The deadline for you to submit an abstract for the 2011 Interdisciplinary Conference on Human Trafficking has been extended !

Our keynote speaker is Siddarth Kara, award-winning author of Sex Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern Slavery. Our theme is still very much knowledge-focused: “What we know, and what we need to know.”

This year there are a number of improvements to the conference, such as longer speaking times, a lower registration fee, lower hotel room rates, special tracks for student papers to receive feedback, and two full days of presentations.

This will be the third year for this great opportunity to present your work and to form working relationships and friendships with others working as academic researchers, victim service providers, law enforcement officials, government officers, and foundations that support anti-trafficking work.

As always, we encourage all types of submissions: descriptions of the work of your organization (particularly an analytical or integrative view), academic papers, analyses, theoretical contributions, identification of problems and need for knowledge, and so forth.

We invite you to visit the conference web site at http://humantrafficking.unl.edu and see for yourself.

Don’t delay! The deadline for 300-word abstracts is now April 21, 2011!

For questions, please contact Dr. Dwayne Ball at dball1@unl.edu.

Save the dates: Dr. Julie Mertus, American University, will speak on feminism and human rights on April 18; the week before her visit, the CWGS/Rapoport Center Research Cluster on Women, Gender, & Human Rights will hold an informal reading group to talk about her work.

1.
“Leap Frog Feminism: Learning about Human Rights Institution Building from Local Actors”
Dr. Julie Mertus, American University
Professor at the School of International Service
Co-Director of the MA Program in Ethics, Peace, and Global Affairs

Monday, April 18, 3:30-5:30p
CCJ 2.310 (Eidman Jury Room: http://www.utexas.edu/law/about/maps/index.php?level=2)
Rapoport Center Human Rights Happy Hour
Sponsored by the CWGS/Rapoport Center Research Cluster on Women, Gender, and Human Rights

Drawing on 25 years of experience working with a host of governmental and nongovernmental human rights organizations, Professor Julie Mertus explains the many mistakes and the few successes in two decades of human rights advocacy. The future, she predicts, rests with today’s students who must navigate the many speed bumps and pot holes frustrating social justice and participatory democracy today.

2.
Optional Reading Group before the talk by Dr. Julie Mertus
Monday, April 11, 11:00-12:30p
SZB 422

In preparation for Dr. Julie Mertus’ talk on April 18, “Leap Frog Feminism: Learning about Human Rights Institution Building from Local Actors,” please join us for an informal discussion of selections from Dr. Mertus’ recent publications. (Dr. Mertus will not be in Austin for the 4/11 discussion.)

For this discussion, please read any or all of these selections:
1. Human Rights Matters: Local Politics and National Human Rights Institutions. Stanford, CA: Stanford UP, 2009.
“Chapter 1: Operationalizing Human Rights at the Local Level,” 1-13
“Chapter 7: Conclusion,” 129-140
2. Mertus with Nancy Flowers. Local Action Global Change: A Handbook on Women’s Human Rights. Boulder, CO: Paradigm, 2008.
“Prologue: From the Kitchen Table to the Burmese Border,” xv-xviii
“Introduction to Women’s Human Rights,” 1-28

If you would like PDFs for these readings for the 4/11 discussion, please email Kristen Hogan at hogank@mail.utexas.edu.

JOB POSTING
2011 Summer Internship with the Bernard and Audre
Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice

Contact: William Chandler wchandler@law.utexas.edu 512-232-4857

How to Apply: Please submit materials to William Chandler via email at wchandler@law.utexas.edu (Subject: Graduate Internship) or in person in TNH Room 3.119D at the Law School.

Deadline: 12:00 PM on Friday, April 8.

Description: Professor Karen Engle is seeking to hire two to three law or graduate students to work at least half-time (20 hrs/week) as summer fellows at the Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice.

Projects may include the following:

Work with human rights archives at UT to develop online exhibits and programming;
Work on the publication of the Center’s 2010—2011 Annual Review by writing and editing articles, compiling photographs, designing layout and working extensively with the software program InDesign; Engage in human rights research, writing and curriculum development;
Other tasks may include mentoring Center undergraduate interns, helping with outreach to students and faculty at the law school and across campus, assisting in the planning of the speaker series and annual conference to take place during the 2011-12 academic year, expanding the Center’s social media and web presence, and assisting with grant writing and fundraising.

Funding is available for the positions.

Required Application Materials: Cover letter, resume, list of three references, and an unofficial transcript that includes the courses you are currently taking. Please indicate any InDesign or Photoshop software skills and foreign language proficiency.

This fellowship is open to all law and graduate students.

Loretta Ross, the national coordinator of SisterSong Women of Color
Reproductive Health Collective, co-author of Undivided Rights: Women
of Color Organize for Reproductive Justice, and longtime human rights,
anti-racism, and anti-sexual violence activist, will be speaking to
the public in April at the University of Texas at Austin. We invite
everyone to join us for this inspiring event.

Who: Loretta Ross
Date: Saturday, April 2
Time: 2:00pm-3:15pm (doors open at 1:45)
Place: Utopia Theater, School of Social Work Building, 1925 San
Jacinto Boulevard, Austin, TX
Cost: Free

Feminist Action Project, a student group at UT, is sponsoring Ms. Ross
as part of their student-run activist conference, “Feminism is for
Every(body),” on April 1 and 2. For more information on the event or
to register, please contact feministactionproject@gmail.com or go to
http://feministactionproject.blogspot.com/. For more information on
Ms. Ross and her work, please see her Speak Out biography here:

http://www.speakoutnow.org/userdata_display.php?modin=50&uid=113

Dear CWGS MA & Portfolio Students,

We invite you to participate in a planning discussion for the October 2012 International Conference on Women’s Human Rights with a focus on women’s human rights organizing in the Americas. This conference is part of the Embrey Women’s Human Rights Initiative, the Center for Women’s & Gender Studies grant-funded project to develop education for women, gender, and human rights. The upcoming meeting builds on an initial pre-planning discussion held in February, and we encourage new faculty, students, and organizers to join the conversation; please see below for details on the initial discussion.

This conference should support the work of faculty, students, and community organizers in Austin, and we need your participation to ensure that the conference will speak to you!

Please join us for a discussion
Monday, April 4, 11:00-12:30
Gebauer (GEB) 4th Floor Conference Room (to the left off of the elevators): http://www.utexas.edu/maps/main/buildings/geb.html
Bring your lunch, and we will provide cookies and coffee.

At this meeting, we will develop:
1. Conference topic and title
2. Conference concept (what it will look like)
3. Plans for community/university and cross-university partnerships for which we may partner with other centers and institutes to provide new project seed money

We also hope to have time to discuss:
4. Goals for the conference
5. Possible keynote or plenary speakers
6. Possible performers or films for the evening event
7. Strategies for circulating the conference announcement and call for proposals.

Please share this announcement with faculty, students, and organizers who may be interested. If you would like more information, please contact Kristen Hogan at hogank@mail.utexas.edu

This meeting will build on an initial shape developed by faculty and staff at a pre-planning meeting in February. Here’s some of what that group contributed:

Conference Goals:
The assembled group described their hopes that such a conference would:
1. Unsettle thinking about gender & human rights,
2. Contribute to ongoing flows of research & conversations,
3. Connect UT faculty with visiting presenters (don’t overlook the work our faculty are doing),
4. Feed back into the EWHRI by supporting new courses or course content, and
5. Involve faculty, community organizers, and students in planning stages and conference.

What will the presentations at the conference look like?
1. Conference organizers will create a call now for partnerships of university and community organizers to collaborate on a project; Centers/Institutes will collaborate to provide seed money to co-researchers in exchange for their report on the work at the conference.
2. Organizers may solicit papers in collaboration between faculty at two different institutions.
3. Organizers will create time and space for networking and project building at the conference.
4. Sessions may consist of results presentation or works in progress.

We are pleased to invite faculty to a series of workshops on teaching critical approaches to women’s human rights. We welcome you to attend any or both of the two remaining workshops scheduled for this semester as part of the Embrey Women’s Human Rights Initiative. Each of the workshops will address readings available prior to the workshop; please email Kristen Hogan (hogank@mail.utexas.edu) if you would like to receive the readings in preparation for the workshop. The workshops will take place on: April 6, 4-5:15, Walter Webb Hall 202 • April 21, 4-5:15, Gebauer 3rd Floor Conference Room

Dr. Julie Mertus, American University

Monday, April 18, 3:30 – 5:30 p.m., TNH 2.111 (The Sheffield Room at the Law School)

Join us for the Rapoport Center Human Rights Happy Hour on April 18, for an afternoon with Dr. Julie Mertus, Professor at the School of International Service (American University). Dr. Mertus is Co-Director of the MA Program in Ethics, Peace, and Global Affairs.
Drawing on 25 years of experience working with a host of governmental and nongovernmental human rights organizations, Professor Julie Mertus explains the many mistakes and the few successes in two decades of human rights advocacy. The future, she predicts, rests with today’s students who must navigate the many speed bumps and pot holes frustrating social justice and participatory democracy today. See you there!

Social Workers Enriching Lation Leadership
Social Justice Action Coalition present a film series on
Immigration

The following movies will be screened at the UTOPIA:
Machete – 3/29/11 @ 6:00pm
Papers – 4/6/11 @ 1:00pm
Letters from the Other Side – 4/21/11 @ 1:00pm
9500 Liberty – 4/27/11 @ 6:00pm

The Vulnerability and Human Condition Initiative & The Feminism and Legal Theory Project at Emory University announce a Call for Papers for the upcoming workshop entitled, Beyond Rights: Vulnerability and Justice. If interested, please submit a proposal by Thursday, March 10, 2011.

This workshop explores the potential for envisioning justice through frameworks of vulnerability that extend beyond current approaches focused on rights and antidiscrimination. This Call for Papers builds upon feminist and transnational progressive critiques that have argued equal protections and human rights approaches fail to adequately address the changing nature of inequality within and across nation states. Remedies based on rights claims and protected legal status only for historically marginalized groups are an incomplete means of challenging both episodic (e.g. the result of recessions, war) and structural (e.g. arising from globalization, privatization) processes creating widespread injustice.

We want to explore the possibility of moving beyond a rights and equality framework to a justice paradigm grounded in vulnerability, which is understood as a universal and constant characteristic of the human condition. While vulnerability can never be eliminated, social institutions can respond to it by providing the resources (education, health, kinship, marketable skills, economic security, and community) that confer resilience. The precariousness of these institutions, as well as uneven access to the benefits they convey, result in systemic inequalities. While these inequalities may sometimes be recognized in antidiscrimination claims based on gender, race and nation, vulnerability analysis moves us beyond identity to consideration how state policy and practice should be grounded in an awareness of the interdependence between and among human beings and the institutions that support them. What are the political possibilities in advancing vulnerability as a substantive basis for justice beyond formal or procedural notions of rights?
Proposals from scholars of all disciplines interested in addressing vulnerability and resilience from either theoretical or specific perspectives are welcomed.

WORKSHOP CONTACTS:
Martha A. Fineman, Emory University School of Law, mfineman@law.emory.edu; Alice Hearst, Smith College, ahearst@smith.edu; Kristin Bumiller, Amherst College, kbumiller@amherst.edu; Katie Oliviero, Emory School of Law, koliviero@emory.edu.

SUBMISSIONS PROCEDURE:
Please email a paper proposal of 400-600 words by March 10th to: Emily Hlavaty, emily.hlavaty@emory.edu
Decisions will be made on or around March 18th and working paper drafts will be due April 18th so they may be duplicated and distributed prior to the Workshop.
Please explore the available resources on VHC at: web.gs.emory.edu/vulnerability/resources/Publications.html

Dear Faculty:

We are pleased to invite you to a series of workshops on teaching critical approaches to women’s human rights. We welcome you to attend any or all of the three workshops scheduled for this semester as part of the Embrey Women’s Human Rights Initiative.

Each of the workshops will address readings available prior to the workshop; *please email Kristen Hogan (hogank@mail.utexas.edu) if you would like to receive the readings in preparation for the workshop.

We also welcome you to forward this announcement to any interested faculty.
Sincerely,
Kristen Hogan

Teaching Women’s Human Rights
Workshops for Faculty

Workshops for and by faculty on teaching women’s human rights material in the undergraduate classroom. All faculty welcome. For each workshop we invite attendees to read selected material in advance. To receive the readings, or for more information, email Kristen Hogan at hogank@mail.utexas.edu.

I. Using Service-Learning and Archival Materials in Support of Women’s Human Rights Course Objectives
Wednesday, February 23, 4-5:15, Gebauer 4th Floor Conference Room
Lisa L. Moore (English/CWGS) &
Kristen Hogan (CWGS)
Help students develop a reflective approach to service learning and archival research that will avoid the pitfalls of volunteerism in the community and appropriation in the archives. Share strategies to prepare students for ethical engagement with community-based service-learning; consider how the responsibility to mutually engage with others extends to understanding archival materials.

II. Teaching a Critical Human Rights Framework for Women’s Human Rights
Wednesday, April 6, 4-5:15, Walter Webb Hall 202
Karen Engle (Law/CWGS/Rapoport Center) &
Neville Hoad (English/CWGS/Rapoport Center)
Embrace your students’ energy for human rights while engaging them in a critical reading of the contexts in which international actors shape human rights discourse. Discuss readings and strategies for replacing a benevolent western human rights world view with a self-aware and mutually engaged practice.

III. Thursday, April 21, 4-5:15, Gebauer 3rd Floor Conference Room
Teaching Women’s Human Rights Material in Support of Course Objectives
Barbara Harlow (English/CWGS/Rapoport Center) &
Sharmila Rudrappa (Sociology/CWGS)
Explore how human rights texts may support courses you’re already teaching. Engage with example pedagogical strategies from the co-facilitators’ classes to understand how discussions about human rights can strengthen students’ critical thinking skills and other course objectives.

Workshops sponsored by the Embrey Women’s Human Rights Initiative at the Center for Women’s & Gender Studies.

Workers Defense Project (WDP) is a membership-based organization that empowers low-income workers to ensure fair employment through education, direct services, community organizing, and strategic partnerships.

Intern Opening: Community Organizer in Austin, TX
Internship Period: June 13, 2011 to August 12, 2011
Last day to apply: April 8, 2011
The Intern will work with WDP staff and volunteers to win better protections for Texas construction workers through our Build A Better Texas Campaign. The intern will learn important skills in community organizing, coalition building, policy advocacy, and non-profit administration.

Requirements:
→ 3.0 GPA
→ Strong written and verbal communication skills
→ Fluent in Spanish
→ Computer literate: Microsoft Office, Internet, and e-mail
→ Ability to work independently
→ Commitment to social justice
→ Able to work 30 to 40 hours a week including some nights and weekends.

Responsibilities: Intern will work with WDP staff and volunteers to:
→ Assist with outreach to construction workers on their workplace rights
→ Participate in and provide support for meetings with key partners
→ Create materials in English and Spanish
→ Attend weekly organizing meetings and trainings of WDP’s Construction Worker Committee
→ Provide technical and administrative support to the Construction Worker Committee (prepare meeting materials, call workers, update contact information etc).
→ General Office Admin support, answering phones, data entry, writing e-mail alerts, mailings, etc.

Compensation:
→ Life-long experience and skills
→ Weekly stipend of $100 a week
→ Referrals for future employment
→ Possible class credit

WDP is an equal opportunity employer and strongly encourages people of color, immigrants, and LGBT individuals to apply.

How to apply: Send letter of interest and one reference to Emily Timm, at emily@workersdefense.org. For questions please call 512-391-2305

Intern Opening: Workers Rights Advocate in Austin, TX
Internship Period: June 13, 2011 to August 12, 2011
Last day to apply: April 8, 2011
The Intern will work with WDP staff and volunteers to protect the rights of low-wage Latina/o workers who face workplace violations. The intern will learn important skills in community organizing, policy advocacy, non-profit administration, and case management.
Requirements:
→ 3.0 GPA
→ Strong written and verbal communication skills
→ Fluent in Spanish
→ Computer literate: Word, Internet, and e-mail
→ Ability to work independently
→ Commitment to social justice
→ Able to work 30 to 40 hours a week including some nights and weekends.

Responsibilities: Intern will work with WDP staff and volunteers to:
→ Assist in planning and carrying out public pressure campaigns to protect workers rights
→ Help Coordinate immigrant worker committees to address issues of workplace abuse
→ Assist with weekly intake of wage claim cases
→ Negotiate with employers who violate workers rights
→ Individual cases of workplace abuse
→ Create “know your rights materials” in Spanish and English
→ Inform Latina/o immigrant workers of their rights
→ General Office Admin support, answering phones, data entry, writing e-mail alerts, mailings, etc.

Compensation:
→ Life-long experience and skills
→ Weekly stipend of $100 a week

→ Referrals for future employment
→ Possible class credit

WDP is an equal opportunity employer and strongly encourages people of color, immigrants, and LGBT individuals to apply.

How to apply: Send letter of interest and one reference to Patricia Zavala, at patricia@workersdefense.org. For questions please call 512-391-2305

Intern Opening: Development Assistant in Austin, TX
Internship Period: June 13, 2011 to August 12, 2011
Last day to apply: April 8, 2011
The intern will work collaboratively with WDP’s Development Manager and Director to help plan and execute fundraising events. The intern will learn important skills in event planning, volunteer coordination, capacity building, and fundraising from a community-organizing focused organization.
Requirements:
→ 3.0 GPA
→ Strong written and verbal communication skills
→ Computer literate: Word, Internet, and e-mail
→ Ability to work independently
→ Commitment to social justice
→ Able to work 30 to 40 hours a week including some nights and weekends.
→ Fluent in Spanish not required but preferred

Responsibilities: Intern will work with WDP staff and volunteers to:
→ Assist in planning and executing WDP’s annual anniversary event
→ Help coordinate a dynamic team of volunteers to collect silent auction items, secure entertainment for anniversary, and solicit event sponsors.
→ Develop event marketing materials and conduct event PR
→ General Office Admin support, answering phones, data entry, writing e-mail alerts, mailings, etc.

Compensation:
→ Life-long experience and skills
→ Weekly stipend of $100 a week
→ Referrals for future employment
→ Possible class credit

WDP is an equal opportunity employer and strongly encourages people of color, immigrants, and LGBT individuals to apply.
How to apply: Send letter of interest and resume to Wesley Aten, at wesley@workersdefense.org. For questions please call 512-391-2305.

Please save the date for the Third Interdisciplinary Conference on Human Trafficking at the University of Nebraska! The conference will take place September 29, 30, and October 1 at the Cornhusker Hotel in Lincoln, Nebraska.

We are pleased to announce that our keynote speaker will be Siddarth Kara, author of the award-wining Sex Trafficking: Inside the Business of Modern Slavery, and Fellow with the Carr Center on Human Trafficking at the Harvard Kennedy Center of Government.

Information on the conference, submission of abstracts, registration, dates, venue, and speakers will soon be available at http://humantrafficking.unl.edu.

There will be a number of changes to the conference, including a student track where students can present paper for feedback.

Keep your eyes open for the call for papers!

Hope to see you there!

Please join the CWGS/Rapoport Center Research Cluster on Women, Gender, and Human Rights for its first meeting of the Spring semester. We are pleased to welcome Dr. Jennifer Suchland of Ohio State University to begin our semester series. Please share this announcement.

“Sex Trafficking and the Making of a Feminist Category of Analysis”
Dr. Jennifer Suchland, Ohio State University
Tuesday, February 8, 4:30 -6pm, GEB 4th Floor Conference Room

What is at stake in how we define and combat sex trafficking? Since the end of the Cold War, the issue of sex trafficking has been dominated by debates regarding agency and violence against women. My talk will discuss why this is the case looking specifically at how a “violence against women” approach to anti-trafficking can privilege particular understandings of trafficking that obscure the role of the state and transnational flows of capital in sustaining the informal and formal economies that make up sex trafficking. I ask how we can advance a human rights approach to anti-trafficking that links economic and sexual rights.

Dr. Jennifer Suchland is an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Slavic and East European Languages and Literatures and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Ohio State University. Her research is on comparative gender studies and issues of culture, law and political discourse. Her most recent essay, “Is Postsocialism Transnational?”, is forthcoming Summer 2011 in “Signs: Journal of Women in Culture & Society.” She will be discussing research from her current book project which includes work on the evolution of global anti-sex trafficking discourse and its impact on postsocialist Russia.

For more details on the event, please contact Lydia Crafts Putnam at crafts.lydia@gmail.com.

The Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice of the University of Texas at Austin is proud to announce the launching of the Rapoport Center Human Rights Working Paper Series.

We encourage submissions from scholars of all disciplines as well as from activists and advocates that contribute to the Rapoport Center’s mission to build a multidisciplinary community engaged in the study and practice of human rights that promotes the economic and political enfranchisement of marginalized individuals and groups both locally and globally.

The Working Paper Series is being launched online in a blog-style format. This approach offers authors the ability to actively receive feedback and encourages readers to engage in debates surrounding human rights and social justice through posted comments.

Please visit the website to read our first working papers, which are the finalists of the Audre Rapoport Prize for Scholarship on Gender and Human Rights. You may also find submission and blogging guidelines on the website.

Greetings from the Bernard and Audre Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice at the University of Texas School of Law.

We are pleased to invite you to register for our seventh annual conference. Entitled “Aftershocks: Legacies of Conflict,” this year’s conference is designed to coincide with performances of The National Theatre of Scotland’s Black Watch at the University of Texas, an award-winning play written by Scottish playwright Gregory Burke and based on actual interviews with Scottish soldiers from the Black Watch regiment who were deployed to fight in Iraq in 2003. The conference will convene an interdisciplinary group of scholars to explore some of the same intersections of violence, the colonial past, memory, and trauma that Black Watch invokes, as well as the unique role that performance might play in the analysis. It will consider these issues in a variety of geographic spaces and places, with a special emphasis on the legal and political regimes that are meant to preserve memory while also transitioning into post-conflict.
Lawrence Wright, journalist, playwright, and New Yorker Magazine staff writer, will deliver the keynote address on Thursday, February 17, to be followed by a pre-show panel with the playwright and a performance of Black Watch at Bass Concert Hall. The conference proceedings will continue throughout the day on Friday at the UT School of Law. The schedule is pasted at the bottom of this email.

This event is co-sponsored by Texas Performing Arts, the Humanities Institute, the Center for Women’s and Gender Studies, UT Libraries, the South Asia Institute, the Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies, Performance as Public Practice, British Studies, and the Kozmetsky Center of Excellence in Global Finance (at St. Edward’s University).

You can learn more about the participants and register by visiting the conference website. This event is free and open to the public. Because space is limited at parts of the conference, we would appreciate your registration as soon as possible. Early registrants will be eligible for a 15% discount on tickets to Black Watch.

http://www.utexas.edu/law/conferences/aftershocks/index.php

We hope that you will be able to join us for what we are sure will be an exciting and thought-provoking event!

Best wishes,

Karen Engle

Cecil D. Redford Professor in Law & Director
Rapoport Center for Human Rights and Justice
University of Texas School of Law
727 East Dean Keeton
Austin, Texas 78705

http://www.utexas.edu/law/academics/centers/humanrights/

Schedule
Thursday, February 17, 2011 — UT School of Law
4:00 p.m.
Conference Opening: Lawrence Wright, Journalist, Playwright, New Yorker Magazine staff writer
Keynote Lecture sponsored by the UT Humanities Institute
5:15–6:30 p.m.
Pre-Show Panel: “Performance and Human Rights”
Chair: Charlotte Canning, University of Texas at Austin
Gregory Burke, Playwright of Black Watch
Nicholas Cull, University of Southern California
6:45-7:45 p.m.
Reception in Bass Concert Hall
8:00 p.m.
Attend performance of Black Watch by the National Theatre of Scotland at Texas Performing Arts’ Bass Concert Hall.
Friday, February 18, 2011 — UT School of Law
9:00-9:30 a.m.
Continental Breakfast
9:30–11:00 a.m.
“Colonial Legacies”
Panelists:
Chair: Benjamin Brower, University of Texas at Austin
Michael Rothberg, University of Illinois
Priya Satia, Stanford University
Ralph Wilde, University College London, University of London
11:00–11:15 a.m.
Break
11:15 a.m. –12:45 p.m.
“Traumatic Legacies”
Panelists:
Chair: Barbara Harlow
Neloufer de Mel, Colombo University, Sri Lanka
Laura Edmondson, Dartmouth University
Jeffrey Helsing, United States Institute of Peace
1:00–2:15 p.m.
Lunch
2:15–4:00 p.m.
“Institutional and Legal Legacies ”
Panelists:
Chair: Karen Engle, University of Texas at Austin
Kate Doyle, The National Security Archive
Paul Gready, University of York
Helen Kinsella, University of Wisconsin/Madison
Fionnuala D. Ni Aolain, University of Minnesota, University of Ulster, Belfast
4:00–4:15 p.m.
Break
4:15–5:30 p.m.
Closing Panel
Invited participants from each of the previous panels

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