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LPE NYC Night School: Race, Space and Displacement in NYC

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Thursday
, 
March 
7
, 
2024
, 
6:15PM
 to 
8:00PM
 (
EST
)
LPE NYC Night School: Race, Space and Displacement in NYC

This event has been rescheduled from Spring 2024 to March 17, 2025. We hope you can join!


"Race, Space, and Displacement in NYC” is the fourth session of the New School’s LPE Night School. In a conversation facilitated by Tasleemah Tolu Lawal (NYU Center on Race, Inequality, and the Law), Alejo Rodriguez (Columbia Law/ BATTLE) and Shirley Lin (Brooklyn Law School) will discuss how institutions exploit race and immigration status as part of a divide-and-conquer strategy against movements in New York. They will begin their conversation by discussing the political economy of the ongoing migration crisis as a launch point for interrogating the state's use of bureaucracies of force.
 

The Night School is a collaboration between LPE NYC and the Politics Department of The New School for Social Research, designed to introduce non-lawyers to law from a critical perspective. From growing inequality to further entrenching hierarchies of race, class, gender and identity, law is inextricably bound up with many of our most pressing problems. But dominant ways of analyzing law can obscure its role in social and economic life. LPE (‘Law and Political Economy’) approaches seek to show the way the law structures our distinctive political economy in order to elaborate better tools for making social change.

This series brings together scholars and practitioners for public lectures and conversations on selected legal topics. Each session offers a critical exploration of an important issue in contemporary law and policy. Taken as a whole, the series offers a survey of major questions in critical legal thought and advocacy.


The series is designed to complement the minor in Law and Social Change at Eugene Lang, but it is open to everyone. Organizers, advocates, and others not currently enrolled in full-time degree programs are encouraged to attend. 

Presented by the Politics Department at The New School for Social Research and LPE NYC. 

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 Free with registration

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https://www.newschool.edu

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Shirley Lin

Assist. Prof. of Law

Brooklyn law school

Prof. Lin researches and teaches critical race theory, employment, and contracts. Her writings explore constructions of race, disability, and gender, and their legal regulation in the political economy. Professor Lin's scholarship has been published in the New York University Law Review, Lewis & Clark Law Review, and the Harvard Journal of Law & Gender. She has also contributed chapters to work law treatises and to Gender Justice and the Law: Theoretical Practices of Intersectionality. 

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Jose Saldana

Director

rapp (releasing aging people in prison)

Jose Saldana is the Director of RAPP (Release Aging People in Prison), a grassroots inter-generational organization that seeks to address the crisis of people serving long prison sentences, getting old, sick and dying. Jose was realeased from prison in 2018, after 38 years of incarceration and parole denials. During that time, he obtained a college degree. Since his release he has been an advocate and leader in pushing for key policy changes for incarcerated people and building strategic partnerships to end mass incarceration.

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Tasleemah Tolu Lawal

Legal Fellow

Center for Race, Inequality, and Law, at the NYU Law School

Prior to joining the Center, Lawal was a Racial Justice Legal Fellow with the New York City Commission on Human Rights, working on legislative and policy analysis, public education and community collaboration, legal research and restorative/transformative justice through a race-specific focus. She also engages in advocacy, supporting Black and Brown-led groups committed to charting the road to liberation for all people, particularly those who are formerly incarcerated. She currently provides legal support to the Justice Impact Alliance. She is also a co-founder and co-lead organizer of Unlock the Bar (UTB), a New York-based campaign and coalition of allied and systems-impacted law students and lawyers who are advocating for a just and equitable legal profession.

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Amy Kapczynski

Amy Kapczynski is a Professor of Law at Yale Law School, Faculty Co-Director of the Law and Political Economy Project, and the Global Health Justice Partnership. Her research focuses on the failures of legal logic and structure that condition contemporary inequality, precarity, and hollowed out democracy.

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