Brisbane Free University Election Eve Special: Politics, Participation and the Democratic Process

When?  6.30pm, Friday 30 January, 2015

Where?  Carpark under Westpac Bank, 89-91 Boundary Street, West End

What? Brisbane Free University brings together a panel of activists, academics, artists and political candidates to talk about political participation and the parliamentary process.

The panel:

Kristen Lyons
Kristen is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Queensland and Greens candidate for Hervey Bay

Ryan Walter
Ryan teaches political theory at the University of Queensland. He researches the history of political thought and Australian political rhetoric

Dave Eden
Dave works in an office and writes at https://withsobersenses.wordpress.com/ and https://thewordfromstrugglestreet.wordpress.com/

Jonathan Sri
Jonathan is a writer, musician, activist and community organiser who recently dipped his toe into ‘mainstream’ politics, and is currently running as the Greens candidate for South Brisbane at the Queensland election.
jonathansri.com

Shayne Hunter
Shayne is an activist, comedian and anarchist organiser currently based in Brisbane.

The format:

Each panelist will give an overview of their attitudes toward political participation and the parliamentary process, followed by an open group discussion.

ALL WELCOME!

Bring your friends, bring your family, bring your dinner, bring your thoughts. We’ll see ya there.

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BFU at the Woodford Folk Festival

Brisbane Free University is very excited to announce our exciting programme scheduled as part of the Woodford Folk Festival!  Check out our huge line-up here:

BFUSchedule-WFF (1)

… and come along if you’ll be at the festival.  As usual, all are welcome!

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First as tragedy, then as farce: A double take on G20 prohibitions

BFU is proud to host the following images, created by a Brisbane-based artist:

Prohibited 1

Prohibited 2

Prohibited 3

Prohibited 4

They are from Seeing Through The G20: A Peoples’ Zine

For information on responses to the G20, check out http://brisbaneblacks.com/g20 and www.briscan.net.au  

Look after yourselves and each other, Brisbane. Together we can get through this week.

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BFU to chair Forum: Civil liberties and other casualties of Abbott’s war in Iraq

BFU will be chairing this upcoming public forum, the purpose of which is to support the Muslim community, defend civil liberties and promote peace.

Speakers:

Dr Peter Slezak – Associate Professor of History and Philosophy, University of NSW

Salam El Merebi – AMARAH (Australian Muslims Advocates for the Rights of All Humanity)

Andrew Bartlett – QLD Greens

When: Saturday 25th of October, 3.30 – 5.30 pm

Where: The Lavalla Centre, 58 Fernberg Rd, Paddington.

This forum is co-endorsed by The Cloudland Collective, BFU, and The Greens.  As always, the session is free and all are welcome.

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BFU presents: Fat Cats and Water Rats: The Future of West End

Brisbane Free University is proud to present a panel for the West End Festival, on a topic dear to our hearts. This is a chance for community members to come together and discuss West End’s community values, share ideas and make plans for the future.

Panelists:  

Boe Spearim 
Boe Spearim is a youth representative for Brisbane Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy (BASE). BASE has been operating from Musgrave Park since 2012.

Dr Erin Evans 
Dr Erin Evans is the president of the West End Community Association (WECA). WECA is a not-for-profit, incorporated association of residents and friends of Kurilpa (West End, Hill End, Highgate Hill and South Brisbane).

Peter Walters 
Peter Walters is an urban sociologist from the School of Social Science at UQ. He teaches first year students what sociology is, and graduate students what sociology could be. He researches how we shape cities and how they shape us.

Peter Westoby 
Peter Westoby is a Director/member of Community Praxis Cooperative and part of the Kurilpa Future Campaign Group. He has lived in 4101 for 26 years, loves hanging at AVID Reader and swimming in Musgrave Park pool. He is also a senior lecturer in community development at UQ.

Everyone is welcome, and, as ever, the event is free.

When: October 11, 4:30pm – 6:00pm

Where: The carpark under the Westpac Bank, 89-91 Boundary St, West End.

West End Festival:
Learn more about West End Festival here: http://westendfestival.com.au/
and join their Facebook event here: https://www.facebook.com/events/671579372938047/?fref=ts

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BFU & Sisters Inside session this week!

A reminder that the BFU/Sisters Inside session, ‘Why the Prison Abolition Movement Must be Global’, is set to take place this week, on Wednesday the 8th of October.  More details can be found on our poster (attached), and this post on our website.  Hope to see you there, and feel free to spread the word!

BFU:SI poster

BFU:SI poster copy

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BFU & Courting Blakness Present ‘Reflecting Blak: The Impact of Courting Blakness at UQ’

BFU invites you to a panel to take place amongst the artworks of Courting Blakness, currently installed in the University of Queensland’s Great Court.  The groundbreaking exhibition, curated by Fiona Foley, sets new pieces by Aboriginal artists in the heart of the campus, and asks: ‘What does contemporary Aboriginal art prompt us to think and feel about the ways we occupy spaces of knowledge?’

To reflect on this and other questions as the exhibition draws to a close, we are bringing together a diverse panel of UQ faculty who have engaged with Courting Blakness in their teaching.  We equally welcome the participation and reflections of anyone who might have been prompted to wonder about history, identity, art, and the place of the university within it all.  The panel will be followed by an informal gathering at UQ’s Pizza Cafe.

About the panel

Panelists: Fiona Nicoll (Cultural Studies), Louise Phillips (Education), Sylvie Shaw (Religion and Spirituality Studies), Sally Babidge (Anthropology), Paul Harnett (Psychology), Kari Sullivan (Linguistics), Morgan Brigg (Peace and Conflict Studies), Kristy Parker (Political Science) and David Burgener (Peace and Conflict Resolution).

When: Friday the 26th of September, 5-6.30 pm

Where: The Great Court, University of Queensland, St Lucia

As always, the event is absolutely free and open to the public.  We hope to see you there.  Be sure to spread the word!

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BFU & Sisters Inside Present: Why The Prison Abolition Movement Must be Global

Brisbane Free University is excited to join with Sisters Inside  to present a panel conversation: “Why The Prison Abolition Movement Must be Global”. The event correlates with “Is Prison Obsolete?” the prison abolition conference that will be held over the 8th, 9th & 10th October 2014.

The night will run as follows:

Acknowledgement of country: Aunty Valda Coolwell

Feature presentation: Angela Davis

Panel Discussion:

Angela Davis
Erica Meiners
Gina Dent
Kim Pate
Sharon McIvor
Deborah Coles
Debbie Kilroy
Cassandra Shaylor
Antoinette Braybrook

Discussion time, questions and answers.

Time: October 8, 7pm – 9pm

Place: South Leagues Club, Jane Street, Davies Park, West End, Brisbane, QLD, 4101.

Entry: gold coin donation for Sisters Inside Young Women’s Art Program.

About the speakers (as per the “Is Prison Obsolete” conference website):

Angela Davis
Author & Activist
Through her activism and scholarship over the last decades, Angela Davis has been deeply involved in our nation’s quest for social justice. Her work as an educator – both at the university level and in the larger public sphere – has always emphasized the importance of building communities of struggle for economic, racial, and gender justice.

Professor Davis’ teaching career has taken her to San Francisco State University, Mills College, and UC Berkeley. She also has taught at UCLA, Vassar, the Claremont Colleges, and Stanford University. She spent the last fifteen years at the University of California, Santa Cruz where she is now Distinguished Professor Emerita of History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary Ph.D program, and of Feminist Studies.

Angela Davis is the author of nine 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.” Davis has also conducted extensive research on numerous issues related to race, gender and imprisonment. Her most recent book is The Meaning of Freedom and Other Difficult Dialogues.

Davis is a founding member Critical Resistance, a national organization dedicated to the dismantling of the prison industrial complex. Internationally, she is affiliated with Sisters Inside, an abolitionist organization based in Queensland, Australia that works in solidarity with women in prison.

Like many other educators, Professor Davis is especially concerned with the general tendency to devote more resources and attention to the prison system than to educational institutions. Having helped to popularize the notion of a “prison industrial complex,” she now urges her audiences to think seriously about the future possibility of a world without prisons and to help forge a 21st century abolitionist movement.

Dr. Erica R. Meiners
Author & Activist
Based in Chicago, I am in involved with a number of initiatives working for justice.
With others, I am a starter, and still a teacher and a coordinator, of an alternative high school for men and women who have been incarcerated, St. Leonard’s Adult High School. In 2009, I co-authored the first LGBTQ audit of teacher education programs in the U.S. Visibility Matters. I collaborated to develop Women and Prison: A Site of Resistance and TAME: Teachers Against Militarized Education.

I am the author of a number of books: Right to be hostile: Schools, prisons and the making of public enemies (Routledge 2007), Public acts: Disruptive readings on making curriculum public with Francisco Ibáñez-Carrasco (Routledge 2004), and my new book with Therese Quinn, is Flaunt It! Queers organizing for public education and justice. I also write articles in a range of publications including AREA Chicago, ReThinking Schools, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Meridians, and Upping the Anti. Check out my article in the latest issue of Radical Teacher. I blog about resistances, Canadiana and pop cultures for MS Magazine.

Work with allies in Chicago about the lives and organizing of undocumented youth is out, including a piece in Social Justice Journal, and Academe. I will be a sister at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute in Montreal, continuing work on fear, childhood and protection. I am also facilitating/participating in a Communiversity through Project NIA and the Chicago Freedom School.
My day job is a Professor of Education and Women’s Studies at Northeastern Illinois University – a public, urban institution in Chicago where I am also a union member of UPI. I am into making jam, trying to keep my bees alive, all kinds of music, and long distance running.

Gina Dent
University of California
Gina is Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies at UC Santa Cruz, having previously taught at Princeton, Columbia, and UC Berkeley. She has published on African American literature and art, and also works on African American women and the prison-industrial complex.

Kim Pate
Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies
Kim is mother to Michael and Madison. She is a lawyer and teacher by training and has completed post graduate work in the area of forensic mental health.

Kim is the Executive Director of the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies (CAEFS), a federation of autonomous societies that work with, and on behalf of, marginalized, victimized, criminalized and institutionalized women and girls, throughout Canada. Kim is also a part-time professor at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law, where she teaches courses on prison law, and defending battered women on trial.

Kim is an expert on the federal prison system, and on the conditions and treatment of criminalized women in Canada, and has also worked with youth and men during her 30 years of working in and around the legal and penal systems. She is the recipient of a number of awards in recognition of her work on equality and human rights. She was honorary doctorates awarded by the University of Ottawa, Carleton University, and Sir Wilfrid Laurier University.

Dr. Sharon McIvor
Activist & Academic
Dr. Sharon McIvor is an indigenous activist and academic. She is a member of the Lower Nicola Indian Band located outside of Merritt B.C. She has a law degree from the University of Victoria, a Masters of Laws degree from Queens University and an Honorary Doctor of Laws from the University of Victoria. . McIvor is an Instructor, Indigenous Studies, at Nicola Valley Institute of Technology, Merritt, British Columbia.

She writes and speaks on women’s rights in the context of Aboriginal self-government. McIvor has worked in the areas of prison reform, violence against women (including aboriginal women), disability rights, aboriginal rights and equality rights. She was a member of the Wilson Task Force on the Status of Women in the Legal Profession and the Task Force on federally Sentenced Women. McIvor chaired the Committee that designed and built the Okima Ochi Healing Lodge, a federal Penitentiary designed for Aboriginal Women, in Saskatchewan.

She has played a key leadership role in the Native Women’s Association of Canada for many years and is a member of the Feminist Alliance for International Action (this NGO successfully requested that the CEDAW Committee institute an Inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women in Canada) and the BC CEDAW coalition. McIvor, as plaintiff in the McIvor v. Canada case has successfully challenged the ongoing discrimination in the Indian Act which has forced the Federal Government to amend the Indian Act (the “McIvor” amendments). The “McIvor” Amendments added approximately 45,000 newly recognized Indians to the Indian Registry. McIvor has, as counsel, appeared in the Supreme Court of Canada on numerous occasions. She also takes her advocacy to the United Nations and Inter America Commission on Human Rights at an international level.

Debbie Kilroy
Sisters Inside Inc.
Debbie Kilroy OAM, MLB, GDFMenH, GDLPrac, BSocWk is a former prisoner and the CEO of Sisters Inside-an independent community organisation in Brisbane, Australia that advocates for the human rights of criminalised women. Kilroy is a strong, active advocate for the implementation and monitoring of human rights within women’s prisons and works against discriminatory practices. Kilroy has participated in several international meetings, including the expert meeting to develop the UN Rules for the Treatment of Women Prisoners and Non-Custodial Measures for Women Offenders (Bangkok Rules) and the Commission on the Status of Women sessions annually. She is the first person convicted of serious criminal offences admitted to practice law in Australia. Her expertise is in criminal defence law.

Deborah Coles
Inquest
Deborah is a committed activist working on social justice issues. As Co-Director of www.inquest.org.uk a unique charity that provides expertise on contentious deaths and their investigation with a particular focus on custodial death. Deborah leads the policy, legal and strategic work for social change and has considerable expertise in working to prevent the deaths and ill treatment of people in all forms of detention, and in campaigning for more effective learning and state and corporate accountability. She is regularly consulted by government, parliamentarians, regulation, inspection and investigation bodies, coroners, human rights lawyers, NGO’s and international human rights groups. She given written and oral evidence to numerous parliamentary inquiries and has been appointed as an expert on a variety of committees and reference groups including the Independent Advisory Panel on Deaths in Custody. She has expertise in specialist areas including coronial reform, policing, human rights compliant investigations, traumatic bereavement, family liaison, juvenile and youth justice, race and gender and criminal justice.

Deborah’s campaigning work around the deaths of women in prison was instrumental in persuading the government to set up the review of women with vulnerabilities in the criminal justice system ‘The Corston report’ and she was an active member of its reference group. She is co-author of ‘Dying On the Inside: Examining Women’s Deaths in Prison’ an in-depth analysis of women’s deaths and their broader social and political context. It argues for the abolition of prison for women and for investment in community based projects.

She has delivered conference papers nationally and internationally and is the co-author of three seminal books on custodial deaths and author of numerous articles and publications. She has advised on radio and TV documentaries and collaborated on theatre productions on social justice issues and is a regular media commentator.

She is also the Chair of trustees for www.womeninprison.org.uk, a trustee of Theatre Company www.cleanbreak.org.uk andwww.emmahumphreys.org

Twitter @debatINQUEST
inquest@inquest.org.uk

Cassandra Shaylor
Justice Now USA
Cassandra Shaylor is an attorney and activist based in Oakland, CA. She is the co-founder of Justice Now, an abolitionist organization and training center focused on people in US women’s prisons. Her academic work focuses on issues of women in prison, abolition, and the intersections of race, sexuality and gender in the prison industrial complex. Over the years she has been active with numerous anti-prison and abolitionist organizations, including organizing with the California Coalition for Women Prisoners and co-founding Critical Resistance.

Antoinette Braybrook 
Aboriginal Family Violence Prevention and Legal Service in Victoria
Antoinette Braybrook is the CEO of the Aboriginal Family Violence Prevention and Legal Service in Victoria. Antoinette is an Aboriginal woman who was born in Victoria on Wurundjeri country. Antoinette’s grandfather and mother’s line is through the Kuku Yalangi, North Queensland. Antoinette graduated Bachelor of Laws at Deakin University in 2000 and was admitted as a legal practitioner in Victoria in 2004. Antoinette is a member of the Victorian Aboriginal Justice Forum, the peak coordinating body responsible for overseeing the development, implementation and direction of Koori initiatives under the Victorian Aboriginal Justice Agreement and the Indigenous Family Violence Partnership Forum as well as other committees and forums. Antoinette also currently holds the position of National Convenor for the National Family Violence Prevention Legal Services Forum which comprises 13 organisations responsible for delivery of the FVPLS Program servicing 31 high-need regional and remote areas in Australia.

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BFU Presents: Gaza in Context

BFU invites you to our upcoming session, which focuses on Gaza in the context of Israeli-Palestinian relations, and international human rights legislation.    The session features two excellent speakers (see details below), plus ample time for open discussion, questions and answers. 

Halim Rane is Associate Professor of Islam-West Relations in the School of Humanities at Griffith University, Queensland.  He formerly worked for the Australian Government Department of Immigration.  Rane’s research is interdisciplinary, encompassing media studies, sociology and international relations.  He is the author of numerous articles and books on Islamic and Muslim issues including: Media Framing of the Muslim World: Conflicts, Crises and Contexts, and Making Australia Foreign Policy on Israel-Palestine: Media Coverage, Public Opinion and Interest Groups.

Dr Natalia Szablewska is a Lecturer at Southern Cross University School of Law and Justice.  She specialises in international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights, and her current research is in transitional justice and different modes of empowerment.  She will present an overview of IHL and its applicability to conflicts between Israel and Palestine.

 

When: Thursday the 4th of September, 6.30 – 8.30 pm

Where: The carpark under the Westpac Bank, 89-91 Boundary St, West End.

As always, all are welcome to attend, and the session is absolutely free.  See you there!

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BFU Presents: Notes from the Underground Economies

Brisbane Free University is excited to invite you to an upcoming panel session on the underground economies of trash and treasure.  Who decides what gets consumed and what gets thrown away?  How does that affect our political economy more broadly?  And how might we reimagine our relationships to waste in order to build a more just world?  This session will feature two short presentations, followed by ample open discussion time.

About the presentations:

‘World-Class Waste, Shadow Economies and the Global City’ with David Boarder Giles, Lecturer in Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at University of Washington, Bothell, and “expert dumpster diver;”

‘The Skin of Commerce: the relationship between plastic packaging and food waste,’ with Gay Hawkins, Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland

When: Thursday 28th August, 6.30 pm

Where: Carpark under the Westpac Bank, 89-91 Boundary St, West End

As always, all are welcome, and the session is absolutely free.

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