http://www.angelfire.com/ny5/psn/
From Cell Blocks to City Blocks building a movement in search of freedom
--a conference agaisnt the prison industrial complex
March 16-17,
[email protected] the State University of NY at Binghamton.
The SUNY Binghamton Prisoner Support Network is planning an upcoming conference focusing on prisons and related issues. This conference will NOT be a conference for questioning or theorizing about prisons. Instead, it is being put together with the belief that prisons are inherently oppressive, and that they exist in order to maintain social inequalities. "From Cell Blocks to City Blocks: Building a Movement in Search of Freedom" will be centered on continuing efforts to organize a viable anti-prison movement, and on finding tangible ways to combat the prison industrial complex. In addition to the goals above, the purpose of this conference is to bring together those working on prison issues on the "outside" with those struggling on the "inside." Prisoners nation-wide have been invited to participate in the conference, through, for example, solidarity discussions inside the prisons on the days of the conference, preparing statements, involvement in the prison art show, and by working to raise awareness about organizing inside prisons (we are planning to assemble a booklet that will highlight prisoners' organizations and movements). A new added date! On Friday, March 15th, we will be showing films that relate to the prison industrial complex.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++ Panelists: Laura Whitehorn, former anti-imperialist political prisoner Bill Ayers, educator and former member of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and Weather Underground Bonnie Kerness, from the American Friends Service Committee Shaka Shakur, ex-prison activist and organizer Ben Ramos, from ProLibertad Brielle Epstein, from The NY3 Freedom Campaign Prison Moratorium Project, NY Michael Hames-Garcia, professor at SUNY Binghamton, Department of English Juanita Diaz, professor at SUNY Binghamton, Department of Sociology William Martin, professor at SUNY Binghamton, Department of Sociology Ramona Africa, from the MOVE Organization Reverend Luscious Walker, from IFCO-Pastors for Peace Corey Finger, union organizer, Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union Local 471 Joshua Smith, from the Victory Gardens Project ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ + Registration
The conference fee is set at $10. However, no one will be turned away for inability to pay. Please e-mail us with the following information (we apologize that this is so "low-tech"): 1. Name: 2. Organization/School: 3. Address: 4. E-mail: 5. Need A Place to Stay? YES/NO (please note that we will be arranging housing on a first-come first-serve basis. You may end up crashing on somebody's floor; please bring a sleeping bag or blanket with you.) 6. If you are from an organization, do you wish to table at our conference? YES/NO (this also works on a first-come first-serve basis) Send to:
[email protected] ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++ Schedule
"The ultimate expression of law is not order--it's prison. There are hundreds upon hundreds of prisons, and thousands upon thousands of laws, yet there is no social order, no social peace...the law and everything that interlocks with it was constructed for poor, desperate people like me."
--George Jackson
Please note that this is a tentative list of workshops.
Friday, March 15th, 2002 Films related to the prison industrial complex. Some films we will be showing: Attica: a documentary on the prison rebellion in Attica prison on September 9-13, 1971. The Last Graduation: a documentary on the cutting of educational programs in prisons. Books Not Bars: a documentary on youth organizing against the prison industrial complex. Corrections: a documentary on private prisons.
Saturday and Sunday, March 16th and 17th, 2002 Conference begins. It will consist of workshops and discussion sessions.
Some of the workshops are as follows (they are not yet titled):
"Dos Alas" : A workshop on the six remaining Puerto Rican political prisoners and five Cuban political prisoners. Teaching in Prisons
Women in Prison
Life, Experience, Organizing : A workshop dealing with organizing both inside and outside of prison, and where the two cross paths.
Victory Gardens Project and the New York 3 : A workshop about prisons, environmental racism/justice, the Victory Gardens Project and the campaign to free the New York 3.
Prisoner Support Networks : A workshop on the SUNY Binghamton Prisoner Support Network and how these types of programs can be established at universities across the country.
Prisons and Labor Organizing : A workshop on prison labor, its effects on the labor movement "outside," and how workers on both sides of the walls can work together.
U.S.-based Political Prisoners : A workshop focusing on the cases of u.s. based political prisoners Mumia Abu-Jamal and the MOVE 9.
Private Prisons and INS Detention : A workshop about private prisons with a focus on INS detention centers.
(Edited by Paris at 7:26 pm on Jan. 31, 2002)
(Edited by Paris at 7:42 pm on Jan. 31, 2002)