with Nastassja Schmiedt and Lea Roth April 20th 9:30am – 5:00pm Columbia School of Social Work Join Nastassja Schmiedt and Lea Roth of Spring Up for a day long training on responding to gender based violence and building the foundations
The School of General Studies Student Leadership Awards are given to individuals that have distinguished themselves with their dedication to leadership and service to the School of General Studies and/or the Columbia University community. 2018 Change Agent Award is in its... READ MORE
The Presidential Teaching Awards were established in 1996 as a way to honor the University’s best teachers. They are conferred based on the original criteria for the awards for faculty and graduate student instructors. To receive this award is a... READ MORE
A Columbia University course serving formerly incarcerated men and women is grounded in an understanding of the powerful meliorative effects of education. I take a seat near the middle of the table at 6:06 p.m. The room soon fills, students clutching... READ MORE
NYC REGIONAL CONFERENCE REGISTRATION The first of our upcoming six regional conferences will be April 13th -14th in NYC, at the Unitarian Church of All Souls located at 1157 Lexington Avenue, corner of E. 80th Street. Registration is now open! We
A talk by James Forman, Jr. (Yale University School of Law) April 12, 2018 6:00 pm Columbia Law School, room 103 Professor Forman is the author of Locking up our own: Crime and Punishment in Black America and a leading
HEAR & NOW is a multimedia pop-up presenting the fieldwork of scholars who are also activists, researchers who are also storytellers, oral historians who are also community members. The exhibit will include work by *Valerie Fendt, oral historian and volunteer with the
Isaac Scott, Artist Talk Wednesday, April 11, 4-5 p.m. Marple Campus | Small Auditorium Reception to follow in the Art Gallery (Rm. 2305) Learn more at: https://www.dccc.edu/campus-life/arts/art-lecture-series FROM THE INSIDE OUT Project Scope: Changing perceptions about people in prison
The American criminal justice system consists of 2.2 million people behind bars, plus tens of millions of family members, corrections and police officers, parolees, victims of crime, judges, prosecutors and defenders. In We Are Witnesses, we hear their stories. This