6 research outputs found

    Processing Anti-Asian Violence: A Roundtable Discussion on the Atlanta Shootings

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    A Roundtable Discussion on the Atlanta Shootings The alarming rise of anti-Asian violence, especially the shooting deaths of six women of Asian descent on March 16 in Atlanta, is prompting conversations about the intersections of racism and misogyny, dispelling stereotypes aboutsex work, and inspiring activism and allyship in support of the AAPIcommunity. In this conversation, Notre Dame professors and PhD students will examine the intersectional nature of anti-Asian violence as well, discuss the roots of systemic racism, and explore the needs of AAPI communities now and in the future. Participants: Jennifer Huynh, Assistant Professor of American Studies Xian Wang, Assistant Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures and Gender Studies Sharon Yoon, Assistant Professor of Korean Studies Lailatul Fitriyah, PhD student in Theology Grace Song, PhD student in History Flora Tang, PhD student in Peace Studies, Theology, and Gender Studieshttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1537/thumbnail.jp

    Escaping Melodramas: Thinking about the Infamous U.S. STD Studies in Tuskegee and Guatemala - VIDEO

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    Moderated by Carla Bittel, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Department of History and followed by a reception hosted by the LMU Department of History Susan M. Reverby is the Marion Butler Professor in the History of Ideas and Professor in the Department of Women\u27s and Gender Studies at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. She is an historian of American women, medicine, nursing and public health. Her prize winning books include Ordered to Care: the Dilemma of American Nursing and Examining Tuskegee: The Infamous Syphilis Study and its Legacy. Her research on an immoral government medical study in Guatemala from 1946-48, where men and women were given sexually transmitted diseases, led to a U.S. government apology, a major report from the President\u27s Bioethical Issues Commission in the US and another from the government of Guatemala, and world-wide media attention. This research was published in the Journal of Policy History in January 2011

    Processing Anti-Asian Violence: A Roundtable Discussion on the Atlanta Shootings

    No full text
    A Roundtable Discussion on the Atlanta Shootings The alarming rise of anti-Asian violence, especially the shooting deaths of six women of Asian descent on March 16 in Atlanta, is prompting conversations about the intersections of racism and misogyny, dispelling stereotypes aboutsex work, and inspiring activism and allyship in support of the AAPIcommunity. In this conversation, Notre Dame professors and PhD students will examine the intersectional nature of anti-Asian violence as well, discuss the roots of systemic racism, and explore the needs of AAPI communities now and in the future. Participants: Jennifer Huynh, Assistant Professor of American Studies Xian Wang, Assistant Professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures and Gender Studies Sharon Yoon, Assistant Professor of Korean Studies Lailatul Fitriyah, PhD student in Theology Grace Song, PhD student in History Flora Tang, PhD student in Peace Studies, Theology, and Gender Studieshttps://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndls_posters/1537/thumbnail.jp
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