NEWS
from
Central Connecticut State University
Honored as a "Leadership Institution" by the
Association of American Colleges & Universities
Media contact:
Bart Fisher,
Associate
Director of
Marketing and Communications
(860) 832-1624;
Fisherb@ccsu.edu
NEW BRITAIN – April 21, 2008
- Angela Davis, political activist, author and
scholar will make a pair of appearances at
Central Connecticut State University, April 24.
Ms. Davis is the author of eight books and has
lectured throughout the United States as well as
in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, and South
America. In recent years a persistent theme of
her work has been the range of social problems
associated with incarceration and the
generalized criminalization of those communities
that are most affected by poverty and racial
discrimination. She draws upon her own
experiences in the early seventies as a person
who spent eighteen months in jail and on trial,
after being placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted
List.” She has also conducted extensive
research on numerous issues related to race,
gender and imprisonment. Her most recent books
are Abolition Democracy and Are
Prisons Obsolete? She is now completing a
book on Prisons and American History.
Professor Davis’ teaching
career has taken her to San Francisco State
University, Mills College, and UC Berkeley. She
has also taught at UCLA, Vassar, the Claremont
Colleges, and Stanford University. She has
spent the last 15 years at the University of
California Santa Cruz where she is Professor of
History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary
Ph.D program, and Professor of Feminist Studies.
At her 2 p.m. lecture in the
Thaddeus L. Torp Theatre in CCSU’s Lawrence J.
Davidson Hall, Dr. Davis will discuss the
premise of “Are Prisons Obsolete?” She will
then be joined in panel discussion by State
Representative William Dyson, of New Haven, the
former Appropriations Committee Chair and
longtime prisoner re-entry advocate; Atty.
Gerard Smyth – Connecticut’s former Chief Public
Defender and current CCSU adjunct professor and
staff member of the Gov. William A. O'Neill
Endowed Chair; Maureen Price, Executive Director
of Community Partners in Action and James
Tillman (recently exonerated after serving 16
years on a rape and kidnapping conviction). The
panel will focus on the national and statewide
implications of prison policy.
At 5:30 p.m., Dr. Davis will
speak on “Race, Class, and Gender Issues in
American Society.” The second lecture, which
will also take place in Torp Theatre, will be
followed by an audience question and answer
period. Both CCSU events are free and
open to the public. However tickets must be
obtained for the later lecture. They are
available through Centix, (860) 832-1989, which
is located at the Information Desk of the CCSU
Student Center. Tickets will not ensure seating
beyond 5:25pm, as any empty seats will be
available on a first come, first serve basis.
Free parking is also
available in CCSU parking garages and surface
lots.
The
events are being sponsored by CCSU’s Institute
for the Study of Crime & Justice, Ruthe Boyea
Women’s Center and Center for Public Policy and
Social Research. For more information, contact
Andrew Clark at 860-832-1871 or Jacqueline
Cobbina-Boivin and Monique Daley at
860-832-1655.
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