Author: Elizabeth Amrien

Call for Papers: Sin lugar: The Journey of (Non)Belonging

(Zine)Lugar is now accepting submissions for its inaugural issue, “Sin lugar: The journey of (non)belonging.” We invite writers, poets, artists, and members of the global community to contribute creative pieces that seek to reshape the production of art and knowledge inside academia. We want to create a third space that includes everyone and anyone. The […]

Haiti: How Can It Solve Its Many Crises? (11.14.24)

Please join us for a panel discussion on the crisis in Haiti with Pierre Noel, Executive Director of the Haiti Development Institute in Boston; Amb. Jorge Heine, Research Professor, Pardee School of Global Studies; and Wollenczy  Gentillon, Major in US Army and MA candidate, Pardee School of Global Studies. Moderated by Amb. Paul Hare, Master […]

Border Crossing and Citizenship: Rethinking Time and Migration (10.09.24)

On October 9 – 10, the Seeing & Not Seeing Faculty Seminar will host Professors Loren Landau (Professor of Migration and Development, University of Oxford) and Anne McNevin (Associate Professor of Politics, New School for Social Research), who will discuss their collaborative research, together with Associate Professor Noora Lori on “Time, Mobility, and Political Possibilities.” They will discuss […]

“Queerealities in Latin America and Spain”: Film Screenings & Conversations

Join us for screenings of four films on sexual diversity from Peru, Brazil, Argentina, and Spain: Retablo (Álvaro Delgado Aparicio, Perú, 2017) This Peruvian pioneering film depicts male homosexuality within an Andean community, narrated in Quechua and Spanish, and featuring actors from peasant communities in the Ayacucho region. In conversation with: Prof. Kimberly Theidon Associate […]

La Colaborativa: Empowering Latinx Immigrants in Massachusetts (10.08.24)

Join us for a conversation with Sierra Held, Economic Mobility Specialist at La Colaborativa in Boston. For over 35 years, La Colaborativa has supported Latinx immigrants in Greater Boston. La Colaborativa partners with the community to provide resources to vulnerable community members, including newly arrived immigrants, undocumented families, non-English speakers, as well as low-income tenants […]