Friday, October 27, 2017 at 12:00pm to 4:00pm
William W. Knight Law Center, Room 184
1515 Agate Street, Eugene, OR 97403
12-2 p.m.: Brown bag lunch and public discussion
2-4 p.m.: Scholarly symposium
Featured speakers:
Kelly Lytle Hernandez is an associate professor in the UCLA History Department. Her work focuses on race, policing, immigration, and incarceration in the United States. Her new book, City of Inmates: Conquest and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles (University of North Carolina Press, 2017), explores the long rise of incarceration as a social institution.
Torrie Hester is an assistant professor in the St. Louis University History Department. Her research interests include immigration and region, race and ethnicity, as well as law and foreign policy during the late nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. Her book Deportation: The Origins of U.S. Policy (Penn Press, 2017) shows how early U.S. deportation law and policy shaped the country.
Sharon Luk is an assistant professor in the University of Oregon Ethnic Studies Department. Her fields of study include racism and racial capitalism, ethnic ontologies, epistemology, social movements, feminisms, and ephemeral archives. Her book The Life of Paper: Letters and a Poetics of Living Beyond Captivity (forthcoming fall 2017, University of California Press) explores the life-worlds sustained through letter correspondence within the evolution of mass incarceration and its attendant racial regimes in California history.
This event is part of the Wayne Morse Center's 2017-19 theme, Borders, Migration, and Belonging. Cosponsored by the UO Prison Education Committee.
Lectures & Presentations, Symposium, Academic, Research, Free, Diversity and Multiculturalism, Discussion
All Students, Faculty/Staff, General Public, Graduate Students
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