Category Archives: Blog Post

Call for Papers: The New Youth Movements

Call For Papers: American Anthropological Association

Annual Conference: Chicago, Illinois – November 20th – 24th, 2013

Panel Title: The New “Youth Movements”: Political Subjectivity, Crisis, and Resistance

Panel Organizers: Manissa McCleave Maharawal (mmaharawal@gc.cuny.edu), CUNY Graduate Center; Zoltán Glück, (zgluck@gc.cuny.edu), CUNY Graduate Center

In late October, 2011 Egyptian activists wrote a solidarity letter to Occupy Wall Street in which they stated: “an entire generation across the globe has grown up realizing, rationally and emotionally, that we have no future in the current order of things,” (Guardian 2011). Identifying a commonality in their struggles, the letter expresses a blunt urgency; that their generation is going to have to create “what we can no longer wait for” (ibid). This urgency was also seemingly felt by thousands around the world as youth-led movements over the past two years have toppled governments from Tunis to Montreal. Within these movements, and in their wake, new forms of political practices, political identities, and solidarities have emerged and begun to change the way that young people facing dire social and economic challenges understand their lived reality. Youth worldwide continue to be hit the hardest by the global economic turbulence and job crises (UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2012) and are slated for continued economic struggles. However, as shown by their overwhelming participation in various political struggles around the globe, youth are challenging these conditions in a myriad of complex and organized ways. Continue reading

Free University of NYC – May Day Call to Education

Turn the City into a Free University!  A Free University in Every Park!

May Day 2013
Multiple Free Universities across NYC
Call to Education

The Free University of NYC invites neighborhood organizations, schools, unions, spiritual centers, and other community education-oriented groups to create your own Free Universities this May 1st. Continue reading

Race, Class, and Disaster Gentrification

By Zoltán Glück

First published at Tidal (http://tidalmag.org/race-class-and-disaster-gentrification/)

In the days and weeks following Hurricane Sandy the inequalities at the heart of New York City could scarcely be missed.  While hundreds of thousands of public housing residents went without heat, hot water or electricity, Mayor Michael Bloomberg rushed to get the stock exchange up and running within 48 hours—a stark reminder of whose lives and well-being are valued by current administration. In the immediate aftermath of disasters such contrasts lay bare the violence of race and class.  Who is able to leave and who is able to return are questions about access to resources, vulnerability, and the existing geographies of economic and social inequality. But it is through the process of reconstruction that existing racial and class iniquities are truly reproduced and deepened. In New York City, as the power has finally come back on for residents and as reconstruction efforts plod along, it is perhaps time for a look at how these dynamics are playing out.

Red Hook Houses Without Power After Hurricane Sandy
Red Hook Houses Without Power After Hurricane Sandy Continue reading

Free University Tool Kit; First Draft

If you read the last meeting minutes, you may know that we are pulling together a first draft of our Free University Tool Kit. This will be compiled of material already collaboratively written by the community about Free Education. There are a couple of sections that can be collectively answered here and now, too!!

 

Please reply to purcellkathleen85@gmail.com with answers to these questions below. They can be one word or lengthier, but as we hope to include as much of your answers as possible, please keep it brief. In fact, short sentences and phrases (even one word) is preferable: Continue reading

Coverage of the NYU Vote of No Confidence

On Friday, March 15th, NYU faculty will be registering their Vote of No Confidence in president John Sexton. Here are some excellent background readings on the issue.

-Nick Pinto’s excellent article in the Village voice about politics and economic of the NYU growth machine model of higher education: http://www.villagevoice.com/2013-02-20/news/nyu-expansion/

-NY Times article about the Vote of No Confidence: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/nyregion/john-sexton-is-tested-by-nyu-faculty.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

-An article at NYU Local about the upcoming vote: http://nyulocal.com/city/2013/02/27/no-confidence-history/

-A fascinating article on the email exchanges between Administration and Faculty in the wake of the scandal over top-administrators’ severance packages: http://nyulocal.com/on-campus/2013/03/11/exclusive-nyu-emails-faculty-amid-fallout-over-jack-lews-shady-bonus/

No Environmental Justice, No Peace – The Burgeoning Student Movement for a Sustainable Planet

Just a few weeks ago, author and environmental activist Bill McKibben spoke on Democracy Now! and recounted an interesting anecdote to host Amy Goodman. McKibben noted that Nelson Mandela, in his first visit to the U.S. after his release from a 27-year prison sentence in South Africa, made sure to stop at the Berkeley campus at the University of California.

Berkeley was “the cradle of the divestiture movement” of the mid 1980’s, according to the Los Angeles Times. The movement prompted colleges and universities throughout the U.S. (as well as pension and municipal funds)to abandon any investments in companies that operated in South Africa, then under apartheid. Berkeley students “boycotted classes, occupied the offices of top administrators, and were arrested in numbers reminiscent of the 1960s.” They even built shantytowns on campus to force a response from administration.  The hard, gritty work eventually paid off and the University of California divested their $3 billion worth of investments in South Africa. Dozens of colleges and universities across the country followed suite.

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Book Review: Chase Madar, The Passion of Bradley Manning

With the recent news that Private First Class Bradley Manning has pled guilty to releasing U.S. classified documents to Wikileaks in early 2010, I thought it fitting that I should come upon a free copy of a recent book about Manning in my university department’s common area. Chase Madar’s The Passion of Bradley Manning (rev. ed.; Verso, 2013) is not just a biography of Manning, but also a critical analysis of the political and legal issues related to Manning’s release of classified materials as well as the U.S. government’s torture, imprisonment, and systematic defamation of Manning. Continue reading

May Day in America


[The Free University of NYC was born out of calls for a General Strike on May 1, 2012.  Right now we are cooking up plans for May Day 2013, and we invite you to get involved with the planning process. See the meeting minutes and events pages on this website for more information about the planning process. In the meantime, here is a short essay on the history of May Day in America. With deep respect, Gregory.]

May Day 2012 NYC

 

 

 

 

 

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Friday Roundup: Student Movement Stories

Originally published on March 1st on at Student Activism (http://studentactivism.net/2013/03/01/friday-roundup/). This occasional roundup of student movement stories is put together by Isabelle Nastasia, a CUNY undergrad, New York Students Rising organizer.

Rest in Power, Trayvon Martin:

The Acts of Courage and Kindness that Came After Trayvon Martin’s Death – Colorlines

Marching to Sanford  (a short documentary featuring the Dream Defenders, a coalition of black and brown youth fighting for immigration reform and an end to the school to prison pipeline and the prison industrial complex.) Continue reading

Students Occupy University President’s Office To Protest Naming Stadium After Private Prison Company

Originally published on ThinkProgress, Feb 26th 2013.

By Adam Peck on Feb 26, 2013 at 1:30 pm

Last week, the administration of Florida Atlantic University raised eyebrows when officials announced that they had sold the naming rights to the school’s new football stadium to the GEO Group, the nation’s second-largest private prison company.

And students aren’t taking the deal lying down. On Monday afternoon, dozens of activists staged a sit-in inside university President Mary Jo Saunders’ office demanding FAU revoke their agreement with GEO Group. After two hours, Saunders agreed to schedule a public meeting with the university community, according to the Palm Beach Post: Continue reading