23.11.10

Listen to "City for Sale"

Click here to read more about "City for Sale" and listen to the archived audio, courtesy of CKUT.

"City for Sale" in The Link

Click here to read an article in The Link on "City for Sale."

4.11.10

City For Sale

Roundtable and Discussion: City for Sale – Whose city? Whose development? Whose security?

The Rad School presents:

'City for Sale – Whose city? Whose development? Whose security?'

Wed, Nov 10, 6:30pm
Concordia's School of Community and Public Affairs
2149 Mackay, Room CI-104

with

• John Bradley, community organizer, Pointe Sainte-Charles Community Clinic

• Stéphanie Lareau and Anita Schoepp from STELLA (sex-workers rights organization)

• Velma Candyass, Save the Lower Main Coalition

• Norman Nawrocki, facilitator

What's happening to public space in Montreal? Rising land values and real estate are having an adverse impact on existing communities. Gentrification and mega-urban developments like the Quartier des Spectacles continue unchecked. People – especially the poor – are being displaced and bashed. Expensive condos replace affordable housing. There is more police profiling of street people, more 'urban cleansing,' and the security of those who work in the streets is jeopardized. Meanwhile, community concerns are being ignored. How can we stop this process and take back our city? How do we keep Montreal affordable, accessible and liveable?

A panel presentation and roundtable discussion.

Presenters:

• John Bradley is a community organizer at the Pointe Saint-Charles Community Clinic, active in non-profit housing development and in questions of social justice in an urban setting for over thirty years (Milton–Parc, SHDM), with a particular interest in the connections between urban planning, public health, ecology and citizen empowerment.

• Stella is the Montreal community group that was created in 1995 to provide support and info to sex-workers so that they can live in safety and with dignity. Stella also educates the public about sex work, fights discrimination against sex-workers, and promotes the decriminalisation of sex work. 'Stella favours empowerment and solidarity by and amongst sex-workers.'

• Stéphanie Lareau has been working at Stella for five years as an outreach worker downtown.

• Anita Schoepp is an intervention streetworker with Stella for the past 7 months and has been doing streetwork in Montreal for the past 5 years. She works mainly in the downtown area and does needle exchanges, crisis intervention, accompaniment and sex-worker rights advocacy.

• Velma Candyass is a teacher, choreographer and performer in the vanguard of bringing neo-burlesque and striptease classes to Montreal. Involved in street theatre and verbatim theatre activist projects, and currently active in the movement to save the Lower Main of Boulevard St Laurent, including Cafe Cleopatra.

Facilitator Norman Nawrocki is a part-time faculty member in Concordia's School of Community and Public Affairs and a longtime community organizer in Montreal, currently involved with saving Parc Oxygène.

The Rad School is a group of Montreal community organizers and activists who present public events about diverse social justice issues. Each event offers a place to think critically about theories and practices, about what works, what doesn't, and to develop new perspectives for our activism so that we can organize more effectively. It's also an opportunity to meet and learn from each other.

More info: theradschool@gmail.com

21.9.10

La tournée COMMUNAUTÉ ET RÉSISTANCE /COMMUNITY AND RESISTANCE TOUR

La tournée COMMUNAUTÉ ET RÉSISTANCE arrive à Montréal!

Jesse Muhammad


The COMMUNITY AND RESISTANCE TOUR comes to Montreal!

Community and Resistance: Katrina, Jena Six and Prisoner Justice

A Panel Discussion with journalists and community organizers 
Jordan FlahertyJesse Muhammad, and Victoria Law







Victoria Law

This panel discussion will include contributions from local activist Scott Weinstein (who volunteered with Common Ground Health Clinic after Katrina hit New Orleans) and will be facilitated by Professor Gada Mahrouse (Simone de Beauvoir Institute).


Tuesday, October 5th 6pm // Mardi 5 octobre, 18h
Chancellor Day Hall, 3644 Peel Street, Moot Court 
(Métro Peel)

The COMMUNITY AND RESISTANCE tour seeks to communicate about current struggles for justice and liberation, from nooses hung in the northern Louisiana town of Jena to
women organizing inside prisons, from resistance to school privatization to post-Katrina community organizing and cultural resistance. The tour also seeks to connect communities of liberation, and to build relationships between grassroots activists and independent media. 
 








Jordan Flaherty


Childcare available upon request with 48 hours notice.

-/-

Communauté et Résistance: Katrina, Jena Six, et la justice pour les prisonniÈres

Un panel avec journalistes et activistes communautaires Jordan Flaherty, Jesse Muhammad, et Victoria Law.

Le panel animé par Gada Mahrouse, professeure à l'institue Simone de Beauvoir inclura une intervention de l'activiste local Scott Weinstein qui a entre autres été volontaire auprès de la clinique Common Ground Health après les ravages de l'ouragan Katrina à la Nouvelle Orléans.


Cette tournée vise à partager les luttes actuelles de justice et de libération qui se déroulent à Jena, ville du nord de la Louisiane: de l'organisation des femmes dans les prisons, au mouvement de résistance à la privatisation de l'éducation, à la résistance culturelle et l'organisation post-Katrina des communautés. La tournée vise également à faire mettre en réseau des processus collectif de libération, en établissant des relations entre les communautés locales, les militantEs et les médias indépendants. 
  
INFO:
http://floodlines.org/?p=209
Traduction et garde d’enfants disponible sous demande 48 heures d’avance

-------------------------------

“New Orleans is not just a tourist stop. New Orleans has a unique set of cultures, with a history of place and a legacy of resistance.”
-Jordan Flaherty, author of
Floodlines: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six (Haymarket Press 2010).

Co-presented by CKUT Radio, QPIRG McGill, Media@McGill, and the RadSchool

18.3.09

Next RAD SCHOOL event: Thurs Mar 26 at 6 pm!

Remembering Sir George

Forty years ago this year a police raid on the 9th floor of the Hall Building at Sir George Williams University (today Concordia University) put an end to one of Canada’s most important student occupations. The Sir George Williams Affair was sparked by claims by Black students that a science professor at the university was deliberately failing them, and when it was over, the reality of racism in Canada became national and international news.

The Alfie Roberts Institute and Rad School present

“Remembering Sir George: Reflections on the Sir George Williams Affair and its Aftermath”

This event will be an intergenerational reflection on the significance of this event 40 years ago and how it informs our understanding of social change today.

What lessons can we learn from the incident?
How did the event impact Montreal and Canada’s Black population, and Canadian society as a whole?
What were the events international implications?

Thursday, March 26, 2009
School of Community and Public Affairs
Concordia University
2149 MacKay
6-9 PM


Event in English with whisper translation

9.3.09

L'école radicale présente: Qui surveille la police?

L'école radicale présente:

Qui surveille la police? Des communautés ripostent

Lundi 16 mars
18h-21h au Centre CEDA
2515 rue Delisle
(métro Lionel-Groulx)

Profilage racial, brutalité policière, harcèlement... Qu'est-ce qui se
passe et comment les groupes locaux réagissent?

Une discussion et un échange entre des activistes de la
Petite-Bourgogne, Côte-des-Neiges, NDG, Walkley, et Montréal-Nord.

Des représentants de RECON, Justice pour Anas et du Collectif Opposé à
la Brutalité Policière (COBP) vont aussi participer.

Bilingue

Pour en savoir plus: theradschool (at) gmail.com

Next Rad School Event: Policing the Police

The Rad School presents:

Policing the Police - Communities Fight Back

Monday, March 16th
6-9 pm, Centre CEDA
2515 rue Delisle
(metro Lionel Groulx)

Racial profiling, police brutality, harassment - what’s happening and
how do local groups respond?

A discussion and exchange between community activists from Little
Burgundy, Côte-des-Neiges, NDG, Walkley, and Montreal Nord.

Representatives from RECON, Justice for Anas, and the Collective
Opposed to Police Brutality (COBP) will also participate.

Bilingual

For more info: theradschool (at) gmail.com