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Other Events: LGBT Law and Policy Conferences
Below are LGBT law/policy conferences and events that are
not sponsored by the Williams Institute. This page is for
informational purposes only; each conference title is linked
to the event's official website. If you would like an
event added to this page, send an email with dates,
location, conference description, and URL to
williamsinstitute@law.ucla.edu.
April 2005
Work It On Out: Employment and HIV Issues
April 23, 2005
12:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Strength In Numbers and Positive Images present "Work It
On Out: Employment and HIV Issues" is a community
educational forum bringing together HIV+ individuals
throughout the Los Angeles area to learn about and discuss
issues related to living with HIV and employment, such as
legal concerns (confidentiality of status when seeking work
or at the workplace, discrimination and transition from
disability to employment) and job search strategies (online
job hunting, resume drafting, and interviewing). Bring a
copy of your resume. There might be time for some of the
speakers to review it and give you some helpful tips.
At the conclusion of the forum, participants will be able
to:
1. Identify options for back-to-work and career
opportunities.
2. Strategize on ways to develop a resume and utilize the
internet and other resources for job searches.
3. Explore opportunities to participate in Positive
Images or Strength in Numbers.
4. Expand their support and social networks.
Panelists include Brad Sears, Executive Director of the
Williams Project, Michael O'Conner of HALSA and Jacque
Chambers, Benefits Consultant and Counselor.
“'Are There Lesbians on the
Team?' The Question Women Coaches Fear”
April 18, 2005
4:00 p.m.
1648 Hershey
Pat Griffin is a professor in Social Justice Education at
the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her research and
writing interests focus on heterosexism and homophobia in
education, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender teachers and
students, and heterosexism and homophobia in athletics, with
a particular interest in women's sports. Dr. Griffin is the
author of Strong Women, Deep Closets: Lesbian and
Homophobia in Sports and co-editor of Teaching For
Diversity and Social Justice: A Sourcebook for Teachers and
Trainers. Williams Project/Lesbian Speaker Series
Strange Fruit
April 6, 2005
6:30 p.m.
UCLA School of Law, Room 1430
The Critical Race Studies Program and the Williams
Project present a screening of the film Strange Fruit
followed by a panel discussion moderated by Russell
Robinson, featuring the film's director Kyle Schickner and
lead actor Kent Faulcon.
March 2005
Living with Lawrence: The State of the LGBT Legal
Movement
March 17, 2005
Georgetown University Law Center
Gewirtz Student Center, 12th floor
120 F. St., NW
March 2005 marks the second year anniversary since the
landmark case of Lawrence v. Texas was argued in the
United States Supreme Court. The Court's decision
invalidated state criminal sodomy laws, but it has done (and
can yet do) so much more. The impact of Lawrence on
discriminatory practices against LGBT people, including
within the institutions of marriage and the military, is
being created as we speak.
Come hear a panel of legal leaders in the LGBT community
talk about how we can shape the meaning of Lawrence.
Professor Nan D. Hunter of Brooklyn Law School (and founder
of the ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights Project) will shoot
questions at eight smart, interesting and creative
panelists.
Panelists include: Jon Davidson, Lambda Legal Defense and
Education Fund; James Esseks, ACLU Lesbian and Gay Rights
Project; Chai Feldblum, Georgetown University Law Center;
Suzanne Goldberg, Rutgers School of Law Newark; Darren
Hutchinson, Washington College of Law, American University;
Pamela Karlan, Professor of Public Interest Law, Stanford
Law School; William B. Rubenstein, The Williams Project; and
Kenji Yoshino, Yale Law School.
February 2005
Southwestern University Law Review Symposium, "Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual and Transgendered Issues and the Civil Rights
Agenda"
Los Angeles, CA February 4, 2005
FEBRUARY
15: LISA DUGGAN
"Love American Style:
Neoliberal Citizenship in Contemporary Marriage Politics"
Tuesday, February 15, 2005
12:00 p.m.
1648 Hershey Hall
UCLA
Free
Lisa Duggan is Associate Professor of American Studies and
History, and Associate Director of the Center for the Study
of Gender and Sexuality at New York University. She is
author of Sapphic Slashers: Sex, Violence and American
Modernity, co-author with Nan Hunter of Sex Wars:
Sexual Dissent and Political Culture, co-editor with
Lauren Berlant of Our Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton
Affair and National Interest, and author most recently
of Twlight of Equality: Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics
and the Attack on Democracy.
Marriage politics played a strange role in the "wedge"
politics of the 2004 election--and have been at the center
of a range of debates over welfare "reform," single parent
families, same sex partnerships, and celebrity lifestyles.
What does all this clamor reveal about the purely symbolic
vs. the material functions of marriage in national politics?
What does the pervasive publicity surrounding marital
crises--from Britney Spears' truncated elopement and J-Lo's
serial ceremonies, to Arnold Schwarzenegger's groping
problem and various politicians' sex and adultery scandals
tell us about the contradictions of public and private
opinions about marriage? How do race, gender, class and
sexuality function in the framing of the issues of coupledom
and state benefits? Most importantly, why does an
institution in such seeming decline (according to national
census statistics) appear at the center of ideology and
aspiration on the national stage? Her article on marriage
politics in the March 15, 2004 issue of The Nation is
available online at
www.thenation.com .
Lesbian Speaker Series
SAME SEX MARRIAGE:
LESSONS FROM CANADA
Thursday, February 17, 2005
12:00 Noon to 1:30 PM
Room 2355 Public Policy Building (2nd floor)
BOB RAE, P.C., O.C., Q.C.
Distinguished Lecturer of Canadian Studies and Visiting
Professor of
Public Policy, UCLA; former Premier of Ontario, Canada, and
Advisor to
the Government of Ontario on Postsecondary Education Review
Discussant: ZACHARY KRAMER, Lecturer in Law, UCLA, and
Fellow, the
Williams Project for Sexual Orientation Law, UCLA
BOB RAE served as Ontario's 21st premier and was elected
eight times
to federal and provincial parliaments before his retirement
from
politics in 1996. During his term as premier, he was
extensively
involved and played a major role in the Canadian
Constitution debate. He
is currently a partner with the law firm Goodmans LLP, where
his clients
include companies, trade unions, charitable and
non-governmental
organizations, and governments themselves. He published two
books - From
Protest to Power and The Three Questions: Prosperity and the
Public
Good. Rae earned a bachelor of laws from the University of
Toronto and
a bachelor of philosophy from Oxford. He has received
honorary
doctorates from the Law Society of Upper Canada, the
University of
Toronto, Assumption University and Huntington University.
ZACHARY KRAMER teaches Law and Sexuality at UCLA. He has
been appointed
a Fellow for the Charles R. Williams Project for Sexual
Orientation Law.
Kramer received his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin,
and his J.D.
from the University of Illinois College of Law, where he was
Editor-in-Chief of the University of Illinois Law Review.
Kramer's
publications have appeared in the University of Illinois Law
Review, the
Seattle Journal for Social Justice, and the Chicago Tribune.
Kramer's
research interests include law and sexuality, employment
discrimination,
and family law.
This lecture is cosponsored by the Canadian Studies Program
at UCLA,
the UCLA School of Public Affairs, the Department of Public
Policy, the
Department of Social Welfare, The Williams Project on Sexual
Orientation
and the Law, and the Center for the Study of Women, UCLA.
LECTURE IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
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