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Showing events starting from October 17, 2019 up to October 30, 2019

  1. Public Comments Event: HUD Changes to Civil Rights' Fair Housing Protections

    October 17, 2019 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm

    In August 2019, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released a new rule with the potential to dismantle important civil rights protections against discrimination in housing.

    Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, known as the Fair Housing Act, prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, or financing of housing and in other housing-related activities on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, disability, familial status, or national origin. However, HUD's new rule proposes to replace the use of "disparate impact" in determining housing discrimination and to raise the burden of proof required to prove discrimination. Moreover, the new rule proposes to release lenders and landlords from responsibility for computer-based algorithms that discriminate while automating decisions about credit scoring, home insurance, and mortgage interest rates.

    Come learn about submitting public comments and make your voice heard on this critical issue! No prior experience submitting public comments is necessary.

    Please visit B780 in the School of Social Work on Thursday, October 17, 2019 any time between 12:00pm to 1:30pm to submit a public comment regarding this rule.

    Public comments on this rule will only be accepted until October 18, 2019.

    RSVP here

  2. Field Placement Application Due for 16-month Students

    October 17, 2019 (all day)

    Field Placement Application due for 16-month students starting field in January 2020

  3. Idealist.org Seattle Graduate School Fair

    October 17, 2019 - 5:00pm to 8:00pm

    Stop by the Idealist.org Graduate School Fair to speak with an admissions representative about U-M's MSW and PhD programs. The fair is free and open to anyone considering graduate school.

     

  4. Revolution and Evolution: Lessons From James and Grace Lee Boggs Revolution and Evolution: Lessons From James and Grace Lee Boggs

    October 17, 2019 - 5:30pm to 7:30pm

    The Semester in Detroit program, Community Action and Social Change Undergraduate Minor (SSW) and the Bogg Center invite your participation in a discussion about James and Grace Lee Boggs vision, framework, and application of transformational social change grassroots leadership. Hosted by Boggs Center board members Stephen Ward and Tawana Petty, the session will explorelessons learned from James and Grace Lee Boggs’ lifelong legacy of community organizing in the cityof Detroit. Through structured facilitation and reflection, participants will engage in discussion that examines the following questions:

    What is (r)evolutionary social change?

    What is the difference between a “riot” and a “rebellion”?

    How do we move from a moment to a movement?

    What is the role of dialectical thinking in deep divides?

    What are transformative aims toward social justice?

    Participants are highly encouraged to watch the American Revolutionary film, and read the publishedwork of James and Grace Lee Boggs prior attending this session for a historical overview. 

    Light dinner served

    Speakers

    Tawana Petty (Honeycomb): is a mother, social justice organizer, youth advocate, poet and author. She is the Director ofPetty Propolis, where she gets to grow through organizing transformative art and education initiatives. Honeycomb is afour-time author and founding member and editor of Riverwise Magazine, a Data Justice Coordinator for the DetroitCommunity Technology Project, a member of the Detroit Digital Justice Coalition, a Detroit Equity Action Lab fellow anda board member of the James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to Nurture Community Leadership. To learn more aboutTawana "Honeycomb" Petty visit her website at honeycombthepoet.org.

     

    Stephen Ward, PhD: is a lead faculty member with the Semester in Detroit program, historian who teaches inthe RC Social Theory and Practice program (STP) as well as the Department of Afroamerican and AfricanStudies (DAAS).

     

    RSVP

  5. Activism in Detroit Today: Site Visit to the Cass Corridor Commons Activism in Detroit Today: Site Visit to the Cass Corridor Commons

    October 18, 2019 - 7:45am to 12:30pm

    The Semester in Detroit program, Communtiy Action and Social Change Undergraduate Minor (SSW), and the Boggs Center invite your participation in a site visit to the Cass Corridor Commons to learn about contemporary activism in Detroit inspired by the legacy of James and Grace Lee Boggs. Led by visionary activist Tawana Petty, we will explore the following questions:

    What can we learn from current activists/organizers about Detroit based activism from an anti-racist lens?

    In what way has the life, legacy and work of Grace and Jmmy influenced existing forms of activism?

    What key themes/takeaways from James and Grace Lee Boggs are important to consider for the future?

    RSVP 

  6. Flu Shot Clinic

    October 21, 2019 - 11:00am to 3:00pm

    Why should you attend this on-site flu shot clinic?

    It’s conveniently located so you don’t have to go out of your way to get your flu shot  

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the best way to prevent influenza is to receive a seasonal flu shot

    Learn more about the flu here

    List of insurances and other forms of payment accepted

  7. SSW Career Services Alumni Lunch with Frank Poma

    October 21, 2019 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm

    The SSW Career Services Office is proud to feature alum Frank Poma, MSW '79. Frank has 30 years of experience in the health care field. He rose from social worker to president of St. John River Hospital (now part of Ascension Health) and currently serves as the Practice Executive for the Center for Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery. The  Center for Cardiovascular & Thoracic Surgery is an independent group providing services at two health systems.

    Come to have a free lunch, network and learn about an alum's exciting career!

    RSVP »

  8. SSW Book Club

    October 22, 2019 - 12:00pm to 1:00pm

    The SSW Book Club will discuss Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a Former White Nationalist by Eli Saslow.

    You are welcome to join us, whether or not you have attended before, and whether or not you have finished the book.

    All members of the SSW community are invited. Feel free to bring your lunch.

  9. Social Justice in the Real World: CASC Minor Alumni Panel Social Justice in the Real World: CASC Minor Alumni Panel

    October 22, 2019 - 5:00pm to 6:00pm

    Join us a for a panel discussion with CASC Minor alumni. Panelists will share their stories and journey engaging in social justice and change work. Learn more about their academic career as undergraduate students, experience in the minor, and the challenges, and lessons learned about applications of social justice "in the real world". Light dinner served and RSVP not required to participate. 

    Alumni Panelists:

    Anouk Versavel (2017): Anouk Versavel (she/her/hers) graduated in 2017 from UofM with majors in Women’s Studies and Sociology (Law Justice and Social Change) and a CASC minor. During undergrad, Anouk was a CASC student board member, taught yoga at aUM, and worked for the Global Feminisms Project through the Institute for Research on Women and Gender. Originally from Antwerp, Belgium, she moved to San Francisco, CA after graduation and for 2 years worked as a Project Manager at Civic Edge Consulting, a communications firm with public sector clients. She also volunteered at the UC Hastings Center for WorkLife Law. Anouk just started studying at Northwestern School of Law and will graduate with a JD in 2022. 

    Amy Ketner (2013): Amy Ketner was born and raised in the Flint area, a place which influenced her understanding of society and identity from an early age.  After graduating from UM in 2013, Amy accompanied youth and young adults in Santiago, Chile for two years through the Jesuit Volunteer Corps.  Since her return to the US, Amy has worked at St. Mary Student Parish (a Catholic Church), coordinating the parish's programs in Spanish. Together with the community, she formed an immigration team to support parishioners and community members who are undocumented, and to promote education and advocacy around immigrant rights.  Amy collaborates with other community organizers across SE Michigan, building a network of parishes and organizations to accompany our immigrant community. 

    Emily Hill (2014): Emily is a licensed clinical social worker. Emily graduated with a BA in Psychology and minor in CASC in 2014, and then went on to earn her MSW from the University of Michigan in 2015. After graduation, Emily worked as a child therapist in community mental health in Wayne County, providing school-based and home-based behavioral health services to children and families. She then transitioned to working as a research associate for the School of Public Health and Center for Sexuality and Health Disparities on a national study focused on improving medication adherence for youth living with HIV. Emily currently works as a clinical social worker in the HIV/AIDS clinic in the University of Michigan Health System, where her primary responsibility is risk reduction counseling and education. Emily also works as a private practice therapist at Amplify Colectivo in downtown Ann Arbor, and will be pursuing a certification to become a Sex Therapist/Sexuality Educator beginning next year. 

    Tahany Alsabahi (2017): Tahany Alsabahi is a 2017 graduate of the University of Michigan (U-M), where she double majored in International Studies and Middle Eastern & North African Studies and minored in Community Action and Social Change. As a student, Tahany worked as a Program Coordinator for the Program on Intergroup Relations; co-founded the Yemeni Students’ Association to create a space for Yemeni students to organize around the war in Yemen; and co-chaired Students Allied for Freedom and Equality (SAFE), where she led campaigns urging the University to divest from companies complicit in human rights abuses. For two year after graduating, Tahany worked in higher ed social justice initiatives in the College of LS&A. Currently, she's in her first year of law school at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law and hopes to take her CASC background to the legal field. 

    Violet Kelly-Andrews (2018): Graduated in 2018 with a major in Performing Arts Management and minors in CASC and History. After graduating, moved to New York City to spend the summer doing arts education before moving to London to a Masters program at King's College London in Arts and Cultural Management. Masters dissertation was in evaluating the impact of a diversity and leadership program that Arts Council England funded. More info on program can be found here: https://www.artscouncil.org.uk/funding/change-makers
     

  10. School of Social Work's Bystander Intervention Training

    October 23, 2019 - 12:00pm to 2:00pm

    The School of Social Work’s Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion brings bystander intervention skills to the SSW community for the purpose of building inclusive, respectful and safe communities. The training is based on a nationally-recognized four-stage bystander intervention model that helps individuals intervene in situations that negatively impact individuals, organizations, and the campus community. Unable to attend in person, view the livestream: https://bluejeans.com/639314111

    RSVP here

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