that he would be presenting the DREAM Act as a stand-alone bill.

“If there is a bipartisan bill that makes sense for our country economically, from a national security perspective and one that reflects American values, it is the DREAM Act. This bill will give children brought illegally to this country at no fault of their own the chance to earn legal status. Children brought to this country before the age of 16 who graduate high school, stay out of trouble and go on to serve in the military or to college would be eligible to earn permanent resident status after meeting certain other requirements.

“Secretaries of Defense from both parties have supported this bill because it strengthens our Armed Forces. In fact, this bill has a long history of bipartisan support, and was originally co-authored by Republicans. The students who earn legal status through the DREAM Act will make our country more competitive economically, spurring job creation, contributing to our tax base and strengthening communities.

“Last time we sought to bring up this bill, all Republicans blocked our effort, even though many have been supporters of the DREAM Act in the past. I hope that our Republican colleagues will join me, Sen. Durbin and Democrats in passing this important piece of legislation, now that we have a stand-alone version and that political season is over.”

Read more…

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About a dozen DREAMers, student activists and allies at the University of Texas at San Antonio have been on a hunger strike since last Wednesday in an effort to push Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison to support the DREAM Act.

Hutchison has backed the DREAM Act in the past but voted against a more recent version attached to a defense bill. She does not support the current version, according to a statement that urged UTSA students to “find safer ways to voice their opinions.”

“The Senator appreciates the passion of these young people for their cause, but she has been clear that she does not support the current DREAM Act legislation,” the statement said. “The Senator had previously proposed a way for students, who have gotten their primary and secondary education in the United States and want to go to college here, to get a temporary visa. She believes the current legislation goes far beyond the intended group of children who have grown up in America.”

Senator Hutchison so far has refused to meet with the hunger strikers, saying through a spokesperson in a meeting with some of the activists that as far as the Senator is concerned the DREAM Act does not exist.

It will be interesting to see if Hutchison changes her tune given the outcome of yesterday’s White House meeting.

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On Monday, the California State Supreme Court ruled that undocumented college students can receive the in-state resident tuition rate, overturning and earlier lower court’s decision. Specifically, the ruling stated that undocumented students who have been studying in California high schools for at least three years fulfill the requirement for in-state tuition even if those students are undocumented because this same benefit is given students with legal residence in the United States and with citizenship.

From Martinez v. UC Regents (PDF here) :

The section 68130.5 exemption cannot be deemed to be based on residence for the simple reason that many nonresidents may qualify for it. Every nonresident who meets section 68130.5‟s requirements — whether a United States citizen, a lawful alien, or an unlawful alien — is entitled to the nonresident tuition exemption. Attending high school in California for at least three years and meeting the other requirements are not the functional equivalent of residing in California. Some American citizens who are not residents of California may also be eligible for the exemption.

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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