Friday, September 22, 2006

Seton Hall School of Law: National Teach-In

My friend David Silver, a professor of Media Studies at the University of San Francisco, founder of the Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies and co-founder of the September Project sent me information about a national teach-in sponsored by Seton Hall School of Law.

This looks like a fantastic opportunity and I'm more than happy to pass this along to BlendedEdu readers. Thanks David!

"during the 1960s, teach-ins on college campuses were common. the reasons for this were many, and one is that the times were extremely chaotic and violent. the teach-ins, organized despite harassment, intimidation, and sometimes violence, reminded us that college campuses were important and relevant spheres of democracy.

on october 5, 2006 there will be a national teach-in called Guantanamo: How Should We Respond? the teach-in takes place at seton hall law school in newark, new jersey and will be broadcasted to over 200 participating campuses in 44 states.

because october 5 is near, most readers affiliated with academia won't be able to organize an event on their campuses. but as engaged scholars, events like this, especially in times like ours, merit our attention and thoughts. this project has three main elements:

1. On October 5th, Seton Hall will host an all-day conference available at academic institutions across the United States to study the national and international implications of indefinitely detaining hundreds of individuals deemed "enemy combatants."

the program is massively diverse. topics range from "medical professionals and guantanamo" and "journalists look behind the wire" to "history of torture in the modern world" and "american detention policy: the next frontier."

speakers include professors, attorneys, governmental officials, military officials, religious leaders, and human rights advocates. among the speakers are journalists from the new yorker, the new york times, the miami herald, and time magazine.

2. Beginning at 10:00 EST, the Teach-In will be available via high-quality video streams accessed through this website. Schools in earlier time zones can pick up the sessions in progress or, by accessing a recording of the earlier sessions, view the whole program from the beginning.

This teach-in is truly national. currently, as of september 20, over 200 campuses in 44 states are organizing teach-ins about guantanamo. the overwhelming majority of hosts are law schools, colleges, and universities.

there are also 5 seminaries and 1 medical school participating in the teach-in. additional information regarding the technology that connects the events at seton hall to the rest of the participating campuses can be found here. (pdf)

3. And, of course, participating schools can schedule their own programming instead of or in addition to some of the nationally broadcast sessions. for example, here at the university of san francisco.

We will run the Internet feed from Seton Hall, beginning with the first presentation. a national teach-in on how to respond to guantanamo - what a great idea. (actually, if YOU are reading this from outside the united states andare interested in making this an INTERNATIONAL teach-in, please contact Mark Denbeaux at denbeama [at ] shu.edu).

it takes a great deal of work to organize projects like this. it also takes a great deal of courage, since so many college and university campuses, like so many other sectors of american society, are hostile to engaged debate and dissent.

finally, it takes a great deal of faith to organize projects like this-faith in college campuses as spheres of relevance, spheres of creativity and inspiration, and spheres of democracy."

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