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	<title>Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 3907</title>
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	<description>Graduate Assistant Workers at OISE/UT</description>
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		<title>Building Community and Joy in the Struggle (Holiday Appeal); Dec 09, 2011</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=896</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Dec 2011 16:38:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Caribbean]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haiti]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Student Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[international solidarity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[http://www.sopudep.org/story/242



From 1791 to 1804, the African slaves of Hispaniola  (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic) revolted against the  mightiest imperial powers of the time, declaring their independence as  the first western black republic. We owe them a great deal of gratitude  for this act of rebellion and showing us that there [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://http://www.sopudep.org/story/242">http://www.sopudep.org/story/242</a></p>
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<p><img style="float: right; margin: 10px;" src="http://www.sopudep.org/sites/sopudep.org/files/holiday_appeal.jpg" alt="" width="319" height="206" />From 1791 to 1804, the African slaves of <em>Hispaniola  (now Haiti and the Dominican Republic)</em> revolted against the  mightiest imperial powers of the time, declaring their independence as  the first western black republic. We owe them a great deal of gratitude  for this act of rebellion and showing us that there is no power to great  to truly snuff out our dignity and spirit of humanity. Sadly, those old  imperial powers, and those new, have rarely shown respect for Haiti&#8217;s  sovereignty. <em>&#8220;There&#8217;s gold in them thar hills&#8221;</em>, to put it glibly.  Our colonial past is one of taking from others what is not ours to  take. This has proven to be a tough habit to squelch.</p>
<p>Haiti need to realize their ancestors dream of a free and independent  nation. This can only happen if we release the reigns of control and  put them in the drivers seat. In a country such as Haiti, where there  are over 10,000 foreign charities and NGO&#8217;s operating withing it&#8217;s  boarders, seeing local Haitian grassroots organizations taking action to  empower their fellow citizens is special and should be nurtured.</p>
<p><em>SOPUDEP</em> and other Haitian grassroots organizations are a prime  example of the capability for Haitian&#8217;s to make their own way; to  educate, to work, to deliver justice, to preserve their proud culture,  and to heal. It is up to us however, to show our support and solidarity,  and at this moment in time, to provide the means to make their work  more effective. There is an end goal with supporting Haitian grassroots  social initiatives; not just a never ending money pit of &#8220;charity&#8221;. The  majority of Haitian&#8217;s will be the first to say that they don&#8217;t want  handouts, but a chance to create a nation and a history that is theirs  and theirs alone.</p>
<p>And for this Haitian social organization, <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> funding  needs are great and varied. This includes the building of a new school,  putting more and more women into their own business through their  micro-credit program, a food program that feeds over 700 people five  days a week <em>(currently funded by <a href="http://www.feedthemwithmusic.com/" target="_blank">Feed Them With Music</a>)</em>,  and seeing that children to poor to attend Haiti&#8217;s traditional tuition  based schools can acquire a quality education; including those children  who&#8217;s home is on the street. Providing free and accessible education has  been <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> main priority since the opening of their first  K-12 school in 2002.</p>
<p><img style="float: left; margin: 10px;" src="http://www.sopudep.org/sites/sopudep.org/files/holiday_appeal2.jpg" alt="" width="243" height="185" />The importance of free education to a child in  Haiti is sometimes hard for us to understand, as for most of us, free  education is the norm. <em>SOPUDEP</em> is able to do away with mandatory  tuitions for its students by putting its international support toward  paying it&#8217;s dedicated all Haitian teaching staff.</p>
<p><em><strong>The Sawatzky Family Foundation&#8217;s</strong></em> funding efforts are  focused on ensuring that <em>SOPUDEP</em> can continue to educate as many  children as they can take in free of charge by paying <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> 48 staff.  In 2010, enrollment was <em>560</em> students and the 2011  school year saw it jump up close to <em>640</em> students, with hundreds  of other children in the community waiting for a spot.</p>
<p>While <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> K-12 school is a main priority for the  Sawatzky Family Foundation, funding  now includes the staff salaries for  two other grassroots community schools; <em><strong>MOJUB</strong></em> and <em><strong>Les  Petits Amis De SOPUDEP</strong></em>. A new program for the 2011 year is  providing post secondary scholarship funds for SOPUDEP&#8217;s top students.  This year, two students have been provided the necessary tuition to  attend college. Marie is studying nursing and Sauvlyne, education  science.</p>
<p><em>The Sawatzky Family Foundation</em> also provides funds for basic  school supplies and textbooks, <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> efforts in earthquake  relief and the work they do in camps, their micro-credit program, their  collaborative work they do with other grassroots organizations and the  many other costs associated for this Haitian grassroots social  organization to work for the betterment of their fellow citizens.</p>
<p><img style="float: right; margin: 10px;" src="http://www.sopudep.org/sites/sopudep.org/files/holiday_appeal3.jpg" alt="" width="257" height="230" />We have made it to the Christmas break, but  the rest of the year still  lies ahead. Your donations are essential to  sustaining and improving <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> education and economic  programs. Please join us in supporting this Haitian organizations  wonderful work!</p>
<p>Of course, we express our deepest gratitude to those that have  already shown us that they believe in <em>SOPUDEP&#8217;s</em> vision for a  better Haiti. However, SOPUDEP is but one group in this fight, and we  recognize those other Haitian and Non-Haitian organizations that are on  the same path of resistance against those powers that would rather see  Haiti benefit a privileged few. We should find joy in helping Haitian&#8217;s  in their struggle for a free and just society because we recognize that  their humanity is also our own.</p>
<p>Thank-you and Happy Holidays</p>
<p>Ryan Sawatzky<br />
The Sawatzky Family Foundation</p></div>
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		<title>Is our EI system broken? Only 46 per cent received unemployment benefits last year, report finds</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=891</link>
		<comments>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=891#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 18:26:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Is our EI system broken? Only 46 per cent  received unemployment benefits last year, report finds
Published On Tue Nov 15 2011
http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1087073&#8211;is-our-ei-system-broken-only-46-per-cent-received-unemployment-benefits-last-year-report-finds?bn=1


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Article
Comments  (16)


 A new report says the  Employment Insurance system is broken and needs a more transparent,  effective and equitable national framework.
Michael  Stuparyk/Toronto Star


The Canadian Press


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Is our EI system broken? Only 46 per cent  received unemployment benefits last year, report finds</h1>
<div><span>Published On Tue Nov 15 2011</span></div>
<div><a href="http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1087073--is-our-ei-system-broken-only-46-per-cent-received-unemployment-benefits-last-year-report-finds?bn=1">http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1087073&#8211;is-our-ei-system-broken-only-46-per-cent-received-unemployment-benefits-last-year-report-finds?bn=1</a></div>
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<div style="width: 615px;"><img id="ts-main_article2_image_IMG" src="http://media.thestar.topscms.com/images/ae/94/38729d274aa69d962f23394c20a1.jpeg" alt="A new report says the Employment  Insurance system is broken and needs a more transparent, effective and  equitable national framework." /> <img id="ts-main_article2_image_IMG_forXXL" style="display: none;" src="http://media.thestar.topscms.com/images/6f/fa/5f789d9e40369cec9d7932ec3642.jpeg" alt="A  new report says the Employment Insurance system is broken and needs a  more transparent, effective and equitable national framework." />A new report says the  Employment Insurance system is broken and needs a more transparent,  effective and equitable national framework.</p>
<p><span>Michael  Stuparyk/Toronto Star</span></div>
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<div><span>The Canadian Press</span></div>
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<p>OTTAWA — A new report says the Employment Insurance system is  broken and needs a more transparent, effective and equitable national  framework.</p>
<p>The report by a task force from the University of Toronto’s Mowat  Centre says the EI system is complex, opaque and not easily understood  by contributors.</p>
<p>It says the current program has failed to keep up with societal and  economic change and it’s widely recognized that there are deep problems  at the core of the system.</p>
<p>Too many people, it says, are being left out of the social safety  net, too many are carrying an unfair burden and too many are not  achieving their potential.</p>
<p>The task force, co-chaired by former Saskatchewan premier Roy  Romanow, found only 46 per cent of the country’s unemployed received EI  benefits last year, compared with 86 per cent in 1981.</p>
<p>It also says EI is the only federal program that relies on region of  residence as a basis for determining benefits — a particularly poor  criterion, says the panel.</p>
<p>“Other important federal social programs, like Old Age Security and  the National Child Benefit, treat Canadians equally regardless of region  of residence,” it notes.</p>
<p>Furthermore, it says many of those who would benefit most from  training are not eligible for federally funded programs because they do  not meet EI criteria.</p>
<p>The panel also included co-chair Ratna Omidvar, president of the  Maytree Foundation and Keith Banting, a leading social-policy scholar  who served as its research director.</p>
<p>The group commissioned several independent research papers on EI,  each of which addressed a different area of the system and presented  possible options for reform.</p>
<p>It identified seven objectives to guide an income-security program  for workers, including the need for transparency, fiscal responsibility,  sensitivity to economic conditions and changes in employment and to  provide adequate support when required.</p>
<p>Its report makes 18 recommendations aimed at making the EI program  “more equitable, more transparent, and more consistent with the  contemporary labour market.”</p>
<p>“They are designed to be a source of national unity, rather than  inter-regional disputes,” it says.</p>
<p>Among its recommendations:</p>
<p>• A single EI entry requirement and benefit duration range for all  workers, reducing both region- and industry-specific subsidies,  increasing transparency and restoring fairness to the system.</p>
<p>• New federal temporary unemployment assistance for the “substantial  number” of unemployed workers who don’t qualify for EI benefits and are  ineligible for provincial social-assistance programs.</p>
<p>• More flexibility in special benefits to help the disabled remain in  the labour force, more choice for parents when taking parental leave,  fair treatment of temporary foreign workers and suggestions for improved  financing and management.</p>
<p>“The recommendations should be considered as a package with all  proposals adopted simultaneously,” says the report.</p>
<p>“While the recommendations would lead to a modest increase in federal  spending, the proposed system could be calibrated to suit governmental  preferences on generosity and incentives and to reflect the state of the  economy.”</p>
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		<title>No quick fix for universities</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=888</link>
		<comments>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=888#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 18:22:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Academic Workers and Relevant Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Equity Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Student Activism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unions on Campus]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Published On Mon Nov 14 2011

 One effect of the  decline in per student funding in Ontario has been a soaring   student-to-faculty ratio. (Oct. 24, 2007)
Rick Eglinton/Toronto  Star


Constance  Adamson


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Among Ontario’s thousands of  professors and academic librarians, there are scholars who specialize in  irony.
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><span>Published On Mon Nov 14 2011</span></div>
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<div style="width: 615px;"><img id="ts-main_article2_image_IMG" src="http://media.thestar.topscms.com/images/90/e1/1344546c46a2bf588caea5515249.jpeg" alt="One effect of the decline in per  student funding in Ontario has been a soaring  student-to-faculty ratio.  (Oct. 24, 2007)" /> <img id="ts-main_article2_image_IMG_forXXL" style="display: none;" src="http://media.thestar.topscms.com/images/bf/95/71c5fc3844e0a4213aa04386aa50.jpeg" alt="One  effect of the decline in per student funding in Ontario has been a  soaring  student-to-faculty ratio. (Oct. 24, 2007)" />One effect of the  decline in per student funding in Ontario has been a soaring   student-to-faculty ratio. (Oct. 24, 2007)</p>
<p><span>Rick Eglinton/Toronto  Star</span></div>
<div>
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<div><span>Constance  Adamson</span></div>
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<p>Among Ontario’s thousands of  professors and academic librarians, there are scholars who specialize in  irony.</p>
<p>We are grateful for their expertise;  at times like these, their guidance is sorely needed. For it is  certainly a sublime irony that, after decades of sounding the alarm bell  over declining quality at our universities, university faculty are now  being singled out as the cause of this decline.</p>
<p>A small coterie of columnists and  pundits are convinced that professors are to blame for a disappointing  undergraduate experience. They claim we spend too little time teaching.  We focus too much on research, they say. As a result, class sizes are  getting bigger, universities are turning to part-time faculty to teach,  and students can’t engage with their instructors.</p>
<p>The critics are right about the  consequences, but wrong about the cause. We need to get serious about  the reasons why quality is threatened at our universities. Like most  things, it comes down to money. The amount of per-student funding  provided to universities by the government of Ontario has declined by 25  per cent since 1990, adjusted for inflation. Since 2001, enrolment has  increased by 60 per cent. Think about what that means: universities are  trying to accommodate significantly more students while receiving  significantly less funding for each of those students. It doesn’t take a  mathematician to realize this is a bad equation for the quality of  higher education in Ontario.</p>
<p>The decline in per-student funding  has had a variety of negative effects. Universities have simply been  unable to hire enough full-time professors to meet the rise in student  demand. Our student-to-faculty ratio is now 27-to-1, the worst in  Canada. In 1990, it was 18-to-1. So let’s be clear: the problem is not  that faculty are not teaching enough. It’s that they cannot possibly  teach enough to compensate for the acute shortage of faculty in the  university system. We simply need more professors.</p>
<p>True, research does take up a lot of  time for most full-time faculty in the university system. But this is a  matter of survival. Ontario’s underfunded universities have become  exceptionally good at chasing dollars. It just so happens that a lot of  new dollars — particularly those from the federal government — are for  research. The government of Ontario has also emphasized research and  commercialization through their funding policies. No surprise then that  the entire reward and career advancement structure at our universities  has become research focused. Many professors would like to spend more  time teaching, but find the current system filled with too many  disincentives.</p>
<p>To address this problem, critics  offer the bromide of “teaching-only” professors or “teaching only”  institutions. This, they claim, will allow us to teach more students  without making additional public investments. Giving faculty the option  to focus on teaching is not necessarily a bad idea. But let’s be clear:  teaching-focused professors should not be seen as a way to deliver  university education on the cheap. To be successful, our universities  must always be adequately funded. And we have to recognize that  scholarship is an important part of being a professor, and an important  part of a university education.</p>
<p>Scholarship — which I define as the  creation of new knowledge, the critical analysis of existing knowledge,  and the communication of these insights — is central to the university.  The teaching and scholarship equation is not zero-sum. Teaching is  scholarship, and the two are inextricably linked. The critics will point  to research that says being a good researcher does not make you a good  teacher. This misses the point. You simply cannot have university-level  teaching without the kind of intellectual inquiry that scholars are  trained to do. If you remove scholarship from the professoriate or from  our universities, you are no longer giving students the education they  expect.</p>
<p>The critics of Ontario’s professors  and academic librarians need to get real about what ails our university  system. Right now, they’re only advocating for a system that offers more  teaching. Meanwhile, faculty are talking about what they have always  been talking about: a system that does more and better teaching. Surely  our students deserve nothing less.</p>
<p><em><strong>Constance Adamson</strong> is president  of the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations.</em></p>
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		<title>CUPE Local 3907&#8217;s Annual General Meeting on October 27th at 12pm</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=876</link>
		<comments>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=876#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Oct 2011 19:49:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Academic Workers and Relevant Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Get Involved]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Local 3907 Events]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Annual General Meeting
Thursday, October 27, 2011
12 -2 p.m.
OISE Room 5-280

The local will be discussing the state of bargaining with the Employer and some things that we intend to do to advance our bargaining goals. The election of the members of the executive committee and the trustees will take place at this meeting.
It will also be [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1 style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong>Annual General Meeting</strong></span></h1>
<h2 style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff00ff;"><strong>Thursday, October 27, 2011</strong></span></h2>
<h2 style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff00ff;"><strong>12 -2 p.m.</strong></span></h2>
<h2 style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff00ff;"><strong>OISE Room 5-280</strong></span></h2>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://www.demotix.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/large_610x456_scaled/photos/jobs-justice-portland-support-wisconsin-workers_611435.jpg" alt="http://www.demotix.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/large_610x456_scaled/photos/jobs-justice-portland-support-wisconsin-workers_611435.jpg" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The local will be discussing the state of bargaining with the Employer and some things that we intend to do to advance our bargaining goals. The election of the members of the executive committee and the trustees will take place at this meeting.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">It will also be presenting the annual report of the local as well as the budget. This meeting will provide us with the opportunity to discuss the direction of the local and the priorities that you would like to establish. Our local is as strong as the degree to which you and other members participate in its activities.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong><sup> </sup></strong></p>
<h2 style="text-align: left;"><span style="color: #3366ff;"><strong>Agenda items include</strong>:</span></h2>
<ul style="text-align: center;">
<li>
<h3>Election of executive committee and trustees</h3>
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<h3>Update on the state of bargaining</h3>
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<h3>Member involvement in the local and social justice campaigns</h3>
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<h3>Annual budget</h3>
</li>
</ul>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong> </strong></p>
<h1 style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff00ff;"><strong><em>Food and Refreshments will be provided!</em></strong></span></h1>
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		<title>Solidarity with MUNACA’s members and their just demands</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=874</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Oct 2011 17:39:46 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[252 Bloor Street West, Room 8-104
Toronto, ON M5S 1V6
(416) 978-2403; cupe3907@gmail.com
September 29, 2011
Kevin Whittaker, President
McGill University Non-Academic Certified Association
L&#8217; Association Accreditee du Personnel Non Enseignant de l&#8217;Universite McGill



3483 Peel   Street
Montreal,   QC
H3A   1W7



 
Re: Solidarity with MUNACA’s members and their just demands 
Dear Brother Kevin:
The members of CUPE Local 3907 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center">252 Bloor Street West, Room 8-104</p>
<p align="center">Toronto, ON M5S 1V6</p>
<p align="center">(416) 978-2403; <a href="mailto:cupe3907@gmail.com">cupe3907@gmail.com</a></p>
<p>September 29, 2011</p>
<p>Kevin Whittaker, President</p>
<p>McGill University Non-Academic Certified Association</p>
<p>L&#8217; Association Accreditee du Personnel Non Enseignant de l&#8217;Universite McGill</p>
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<p>Montreal,   QC</p>
<p>H3A   1W7</td>
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<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p><strong>Re: Solidarity with MUNACA’s members and their just demands </strong></p>
<p>Dear Brother Kevin:</p>
<p>The members of CUPE Local 3907 at the University of Toronto stand in solidarity with the members of McGill University Non-Academic Certified Association (MUNACA) and their strike action. Your strike to achieve internal and external equity with other similarly-placed workers in your workplace as well as with employees in other postsecondary educational institutions in Montreal is both inspiring and encouraging to our local.</p>
<p>In going out on strike, MUNACA is valiantly attempting to bring the Employer’s behavior in line with its expressed principles. In the terms of reference of the <em>Principal’s Task Force on Diversity, Excellence and Community Engagement, </em>the Employer asserts, “We will evaluate our achievement regularly and rigorously, both against our own previous performance and against that of our peers.” The practice of evaluating its operation against that of other comparator organizations is a long established way of ensuring that McGill University meets or exceeds the best practices in the university sector.</p>
<p>Therefore, the Employer should not treat your demands for a wage scale, substantive involvement in decisions about your members’ pension plan and workplace benefits, which are already enjoyed by workers in comparable organizations, as unreasonable and unprecedented. Internal and external equity has long been used in industrial relations to determine the terms and conditions of employment for workers and even administrators in higher education institutions.</p>
<p>The <em>Principal’s Task Force</em> highlights diversity of staff or employment equity as a major concern. If the Employer has concerns about seniority considerations frustrating the need to remove structural racist and other discriminatory barriers in fairly representing equity-seekers throughout the job classifications system, it should see MUNACA as partner and not a liability to this necessary goal. Any union that is committed to the principle of an “Injury to one is an injury to all” is going to work to ensure that equity-seekers are fairly and rapidly represented in all job categories.</p>
<p>CUPE Local 3907 applauds the determination of your members in standing up for fairness and equity in the workplace. Please rest assured that our members are solidly behind your strike action. A cheque is attached to this letter and it represents a donation from CUPE Local 3907 to MUNACA’s strike fund.</p>
<p>In solidarity,</p>
<p>Cristina Guerrero, Chair External                                    Yongfang Jia, Chair Internal</p>
<p>Cc: Dr. Heather Munroe-Blum, Principal and Vice-Chancellor, McGill University</p>
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		<title>Group wants level employment playing field</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=872</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2011 19:44:47 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[http://www.thecaribbeancamera.com/news/5290-js-1
Posted on     Wednesday October 05, 2011 

By  Jasminee Sahoye
The local chapter of an organisation that represents Africans around the world wants to see a  better and more comprehensive employment equity legislation in Ontario.
The Network for Pan-Afrikan  Solidarity (Toronto) is calling on the three major political parties to  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>http://www.thecaribbeancamera.com/news/5290-js-1</h1>
<p>Posted on     Wednesday October 05, 2011<small></small> <script type="text/javascript">
</script></p>
<p>By  Jasminee Sahoye</p>
<p>The local chapter of an organisation that represents Africans around the world wants to see a  better and more comprehensive employment equity legislation in Ontario.</p>
<p>The Network for Pan-Afrikan  Solidarity (Toronto) is calling on the three major political parties to  support a comprehensive employment equity legislation so as to create a  level employment playing field for racialized workers.</p>
<p>It says racialized workers are  not experiencing the glass ceiling. “We are faced with the concrete  ceiling or steel door.”</p>
<p>The organization says there are  no anti-racist planks in the individual electoral platform of Ontario&#8217;s  three major political parties and it wants to communicate its strong  objection to what it describes as “the race-baiting of Tim Hudak on the  question of racist employment barriers” and initiatives to address this  matter.</p>
<p>“Our organization has been  following the responses to Progressive Conservative party leader Tim  Hudak&#8217;s comment about “foreign workers” being given privileged access to  job opportunities. Was he implicitly appealing to white voters who have  Ontario or Canada as their place of birth? The various criticisms of  Hudak&#8217;s statement have largely failed in addressing the real issue about  race and access to jobs in the province.”</p>
<p>The organization says instead of  calling for an apology or a retraction of the racially offensive  statement from Hudak, critics ought to be calling for the inclusion of a  comprehensive employment equity legislation plank in the respective  platforms of the three major parties. “Racialized workers are confronted  by discriminatory employment barriers in the workplaces across the  province of Ontario and the rest of Canada. In the absence of employment  equity legislation with targets and enforceable accountability  measures, it will be decades before these workers are fairly represented  across the job classifications system in the private, public and  not-for-profit sectors in Ontario. “</p>
<p>The organization added that the  federal government with an employment equity legislation covering the  national civil service has failed in equitably hiring and promoting  racialized workers.</p>
<p>“In 2010, racialized workers had  a national workforce availability (WFA) figure of 12.4 per cent, but  only 9.8 per cent of them were employees of the national government. It  was very instructive that of the four employment equity designated  groups (women, racialized workers, people with disabilities and  Aboriginals),racialized workers were the only underrepresented group.  The other groups were overrepresented as federal employees based on  their respective WFA figures,” the Network of Pan Afrikan Solidarity  said.</p>
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		<title>Race, Oppositional Politics, and the Challenges of Post-9/11 Mass Movement-Building Spaces</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=868</link>
		<comments>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=868#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Sep 2011 18:03:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Home &#62; 	No 1 (2011) &#62;	Nangwaya

Race, Oppositional Politics, and the  Challenges of Post-9/11 Mass Movement-Building Spaces

Ajamu Nangwaya
http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/article/view/44

Abstract
In the absence of a critical race analysis that is aimed at  informing and shaping political practice in the United States, the  prospect for revolutionary renewal and movement building will not be  able to reach [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="breadcrumb"><a href="http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/index" target="_parent">Home</a> &gt; 	<a href="http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/issue/view/5" target="_parent">No 1 (2011)</a> &gt;	<a href="http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/article/view/44/0" target="_parent">Nangwaya</a></div>
<div id="articleTitle">
<h3>Race, Oppositional Politics, and the  Challenges of Post-9/11 Mass Movement-Building Spaces</h3>
</div>
<div id="authorString"><em>Ajamu Nangwaya</em></div>
<p>http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/article/view/44</p>
<div id="articleAbstract">
<h4>Abstract</h4>
<div>In the absence of a critical race analysis that is aimed at  informing and shaping political practice in the United States, the  prospect for revolutionary renewal and movement building will not be  able to reach its full potential in the post-9/11 period and beyond.  This paper examines the race-informed developments of the 9/11 attacks,  the racial politics of reparations, the spring 2006 immigrant rights  protests, and the February/March 2011 protest action in Madison,  Wisconsin, for illustration. In addition, it interrogates the issues of  race and racism within the labour movement and the wider American  society, and the manner in which they are deployed to prevent the  emergence of an anti-oppression collective consciousness and a  broad-based political movement.</div>
</div>
<p>Full Text: 									<a href="http://www.anarchist-developments.org/index.php/adcs/article/view/44/51" target="_parent">PDF</a></p>
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		<title>Migrant workers demand better conditions on community reality tour</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=864</link>
		<comments>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=864#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Sep 2011 23:02:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3285720
By KARENA WALTER Standard Staff
Posted 3 days ago
The dozens of migrant workers who rallied  in Niagara this weekend took an enormous risk in doing so, organizers of  a &#8220;solidarity caravan&#8221; said Sunday.
Many workers fear  retribution or even deportation if their employers discover they have  been rallying for better conditions, members of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3285720</p>
<h4>By KARENA WALTER Standard Staff</h4>
<h5>Posted 3 days ago</h5>
<p>The dozens of migrant workers who rallied  in Niagara this weekend took an enormous risk in doing so, organizers of  a &#8220;solidarity caravan&#8221; said Sunday.</p>
<p>Many workers fear  retribution or even deportation if their employers discover they have  been rallying for better conditions, members of Justice for Migrant  Workers said.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a tremendous risk they&#8217;re taking,&#8221; said  organizer Chris Ramsaroop.</p>
<p>About 100 southwestern Ontario migrant  workers from Guatemala, Jamaica, the Philippines and Thailand, among  other countries, gathered at the British Methodist Episcopal Church on  Geneva St. in St. Catharines on Sunday.</p>
<p>They are among thousands  of workers who come to Canada to fill labour shortages through Seasonal  Agricultural Worker and Temporary Foreign Worker Programs.</p>
<p>The  church was the first stop on a tour for the group whose members came on  buses from as far away as Leamington and Tillsonburg.</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re all  here to demand justice and call for rights in Canada,&#8221; Ramsaroop said  to applause outside the church. &#8220;Congratulations for the risk you&#8217;re  taking to stand up for your rights.&#8221;</p>
<p>The &#8220;solidarity caravan&#8221; is  making stops along the Underground Railroad to raise questions about  whether those communities still represent freedom for all or oppression  for migrant workers.</p>
<p>Ramsaroop said some workers are fearful of  rallying in their workplace communities, but will take action elsewhere.</p>
<p>One of those workers who travelled from Tillsonburg said there&#8217;s  no way to refuse unsafe work with chemicals for fear of being sent  home.</p>
<p>&#8220;If you deny work, you can be penalized and lose your job,&#8221;  he said.</p>
<p>And losing his job would mean being sent  back to Trinidad, where the pay is less.</p>
<p>He has spent eight months  every year for the last 13 years working in Canada without his family  for that paycheque.</p>
<p>He said he doesn&#8217;t want the programs shut  down, but added he shouldn&#8217;t have to live in a home with rats or have  insufficient medical care.</p>
<p>Canadians, he said, have no idea what  takes place behind the scenes.</p>
<p>&#8220;You get these nice fruits,  farming helps develop the country, but we&#8217;d like to be treated like  human beings,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>Tzazna Miranda, an organizer from Justice  for Migrant Workers, said health and safety is a big issue with workers  using pesticides and machinery without proper training. Gender and  racial discrimination, labour laws and the ease with which someone can  be deported are also concerns.</p>
<p>&#8220;The problem is there is very  little enforcement. It doesn&#8217;t matter what the law is if nothing&#8217;s  enforcing it,&#8221; Miranda said.</p>
<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t want to close the program,  but we want it to properly work.&#8221;</p>
<p>Filipino Gina Bahiwal, an  organizer and agricultural packer in Leamington, said she hoped the  caravan would raise awareness and push the government to protect migrant  workers from abuses.</p>
<p>She said she had to find a new employer or  go home after she was accused of organizing a union.</p>
<p>&#8220;For three  years I am here,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I see there is no protection for migrant  workers and there is injustices.&#8221;</p>
<p>Later on Sunday, the caravan  made stops in Virgil and Niagara-on-the-Lake.</p>
<p>kwalter@stcatharinesstandard.ca</p>
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		<title>Migrant workers rallying for their rights</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=862</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Sep 2011 17:42:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[




Ajamu  Nangway, a PhD student in adult education at the University of Toronto,  handed out pamphlets along Queen Street to raise awareness about issues  migrant workers face each summer when they come to work in Canada.


















Migrant workers rallying for their rights
By Sarah Ferguson
Posted 19 hours ago
http://www.niagaraadvance.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3288847
While many residents spent their Labour  [...]]]></description>
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<div><a title="Ajamu Nangway, a PhD student in adult education at the  University of Toronto, handed out pamphlets along Queen Street to raise  awareness about issues migrant workers face each summer when they come  to work in Canada." rel="lightbox" href="http://gallery.niagaraadvance.ca/cache/derivative/1/5/1579216.dat" target="_blank"><img src="http://gallery.niagaraadvance.ca/cache/derivative/1/5/1579216.dat" alt="" /></a></div>
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<div>Ajamu  Nangway, a PhD student in adult education at the University of Toronto,  handed out pamphlets along Queen Street to raise awareness about issues  migrant workers face each summer when they come to work in Canada.</div>
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<h1>Migrant workers rallying for their rights</h1>
<h4>By Sarah Ferguson</h4>
<h5>Posted 19 hours ago</h5>
<p><a href="http://www.niagaraadvance.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3288847" target="_blank">http://www.niagaraadvance.ca/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=3288847</a></p>
<p>While many residents spent their Labour  Day weekend enjoying the last bit of summer, migrant works marched down  Queen Street on Sunday for better wages and rights.</p>
<p>About 100 farm  workers and supporters took part in the caravan, says Chris Ramsaroop,  organizer of Justicia for Migrant Workers.</p>
<p>It was one of three  stops which included St. Catharines and Niagara Falls.</p>
<p>The  organization promotes the rights of farm workers in the Canadian  Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program  (SWAP) and the Low Skilled  Workers Program.</p>
<p>There are many migrant workers here in NOTL which  are a part of SWAP, says Ramsaroop.</p>
<p>It is a program which  responds to the labour shortage in the Canadian agricultural industry.</p>
<p>Migrant   workers come from places such as Jamaica, Mexico or the Carribean and  they can work from four to eight months in Canada, says Ramsaroop.</p>
<p>The   organizer says the rallies are an attempt to education people about the  lack of  rights, the possibility of deportation if workers speak out  and fees workers have to pay to recruiters just to work in Canada.</p>
<p>He  says both the SWAP and the LSWP face the same issues.</p>
<p>Ramsaroop  says people on the street became receptive to what the rally was about   and were willing to listen when they gave away pears, peaches and  vegetables which the migrant workers help to grow and harvest.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s  helping to break the invisibility of migrant workers.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Henry Giroux on Democracy Unsettled: From Critical Pedagogy to the War on Youth</title>
		<link>http://3907.cupe.ca/wp/?p=860</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Aug 2011 23:01:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Monday 29 August 2011
by: 		Michael A. Peters, Truthout         &#124; Interview
http://www.truth-out.org/henry-giroux-democracy-unsettled-critical-pedagogy-war-youth/1313679897


Henry Giroux. (Photo courtesy of Henry Giroux)

Learn more about Disney&#8217;s creeping cultural hegemony &#8211; read &#8220;The Mouse That Roared,&#8221; Truthout&#8217;s Progressive Pick  of the Week.
Henry Giroux is one of the founding theorists of critical pedagogy in  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><span>Monday 29 August 2011</span></div>
<div>by: 		Michael A. Peters, Truthout         | Interview</div>
<p>http://www.truth-out.org/henry-giroux-democracy-unsettled-critical-pedagogy-war-youth/1313679897</p>
<div style="padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 10px; float: right; width: 250px; display: inline;"><img src="http://www.truth-out.org/sites/default/files/081811giroux_story.jpg" alt="" width="240" /></p>
<div style="width: 238px; font-size: 11px; font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; font-weight: bold; line-height: 12px;">
<p>Henry Giroux. (Photo courtesy of Henry Giroux)</p></div>
</div>
<p><em>Learn more about Disney&#8217;s creeping cultural hegemony &#8211; read &#8220;<a href="http://members.truth-out.org/bgift52-gift/choose-type-donation" target="_blank">The Mouse That Roared</a>,&#8221; Truthout&#8217;s Progressive Pick  of the Week.</em></p>
<p>Henry Giroux is one of the founding theorists of critical pedagogy in  the United States and a close friend of the late Paulo Freire. He and  Freire coedited a very influential series on education and cultural  politics for Bergin and Garvey. Giroux has made groundbreaking  contributions to numerous fields, including education, critical theory,  youth studies, cultural studies, media studies, higher education and  public pedagogy. A leading cultural critic in the United States and  Canada, he has held positions at Boston University, Miami University of  Ohio, and Penn State, and currently occupies the Global TV Network Chair  in English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Hamilton,  Canada. He is a public intellectual and has written over 50 books, while  also collaborating with eminent scholars such as David Purple, Stanley  Aronowitz and Peter McLaren. His first book was Ideology, Culture and  the Process of Schooling (1981), and he subsequently authored such  classics as Theory and Resistance in Education (2001, 2nd ed); Border  Crossing: Cultural Workers and the Politics of Education (2005, 2nd  ed.); Disturbing Pleasures: Learning Popular Culture (1994); and The  Mouse That Roared: Disney and the End of Innocence, co-authored with  Grace Pollock (2010; rev. ed.).</p>
<p>Youth, the state of America and neoliberalism are constant themes in  his work. He has written on film and the new media in Breaking In to the  Movies: Film and the Culture of Politics (2002) and Beyond the  Spectacle of Terrorism: Global Uncertainty and the Challenge of the New  Media (2006). He has also written on democracy and the commercialization  of public schools and higher education in Schooling and the Struggle  for Public Life (2005; 2nd ed); The Abandoned Generation: Democracy  Beyond the Culture of Fear (2004); and Take Back Higher Education: Race,  Youth, and the Crisis of Democracy in the Post-Civil Rights Era, with  Susan Searls Giroux (2008). His most recent books continue to elucidate  the connections between a formative culture based in critical education  and the conditions required for substantive democracy, including   Against the Terror of Neoliberalism: Beyond the Politics of Greed  (2008), Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability? (2009);  Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (2010); On  Critical Pedagogy (2011); and Education and the Crisis of Public Values  (2011). His work has been anthologized in The Giroux Reader (2006);  American on the Edge: Henry Giroux on Politics, Culture, and Education  (2006); and Reading and Teaching Henry Giroux (2006). Many of his  articles and books have been translated into Spanish, Chinese and a  number of other languages.</p>
<p>He has won many awards, given many interviews and his work has been  warmly received by the academic community. He is without doubt one of  the foremost critical educators of his time.</p>
<p>Henry Giroux&#8217;s personal <a href="http://www.henryagiroux.com/" target="_blank">web site</a>.</p>
<p>Interview on <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DgdVCnTTqXA" target="_blank">YouTube</a>.</p>
<p>Entry on critical pedagogy <a href="http://mingo.info-science.uiowa.edu/%7Estevens/critped/giroux.htm" target="_blank">on the web. </a></p>
<p><strong>Michael Peters: Henry it is a great pleasure to do this  interview with you, as a colleague and friend I have much admired over  the years and someone who helped me enormously to develop my work and  professional self when I was a young academic. As a young New Zealand  academic, I remember reading your work in the 1980s. I was a graduate  fresh from a philosophy department, hungry for material that took a  critical look at the world.  I discovered your early work on postmodern  criticism and used the book you wrote with Stanley Aronowitz, Education  Under Siege, as a text in one of the classes I was teaching. You  expressed eloquently many ideas that I was currently grappling with and  led the way I suspect for a generation when you developed as a public  intellectual and cultural critic concerned for the fate of young people.  In particular, you generously offered, mentored and supported me in  publishing my first book, Education and the Postmodern Condition  (foreword by Lyotard) in your Bergin and Garvey series co-edited with  Paulo Freire. The experience really kick-started my academic career and,  through your auspices, I went on to publish some six books in your  series. This was a generous and collegial act for which I am very  grateful. I know there must be many other scholars whom you mentored and  helped along the way. And this speaks to your role as a public  intellectual located increasingly in a networked environment that  transforms the concept of intellectual collaboration and enhances the  notions of collegiality and the public space of knowledge development.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Let me start this interview by asking you to reflect on your  childhood, upbringing and undergraduate experience. What was it in your  background that predisposed you to issues of social justice? Tell us  when and under what circumstances you felt outraged at social injustice  and became determined to do something about it.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Henry Giroux: </strong>I grew up in a working-class  neighborhood in the 1950s and &#8217;60s that was marked by an ongoing  juxtaposition of violence, loyalty and solidarity. On the one hand, it  was a neighborhood where people defined themselves in terms of specific  communities, places and spaces. The notion of the detached individual  going it alone and defining his or her existence in mostly  individualistic and competitive terms was an anomaly in such a  neighborhood. People helped each other in times of need, socialized  together and looked out for each other. At the same time, there was a  lot of violence in the neighborhood, often inflicted by the police and  other repressive institutions such as the schools. One could not survive  in that neighborhood without friends, without recognizing that the  protections that offered one a sense of agency and freedom came from the  group, not the isolated uncommitted individual so celebrated today.  Social justice for me was forged in the bonds of solidarity, and the  need to recognize both some notion of the common good and the importance  of the social.</p>
<p>As a working-class male in a neighborhood where masculinity was a  shifting marker of courage, brutality and identity, the body became the  most resourceful tool I had. It was the ultimate source of agency,  required in order to survive, ensure respect and provide a framing  mechanism to mediate between oneself and the larger world. Violence in  that neighborhood was both personal and institutional. People were poor,  many unemployed and their lives were often lost before they had any  chance of maturing. Young people existed in a kind of dead time, waiting  to graduate from high school and hoping to get a job, perhaps as a  priest, firefighter, or police officer and eventually go on disability.  Gender was a dividing line and the violence that permeated our relations  with women was rarely ever physical as much as it was ideological and  political. Women just didn&#8217;t matter much outside of very traditional  roles. I saw a lot of hardship and love in that neighborhood, and it  affected me deeply. On a personal level, my family was very poor, and my  father struggled tirelessly to feed us and make sure we had the basic  necessities, though he was not always successful. We usually ran out of  food by Thursday, one day before my dad got paid. But at least we were  not homeless, and we managed to survive less as victims than as a family  fighting against larger systemic forces that we were not in a position  to control. Such hardship created enormous problems, but they also  strengthened our resolve to struggle, embrace the warmth of others, and  develop a sense of both humility and outrage in the face of such  unnecessary and systemically determined deprivations. But poverty does  not just build character, it also produces tensions, injustices, and  violence. Surviving was not a made for Reality TV, it was an effort that  put one on guard constantly; it turned time into a deprivation rather  than a luxury; and it redefined the parameters of agency, learning, and  survival.   Justice came quickly in that neighborhood, and it was not  always on the side of the angels. Much of my youth until I went to high  school was based on getting by, surviving in a world in which my biggest  strength was talking fast rather than proving myself as a neighborhood  fighter. At six feet and 145 lbs, that wasn’t a viable option.</p>
<p>What I lacked at that time was a language to mediate the inequalities,  suffering and modes of solidarity I saw all around me. I got a glimpse  of the need for such a discourse when I went to high school, which  ironically was named Hope High School. At the time, Hope High School was  segregated along class and racial lines. Poor white and black kids were  in what was labeled as the &#8220;junk&#8221; courses, played sports and were seen  for the most part as both deficit-ridden and delinquent. Most of us  entered the school through the back entrance; wealthy white kids came  through the front door. It was hard for me to miss the class and racial  dimensions of all of this, especially as I was a basketball player and  hung out with many of the black kids on my team. Visiting their  neighborhood and playing in gyms on their turf was relatively easy, but  they could not come into my neighborhood without suffering the  indignities of racial slurs or much worse.</p>
<p>My sense of social justice began at that moment when the lived  experience of solidarity and loyalty rubbed up against my own  unquestioned racism and sexism, which had a long history in the daily  encounters of my youth. Sometimes the contradictions that characterize  the “common sense” of racism and sexism were challenged and became  unraveled. Treating people as objects or understanding them through  established stereotypes was being constantly tested as I moved through  high school, and met black men and women who refused those stereotypes  and had the kindness and intelligence to open my eyes through both their  own lived experiences and their access to a critical language that I  lacked.</p>
<p>Everything changed when I went to college, at least on my second  attempt. The first time I left for college, I attended a junior college  on a basketball scholarship but I was not ready for the cultural shift. I  felt terribly insecure in that space, did not know how to navigate the  cultural capital of middle-class kids and within a short time dropped  out. After working for two years in odd jobs, I got another basketball  scholarship to a small school in Maine. This all took place in the  sixties—a time in which language, social relations and culture itself  were changing at an accelerated rate. It was hard to miss the changes,  ignore the civil rights struggles and not feel the collective hope that  was driving student protests against the Vietnam War and middle-class  mores. I got caught up in it very quickly. Knowledge took on a new  register for me, just as the changing cultural mores deeply affected my  sense of both the present and the future. As a result, knowledge was not  just powerful, but sexy; language became my weapon of choice. Social  justice as a means to live in a better world was the pre-eminent issue  touching the lives of most of the people around me at the time. In  college, I read avidly, moving between Marx and James Baldwin, immersing  myself in Beat literature and trying to figure out how all of this made  sense in terms of my own critical agency and what role I might play in  shaping a better world.</p>
<p>Enrolling in a teacher education program was enormously important for  me because I quickly realized the ethical and political dimensions of  teaching and how important the issue of developing a critical  consciousness and formative culture was to any viable democratic  society. After graduating, I went to Appalachian State University for an  M.A. in history and became a research assistant for a young assistant  professor named Bob Sandels. Bob was an incredibly sharp leftist  intellectual, and he did more than anyone at the time to connect the  dots for me around a number of domestic and foreign policy issues in  which social and economic justice were central. Once I graduated, I  ended up teaching at the high school level for a several years and  started reading Paulo Freire and Howard Zinn, both of whom eventually  became close friends. From that point, I was on fire, and fortunately  the fire never went out.</p>
<p><strong>MP: So your working-class credentials have stayed with you. I&#8217;m  interested in the tensions and contradictions of those born into the  working class who become professors. May I hear your reflections on your  own experience of education as self-transformation? I suspect the  reason that Paulo Freire and Howard Zinn resonated with you was in part  because of your background. Perhaps, you could also detail the nature of  your relationships with these two thinkers.</strong></p>
<p><strong>HG: </strong>Being an academic from the working class is, of  course, impacted by many registers, extending from ideology and cultural  capital to politics. When I first started teaching at Boston University  I did not have the knowledge, theoretical tools or the experience to  move into a world largely dominated by middle- and ruling-class cultural  capital. I was constantly confronted with faculty and students who  assumed a god-given right of privilege and power, especially with  regards to their academic credentials, middle-class language skills and  lifelong experience in which people like myself were defined through our  deficits, and largely as outsiders. Or, even worse, our very presence  in the academy meant that we had to assimilate mentally to the middle  class, or at least act as if we were. This often meant dressing a  particular way, speaking in elaborate code and immersing oneself into  the cultural circuits that middle-class people enjoyed.</p>
<p>All of these requisite changes were brought home to me during my second  semester. My father had just died of a heart attack, and I had returned  to the campus after attending his funeral. My Dean at the time was a  guy named Bob Dentler, an Ivy-League educated scholar. I ran into him on  the street shortly after my father&#8217;s death and he said to me, &#8220;I am  sorry to hear about your father. It must have been difficult settling  his estate?&#8221; Estate? My father left a hundred dollars in an envelope  taped behind a mirror. That was his estate. I was immediately struck by  how out of touch so many academics are with respect to those others who  are not replicas of themselves. But as I began to understand how class  was mapped onto academia, I was determined not to play the role of the  subservient, aspiring-to-be-middle-class professional. I had no  intention of letting myself morph into a golf-playing suburbanite living  a politically irrelevant academic life. I viewed myself as being on the  left, and my politics provided me with the tools to be not only  self-reflective but also critical of the cultural capital that dominated  the academy and passed itself off as entirely normalized. I had no  interest in narrowly-defined, almost-choking specializations, stifling  forms of professionalism, appeals to positivism or a politics that  largely removed the university from the broader society.</p>
<p>I was also lucky in that before I became an academic, I lived in  Providence, Rhode Island, and took advantage of the many free lectures  Brown University offered. Watching the radical lawyer William Kunstler  and scholar-activist Stanley Aronowitz in many ways saved my life. Here  were two working-class intellectuals whose cultural capital was  unmistakable. And they knew much more than most of the Ivy-League types  who invited them. They were passionate, brilliant and spoke directly to  public issues. Of course, I had a certain familiarity with the  discourses of radical education, history and the civil rights movement  having read Paulo Freire, Howard Zinn and James Baldwin, but it was the  existential grounding of such work that quickened in me a willingness to  fight for social justice that changed my life. I had been told all my  life that the body should not connect with one&#8217;s head, that passion was a  liability in making an argument or taking a position. These figures  uprooted that myth very quickly, and I never let go of my working-class  sensibility, even though I had to learn middle-class skills and  knowledge in order to be a border crosser—to cross over into a  middle-class institution such as academia without burning the bridges  that enabled me to get there.</p>
<p>I also remember having a conversation with Joe Kincheloe who had a  similar background. Joe was always such a pleasure to be around because  we shared a cultural capital that defined us both within and outside of  the academy as outsiders:  we were working-class and allegedly  deficient, unsanctified by Ivy-League degrees and harboring a pedigree  that connected the body and mind in a way that was often defined by the  overly scrubbed and passionless as lacking civility. Of course, it was  this shared space that allowed us not only to reject an easy and  unproductive sense of resentment but also to interrogate the strengths  of the resources hard-wired into our working-class backgrounds, along  with what it meant to develop a more expansive and democratic politics.  We got along with many different kinds of people, but we were especially  sensitive to poor white and minority kids who shared our background and  sometimes found a model in what we represented that changed their lives  and prepared them for the long struggle ahead.</p>
<p>The starting point for my politics began with questioning what the  middle- and ruling-class types alleged were working class  “deficiencies.” It was necessary to flip the script on this type of  stereotyping aimed at working-class kids. I began to see that my  cultural capital could not be reduced to deficits or lack. In fact, I  had learned some time back that while my background was problematic in  terms of a range of issues extending from violence to sexism, it also  provided me with a deep commitment to solidarity and a humility that  recognized that people had different capacities and intellectual  strengths.  My sense of what constitutes a crisis is generally different  from my peers. I never bought the arrogance and I never bought the  notion that if one were educated in an Ivy-League school that guaranteed  superior knowledge and set of skills. In due time, the university  seemed with some exceptions, of course, to produce academics who were  uptight, conservative politically and personally arrogant. When  accompanied by rigorous modes of reflection and discrimination, these  alleged lacks became for me a formidable resource and source of strength  for a more viable sense of critical agency and democratic political  commitment. Neither Joe nor I ever faltered on this issue, and I think  it served us and our working-class students well.</p>
<p>I have often laughed over the seeming incongruity of being a  working-class intellectual, and how such a term often rubbed against the  grain of many colleagues whose cultural capital seemed to mark them  less by what they knew than by how much they had to unlearn. It was  often difficult to listen to, experience, and tolerate the pompous  self-flattery, the impenetrable discourses, the rigid specializations,  the flat affect and the decidedly anti-political posturing that  characterized so many in the academy. These were academics who were both  clever and frivolous, anti-political and often indifferent to the  growing plight of human suffering. Their academic work was often utterly  privatized and unconnected to important social issues and always  haughty—and they were quite unaware of the caricatures they had become.  For others, intellectual courage had given way to the comfortable space  of accommodation, and the notion of the public intellectual had been  replaced by the “public relations intellectual,” the overheated talking  head spewing out sound bites and providing &#8220;scholarshit&#8221; to various  media outlets. I increasingly came to believe that I was in an  educational setting where most academics had withdrawn into a world in  which the measure of theoretical prowess was determined by the degree to  which it escaped from any sense of responsibility, or for that matter  any notion of consequential thinking.</p>
<p>Being in the academy for me was a form of soft exile. I have always  felt as if I did not belong there, though I was far from alienated over  the issue. I simply did my work, published, taught and used the academy  as a site from which to do what I was thought was important educational  and democratically inspired political work. I realized early that coming  from a working-class background gave me at least a couple of advantages  in academia. Because I did not have to unlearn all of the cultural junk  that came with middle- and ruling-class ideologies, I had more time to  be reflective about my own work, politics and the role I would play in  furthering the discourses of critical agency, education, pedagogy,  politics and hope.</p>
<p>I have felt isolated, but not alone, in the academy. Fortunately, a  number of friends, including Joe Kincheloe, Richard Quantz, Paulo  Freire, Stanley Aronowitz, Roger Simon, Peter McLaren and Donaldo  Macedo, helped me to find solidarity in often dark places. These spaces  are no longer as dark for me as they were when I was first teaching at  Boston University, and I believe being an outsider in the academy offers  both the possibility for developing an opening to consider critical  insights forged within a working-class sensibility and the never ending  challenge presented by class lines.</p>
<p><strong>MP: Thanks, this is exactly the kind of reflection and  autobiographical detail I was hoping would emerge. There is a need for  those traditionally excluded from the academy to be able to identify  with those who have negotiated the class experience so successfully as  you have. I am also interested in your remarks about privilege and the  way in which many professors simply take class position for granted. To  what extent is the university a class-based institution? One other  aspect that you allude to in your experience is the way university  administrations are often out of sync with the professoriat. I know that  you have been targeted because of your beliefs. I know also that you  have theorized the institution and its development under the conditions  of neoliberalism. Please share with us your thoughts on the neoliberal  and neoconservative attacks of the left and the rise of the neoliberal  university.</strong></p>
<p><strong>HG: </strong>Higher education in the United States has the  appearance of a meritocracy, but that belies the ways in which wealth  and power shape the hierarchical nature of the system. Working-class  kids in the U.S., if they have aspirations of getting a college diploma,  generally do not have the funds to support such an endeavor,  particularly given the spiralling tuition rates of the last few decades.  And when they do go on to some form of higher education, many of them  wind up in community colleges or technical schools. Of course, in the  past we had programs like the GI Bill that made access easier, but those  days are over. Economic inequality is now hardwired into the central  core and structure of the university thanks to neoliberalization, though  mass access to higher education has always been a kind of Holy Grail.   So access is largely a class issue, but also a racial issue. The culture  of much of higher education has little to do with the histories,  experiences, languages, and cultural backgrounds of many working-class  and minority kids. Middle and upper class cultural capital tends to  crush these kids, and the damage is inflicted more heavily when there  are no remedial programs available to compensate for the poor education  they often receive in underfunded and neglected schools that largely  serve to contain and criminalize the behaviors of the disenfranchised.  For many working-class youth, time is a burden, not a luxury, and they  have to often work while trying to take classes and make the requisite  grades. College for these kids is an uphill battle. They often compete  with middle-class kids who can spend most of their time studying or  attending classes.</p>
<p>In terms of the university itself, the attack on higher education by  right-wing ideologues and corporate power has been going on for a long  time, but at the current historical conjuncture it has gotten much  worse. Higher education is being targeted by conservative politicians  and governments because it embodies, at least ideally, a sphere in which  students learn that democracy, as Jacques Rancière suggests, is a  rupture—a relentless critique and dialogue about official power, its  institutions and its never ending attempts to silence dissent. As Ellen  Schrecker points out, &#8220;Today the entire enterprise of higher education,  not just its dissident professors, is under attack, both internally and  externally.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the United States, England, and a number of other European  countries, universities and businesses are forming stronger ties; the  humanities are being underfunded; student tuition is rising at  astronomical rates; knowledge is being commodified; and research is  valued through the lens of an audit culture. Economic Darwinism is now  undermining the civic and intellectual promises that make higher  education a public good. The reach and influence of corporate-based  models of education can be seen in the rise of modes of governance,  financing and evaluation that for all intents and purposes make higher  education an adjunct of corporate values and interests. Moreover, the  most important value of higher education is now tied to the need for  credentials. Delivering improved employability has reshaped the  connection between knowledge and power, while rendering faculty and  students as professional entrepreneurs and budding customers. In the  search for adopting market values and cutting costs, classes have  ballooned in size, and there is an increased emphasis on rote learning  and standardized testing. Disciplines and subjects that do not fall  within the purview of mathematical utility and economic rationality are  now seen as dispensable. The notion of the university as a center of  critique and a democratic public sphere vitally necessary in providing  the knowledge, skills and values necessary for the health of a  democratic polity is giving way to a view of the university as a  marketing machine essential to the production of neoliberal subjects.  Like most neoliberal models of education, higher education only matters  to the extent that it promotes national prosperity and drives economic  growth, technical innovation, and market transformation.</p>
<p>In the United States, this neoliberal model can be understood through a  number of corporatizing tendencies. Under the call for austerity,  states have begun the process of massively defunding public  universities, while they simultaneously provide massive tax breaks for  corporations and the rich. At the same time, higher education in its  search for funding has, as Stanley Aronowitz points out, &#8220;adopted the  organizational trappings of medium-sized or large corporations.&#8221;  University presidents are now viewed as C.E.O.s, faculty as  entrepreneurs and students as consumers. Similarly, many college  presidents not only align themselves with business values, but willingly  and openly associate themselves with corporate interests. As business  culture permeates higher education, all manner of school practices from  food services to specific modes of instruction and the hiring temporary  faculty is now outsourced to private contractors. It gets worse. In some  universities, new college deans are shifting their focus outside of the  campus in order to take on fundraising, strategic planning and industry  partnerships that were once the job of the university president.  Academic leadership is now defined in part through one&#8217;s ability to  raise funds, engage in strategic planning and partner up with corporate  donors. Burdened by a lack of state funding, many deans are increasingly  viewed as the heads of complex businesses, and their job performance  ratings are dependent on their fundraising performances. This is not  meant to wholeheartedly condemn the necessity for fundraising, which can  also be productive, as much as it is to insist that it cannot take  priority over modes of leadership rooted in more democratic,  emancipatory and non-commodified values.</p>
<p>One of the most serious consequences facing higher education in the  United States under the reign of neoliberal austerity and disciplinary  measures is the increased casualization of academic labor and the  ongoing attacks on tenure and academic freedom. As universities adopt  models of corporate governance, they are aggressively eliminating tenure  positions, increasing part-time positions and attacking faculty unions.  In a number of states such as Ohio and Utah, legislatures have passed  bills outlawing tenure, while in Wisconsin the governor has abrogated  the bargaining rights of state&#8217;s university faculty. At a time when  higher education is becoming increasingly vocationalized, the ranks of  tenure track faculty are being drastically depleted, furthering the loss  of faculty as stakeholders. Currently, only 27 percent of faculty  either occupy a tenure position or are on a tenure track. Consequently,  many faculty have been demoted to contingent forms of labor, losing not  only their power to influence the conditions of their work, but  rendering them powerless as their workloads increase, their salaries  stagnate or decrease, they are deprived of office space and supplies,  they are refused travel money and they are subjected to policies that  allow them to be fired at will. The latter is particularly egregious  because, when coupled with an ongoing series of attacks by right-wing  ideologues against left-oriented and progressive academics, many  non-tenured faculty feel they must censor themselves in their classes.  At a time when critics within the academy can be fired for their  political beliefs, have their names posted on right-wing web sites, are  forced to turn over their email correspondence to right-wing groups and  are harassed in the conservative press, it is all the more crucial that  protections be put in place that safeguard faculty positions and the  rights of  academics to exercise academic freedom.</p>
<p>If it is viewed as simply a training ground for the corporate order and  the national security state, then higher education will default on its  promise of a democratic future for young people and its investment in a  social state. The anti-public social formation that has emerged with  neoliberalism has no interest in fostering the educational conditions in  which it becomes possible for young people to imagine another world  outside of the economic Darwinism that now bears down on every aspect of  their lives. While the complexity of such struggles cannot be  exaggerated, it is time to develop a new political language that  connects the dots between the wars abroad and the war happening at home.  The consequences of such an egregious assault on the university will be  the destruction of any vestige of higher education as a public good and  democratic public sphere. Clearly, there is more at stake here than the  abrogation of worker&#8217;s bargaining rights and skyrocketing university  tuition rates. There is also the question of what kind of society we  want to become, and what is going to have to be done to stop the  arrogant and formidable assault on all aspects of democratic life now  being waged by the financial elite, corporations, conservatives,  reactionary think tanks, authoritarian politicians and a right-wing  media that ignores every principle of honor, decency and truth.</p>
<p>Of course, the point is for intellectuals and others to make it clear  that neoliberal and neoconservative forces are transforming the  university into an anti-democratic public sphere and to provide a  discourse of possibility that challenges this terrible refiguration of  higher education. Let me mention a few possibilities informed by my own  work on the neoliberalization of the university.</p>
<p>First, we need to figure out how to defend more vigorously higher  education as a public good. If we can&#8217;t do that, we&#8217;re in trouble.  Secondly, we need to address what the optimum conditions are for  educators, artists, activists, etc., to perform their work in an  autonomous and critical fashion. In other words, we need to think  through the conditions that make academic labor fruitful, engaging and  relevant. Third, we need to turn the growing army of temporary workers  now swelling the ranks of academy into full-time, permanent staff. The  presence of so many part-time employees is scandalous and both weakens  the power of the faculty and exploits these workers. Fourth, we need to  educate students to be critical agents, to learn how to take risks,  engage in thoughtful dialogue and address what it means to be socially  responsible. Pedagogy is not about training; it is about educating  people to be self-reflective, critical and self -conscious about their  relationship with others and to know something about their relationship  with the larger world. Pedagogy in this sense not only provides  important thoughtful and intellectual competencies; it also enables  people to act effectively upon the societies in which they live.</p>
<p>Pedagogy also takes on a new dimension and impact with the rise of  digital technologies and the endlessly multiplying forms of screen  culture, each attempting to win over new and larger audiences and more  often than not mark them as potential consumers. These new technologies  and the proliferating sites in which they are appearing constitute  powerful configurations of what C. Wright Mills termed cultural  apparatuses engaged in modes of popular education. They represent more  specifically pervasive forms of public pedagogy that increasingly  function to divorce learning from any vestige of critical thought. These  powerful forms of public pedagogy need to be addressed, both for how  they deform and for how they can create important new spaces for  emancipatory forms of pedagogy. Not only do we need to understand who  controls these cultural apparatuses and how they mobilize new desires,  needs, modes of identity, and social relations. We also need to  challenge the new media in terms of their power, what they represent and  how they present it. Public pedagogy is a site of struggle in which  critically engaged intellectuals can address broader audiences and raise  in the public domain a number of important social and political  issues.  The articulation of knowledge to experience, the construction  of new modes of agency, the production of critical knowledge, the  recovery of critical histories and the possibility of linking knowledge  to social change cannot be limited to influencing students in the  classroom. Everyone, but especially those working in education, have to  extend our roles as public intellectuals to other pedagogical sites,  audiences and institutions. It is politically imperative to organize a  whole range of people outside of the academy. For this, as I mentioned  above, we need a new political language with broader narratives. I am  not against identity politics or single-based issues, but we need to  find ways to connect these issues to more encompassing, global  narratives about democracy so we can recognize their strengths and  limitations in building broad-based social movements. In short, it is  imperative that as educators and socially responsible intellectuals,  artists, parents and concerned citizens, we must act for justice and  against injustice. And such a call to pursue the truth with a small “t”  must be informed by informed judgments, self-reflection, searing forms  of critique, civic courage and a  deem commitment to education as  central to the struggle for democracy and social change.  Needless to  say, we need to find new ways to connect education to the struggle for a  democratic future, which is now being undermined in ways that were  unimaginable thirty years ago.</p>
<p><strong>MP: Thanks Henry, I appreciate the way in which your analysis  proceeds from a combination of personal experience and critical theory.  Your works have sustained us for many decades now and the thrust of in  your work in terms of critical pedagogy, cultural studies, youth culture  and global studies in communication provides both a powerful  theoretical lens and a practical critique of contemporary neoliberal  society. I know these interests did not develop chronologically and  there are many overlapping characteristics. It would be interesting to  hear of the evolution of your thought in terms of these perspectives and  what you think is required to be a critical thinker today, in an age of  global media.</strong></p>
<p><strong>HG: </strong>My interest in critical pedagogy grew out of my  experience as a secondary school teacher. I came of age in the 1960s as a  teacher, and there was a great deal of latitude in what we were allowed  to teach then. I taught a couple of seminars in social studies and  focused on feminist studies, theories of alienation and a range of other  important social issues. While I had no trouble finding critical  content, including progressive films I used to rent from the Quakers  (Society of Friends), I did not know how to theorize the various  approaches to teaching I tried in the classroom. This all came to a head  when an assistant principle confronted me after class once and demanded  that I not put the students in a circle while teaching the class. I  really could not defend my position theoretically. Fortunately, I was  introduced to Paulo Freire&#8217;s Pedagogy of the Oppressed and from then on  my interest in radical pedagogy began to develop. My interest in young  people also developed during that time, though I don&#8217;t believe I had any  idea that it would later become a serious object of scholarship and  political intervention for me. After graduating from Carnegie-Mellon  University in 1977, I became deeply involved with the work being  produced around the sociology of education in England, the work of  Bowles and Gintis on the political economy of schooling as well as the  Marxist ethnographic work developed by Paul Willis at the Birmingham  Center for Cultural Studies. All of this scholarship was heavily  influenced by various shades of Marxism and while I learned a great deal  from it, I felt that it erred on the side of political economy and did  not say enough about either resistance, pedagogy or the importance of  cultural politics. The structural nature of this work was gloomy, over  determined and left little room for seizing upon contradictions,  developing a theory of power that did not collapse into domination or  imagining a language of struggle and hope.</p>
<p>I began to look elsewhere for theoretical models to develop a more  comprehensive understanding of schooling and its relationship to larger  social, economic and cultural forces and found it in the work of  contemporary critical theorists, especially those of the Frankfurt  School. I drew upon critical theory to challenge the then-dominant  culture of positivism as well as the overemphasis on the political  economy of schooling. Theory and Resistance in Education was the most  well-known outcome of that investigation. And while it is considered a  classic in some quarters, I must say that I had a hard time publishing  my work in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Work in educational theory  and practice in the United States was dominated by Routledge press,  which was rather insular in its refusal to publish scholarship that  moved outside of the parameters of Marxism and political economy. I was  fortunate at that time to meet Roger Simon who not only published my  work in Curriculum Inquiry but also taught me a great deal about how to  theorize matters of pedagogy and schooling. Roger was and is brilliant,  and his work in my estimation far exceeded anything being published on  critical education at the time, especially his book Teaching Against the  Grain. I believe that Theory and Resistance in Education would never  have been written if it had not been for my ongoing conversations with  Roger.</p>
<p>In the 1970s and 80s, I developed a friendship with Donaldo Macedo and  Paulo Freire, and we soon started an education series with Bergin and  Garvey that later became the Greenwood series. It opened up a new space  for publishing a variety of work from theorists dealing with critical  pedagogy and educational theory more broadly. Crucial to my own  conception of pedagogy is that I saw it as a moral and political  practice that was about more than analyzing classrooms and schools.  Pedagogy for me was central to proclaiming the power and necessity of  ideas, knowledge and culture as central to any viable definition of  politics, and the goal of living in a just world with others. Pedagogy  remains a crucial political resource in theorizing the importance of  establishing a formative culture conducive to creating subjects and  values that can sustain a substantive democracy.</p>
<p>I was also deeply influenced in the 1980s by the cultural studies  movement in the U.S. and England, particularly the work of Larry  Grossberg, Meaghan Morris, Paul Gilroy, Paul Willis, Angela McRobbie,  Richard Johnson and Stuart Hall. The early work in cultural studies on  education and youth was very important to my own theoretical  development. Not only did it emphasize the importance of pedagogy inside  of the academy, but Raymond Williams opened up the concept with an  exploration of what he called “permanent education” and offered the  beginning of a theoretical framework for taking seriously the  educational force of the wider culture. At that point, I attempted to  revive the centrality of pedagogy for cultural studies, particularly  given that many of the theorists who followed Williams seem either to  display little interest in it or to assume that it meant teaching  cultural studies in schools. Pedagogy in this case had become the  present absence in cultural studies, just as youth had become the  present absence among left theorizing in general. While there was  considerable talk about class, race and gender, there were very few  people writing in the U.S. about the plight of young people and the  transformation from a society of production to a society of consumption,  or as Zygmunt Bauman points out, the move from solid modernity to  liquid modernity. Young people, especially minorities of class and  color, were under siege in a particularly harsh way at the beginning of  the 1980s, and there were very few people addressing what I called the  “war on youth.” I argued then and continue to insist that since the  1980s we have seen a series of political, economic and cultural shifts  that mark the beginning of a form of economic Darwinism, on the one  hand, and the rise of the punishing state, on the other. And one  consequence of the merging of these two movements is this war on youth. I  have attempted to chart and engage the shifting parameters of the war  on youth in a number of books, with the recent and perhaps most  definitive being Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability?</p>
<p>In the age of Reagan and Thatcher, neoliberalism was becoming  normalized all over the globe. This was particularly evident to me by  the early 1990s as neoliberal capitalism became more ruthless,  consolidated and poisonous in its ever expanding support for a culture  of cruelty and a survival-of-the-fittest ethic in which market-driven  values and relations acted as the template for judging all aspects of  social life. By transforming society into the image of the market, the  space and conditions for thinking outside of market values and relations  became more difficult, and one particularly grim consequence was the  demolition of non-market values, public spheres, and forms of community.  As democratic social forms diminished, so did social values, the public  good, social responsibility and the very nature of politics. This was a  very destructive moment for both the U.S. and the rest of the world.  Just as corporate sovereignty replaced or weakened political  sovereignty, the attack on the social state intensified, the power of  capital became detached from the traditional politics of the nation  state, the punishing state was on the rise and there emerged a new set  of economic and social formations in which social protections were  weakened, social problems were increasingly criminalized and all public  spheres were subjected to the forces of privatization and  commodification, especially public and higher education.</p>
<p>Under neoliberalism, we have witnessed the rise of an unfettered  free-market ideology and economic Darwinism in which market values  supplant civic values. Everything is for sale. A hyper-individualism is  celebrated. Profit-making is seen as the essence of democracy, and the  obligations of citizenship are reduced to the practice of consuming.  This is a system in which a dehumanizing mode of consumerism and the  unencumbered concentration of capital are matched by the endless  disposing of goods, rendering even people now redundant and extraneous.  This is also a system in which everything is privatized, with one grave  consequence being that the public collapses into the private. It becomes  increasingly difficult to translate private concerns into public  issues. My work in the last decade has aimed at connecting neoliberal  forms of public pedagogy and authoritarian disciplinary practices with  the rise of new modes of individualism and what it means to make such  forces visible in order to collectively resist them. This project has  been deeply influenced by the work of diverse figures such as Pierre  Bourdieu, Edward Said, Zygmunt Bauman, Hannah Arendt, Nancy Fraser, C.  Wright Mills, Stanley Aronowitz and more recently David L. Clark.</p>
<p>Bourdieu&#8217;s work on neoliberalism and Bauman&#8217;s work on liquid modernity  and the transformation of the public sphere are treasure troves of  insight regarding the changing conditions of modernity, the politics of  consumerism and the call for new modes of ethical responsibility.  Arendt’s work on authoritarianism and its potentially recurring  conditions, albeit in new forms, along with Nancy Fraser’s brilliant  work on feminist public spheres provided me with a new language to think  about the institutions and spaces necessary for a formative culture  that makes democratic modes of agency and subjectivity possible. Said&#8217;s  and Bourdieu&#8217;s work on the responsibility of academics as public  intellectuals had a profound effect on my scholarship. Similarly, C.  Wright Mills deeply influenced me on the importance of connecting  private issues to public considerations, the centrality of cultural  apparatuses in the transformation of political culture and the role  public intellectuals might play as agents of change.</p>
<p>Stanley Aronowitz is arguably the most brilliant public intellectual in  North America. His broad understanding of various domains of knowledge  and his ability to bring vastly different issues together and to engage  them in relation to a larger totality is a model for how to do  scholarship that is public, rigorous and dialectical. Finally, I would  be remiss to not underscore the more recent influence of my colleague,  David L. Clark.  His brilliance—which never fails to astound me—has been  instrumental in fine tuning my knowledge of critical theory, Derrida,  and a range of other theoretical traditions that he engages and writes  about in ways that are as insightful as they are poetic. David’s sense  of solidarity and commitment is remarkable in an academy that  increasingly seems addicted to the insularities of careerism, cronyism  and the need to comfort students—now viewed as customers with rights  rather than obligations—rather than prepare them intellectually for a  world that needs to be engaged, not merely enjoyed.</p>
<p>To be an intellectual in the current historical juncture is not only to  rethink the profound changes wrought by the rise and power of the new  media and the ways in which it has transformed the very concept of the  social, communal, and political, but to redefine what it means to be a  public intellectual capable of working across a number of disciplines  and speaking to a variety of audiences. The old model of the  intellectual writing and speaking in a narrow and obtuse theoretical  language seems unproductive at this particular point in history. Theory  needs to be rigorous and accessible, and it needs to address not merely  the outer limits of disciplinary scholarship but also important social  problems. Equally important, it needs to include and engage people who  are not versed in the specialized disciplinary vocabularies of the  academy. Theory is neither a metaphor for scholasticism and formalism  nor is it politically irrelevant. Nor can it be dismissed as something  distinctly American (Terry Eagleton) or French, or a thing exotic or  foreign. Theory is essential and inescapable and cannot be so neatly  abstracted from the responsibilities of political criticism, but how we  do it and for what reason is a more problematic and troubling issue.  What does it mean to use theory rather than simply apply it as many  graduate students and professors tend to do?</p>
<p>Theory is the enemy of “common sense,” and hence hated by many of our  newly minted anti-intellectual authoritarian populists now running  against Obama in the 2012 elections. Of course, there is another  important question regarding when theory becomes toxic, an immunity  against immunity, turning in on itself, functioning, to use Derrida’s  term, as kind of autoimmunity. Given the bankruptcy of the current  anti-intellectual politics of the “self-evident,” theory is all we have  left and functions as a kind of tool box to be used to break the  consensus of common sense, develop better forms of knowledge, and  promote more just social relations. Theory is an indispensable resource  in the task of thinking through and developing new modes agency, power,  and action in the service of connecting knowledge and power, meaning and  social relevance, and private troubles and public issues. Clearly,  self-reflection, mastering broad bodies of knowledge, and engaging with  the new technologies as a way to reach broader audiences all matter—just  as it is only through theory that we can recover what survives of the  defeated, the repressed, the marginalized, and those ideas relegated as  obsolete, un-American, and indigestible. But there is also something  more fundamental at work in this project. The global left doesn’t need  to abandon theory; it needs to find a new language in order to move away  from the kinds of fractured politics that have dominated Western  societies since the 1980s.</p>
<p>In a similar manner, the politics of identity has to guard against  becoming exclusionary and needs to be rethought as part of a much  broader set of connections and projects. In the 1980s, I believe that a  group of highly influential feminist theorists in education did a great  deal of damage politically and ethically to the understanding of both  critical pedagogy and radical education as a practice of transformation  and freedom. Rather than build upon and critically engage the complex  traditions out of which this work developed, interrogating both its  strengths and weaknesses, treating it as a developing and ongoing  theoretical discourse and practice, they falsely labeled critical  pedagogy as the enemy of empowerment. Operating out of comforting  absolutes on the model of us versus them, this rhetoric of simplistic  oppositions furthered a manipulative discourse and a climate for  political opportunism. A problematic type of essentialism and  reductionism structured this work. Rather than engage a complex  tradition of work, it simply demonized it, reducing it to one side of a  binarism in which all doubt, mediation, complexity and nuance  disappeared. What made this intervention even worse was that it was  followed by an endless stream of endorsements by supine white male  academics who cited this work to prove their own faux feminist  credentials. This was truly as ideologically disingenuous as it was  politically reactionary, or even worse, dangerous. Unaware of its own  refusal to engage in nuanced and thoughtful analytic and deconstructive  work, this type of feminist educational theory put forth its own  mechanical and positivist calculations as if such work offered political  guarantees, buttressed by the absolutism and vitriol in which it was  sometimes delivered. This was a symptomatic of what a particular version  of identity politics can become when it is driven by moralism, a  politics of purity, a logic of certainty and a disregard for critical  and scholarly exchange. There is more at work here than simply hubris  and a denial of the complexity of the work under review; there is also a  claim to moral and political clarity that actually produces its  opposite. Fortunately, some of this work was offset by a smaller number  of feminist scholars working in critical pedagogy who rejected this type  of friend/enemy distinction. This was particularly evident at the time  in work by Linda Brodkey, bell hooks, Deborah Britzman, Sharon Todd,  Chandra Mohanty, Sharon Crowley, Lynn Worsham and later by Robin Truth  Goodman and Susan Searls Giroux.</p>
<p>Rather than fire missiles at each other, public intellectuals need to  address how we can effectively understand our differences as part of a  broader and more powerful movement for engaging in critical exchanges,  pushing the frontiers of transformative knowledge, extending democratic  struggles and addressing the massive suffering and hardships,  particularly for young people, now being caused by various  fundamentalist and authoritarian institutions, policies and practices.  As my partner, Susan Searls Giroux, has recently concluded with  characteristic precision, “As a consequence of our devastatingly  misguided priorities and our negligence we have, in short, produced  smart bombs and explosive children.”</p>
<p>We need to make connections, build broad social movements, make  pedagogy central to politics and dismantle the reactionary forms of  neoliberalism, racism and media culture that have become normalized. We  need to take up and develop more relational theories concerned with  broader totalities and the ways in which the forces of difference,  identity, local politics, cultural pedagogy and other social formations  interact in ways that speak to new and more threatening forms of global  politics. Power is now free floating; it has no allegiances except to  the accumulation of capital and is not only much more destructive but  also more difficult to contain. Any viable notion of politics has to be  relational and connected; it has to think within and beyond the  boundaries of nation states, invent new vocabularies, invest in more  broad-based groups beyond simply workers, address the plight of young  people and resurrect the power of the social state and democracy as a  radical mode of governance and politics. This suggests taking matters of  specificity and context seriously, while at the same time changing the  level of magnification to a more global view.</p>
<p>One of the most important considerations necessary for a new vision of  politics is incorporating economic rights and social protections into  the political sphere. Political and personal rights become dysfunctional  without social rights. As Zygmunt Bauman reminds us, freedom of choice  and the exercise of political and personal rights become a cruel joke in  a society that does not provide social rights—that is, some form of  collectively endorsed protections that provide the time and space for  the poor and disenfranchised to participate in the political sphere and  help shape modes of governance. In order to exercise any real sense of  civic agency, people need protections from those misfortunes and  hardships that are not of their own doing. At the same time, a movement  for democracy must challenge the erosion of social bonds, the crumbling  of communal cohesion and the withering of social responsibility that has  taken place under a neoliberal apparatus that promotes deregulation,  privatization and individualization. We also need to think in terms of  what it means to create the formative cultures necessary to fight  racism, celebrity culture, the culture and institutions of casino  capitalism, the assault on the environment and the growing inequality in  wealth and income that is destroying every vestige of democratic  politics in the world. We need a language that takes both history and  the current dangerous authoritarian period seriously, one that  recognizes, as Bauman points out, that shared humanity is the lifeboat.  Too many people on the left are acting as if they are living in the  nineteenth century and are completely out of touch with the new  technologies, modes of domination and emerging social formations that  are taking shape all over the world.</p>
<p>A viable politics in the present has to take seriously the premise that  knowledge must be meaningful in order to be critical, in order to be  transformative. This is about more than reclaiming the virtues of  dialogue, exchange and translation. It is about recovering a politics  and inventing a language that can create democratic public spheres in  which new subjects and identities can be produced that are capable of  recognizing and addressing the plight of the other and struggling  collectively to expand and deepen the ongoing struggle for justice,  freedom and democratization. The global left needs to be thorough,  accessible and rigorous in our critiques, especially amid the political  and cultural illiteracy produced by neoliberalism&#8217;s cultural  apparatuses. But we also need a language of hope, one that is realistic  rather than romantic about the challenges the planet is facing, and yet  electrified by a realization that things can be different, that  possibilities can not only be imagined but engaged, fought for and  realized in collective struggles.</p>
<p>Opposing the forces of domination is important, but it does not go far  enough. We must move beyond a language of pointless denunciations and  offer instead a language that moves forward with the knowledge, skills  and social relations necessary for the creation of new modes of agency,  social movements and democratic social policies. We need to open up the  realm of human possibility, recognize that history is not closed, that  justice is never complete and that democracy can never be fully settled.  I fervently believe in the need for both critique and hope, and have  faith that progressives can develop the public spheres, formative  cultures, and social movements that make democratic convictions and  dreams possible. Democratic ideals, social relations, and values need  public spheres to nourish them. Such spaces can be found  in  schools,  classrooms, workshops, newspapers, online journals, community colleges  and other spaces where knowledge, power, ethics, and justice can merge  to create new subjectivities, new modes of civic courage and new hope  for the future. Our work has only just begun.</p>
<p><em>Full disclsoure: Henry Girioux is a member of Truthout&#8217;s Board of  Directors.</em></p>
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