51猎奇入口

Public Event – Haiti Earthquake 10th Anniversary Symposium

Friday, February 7, 2020, 1:30 pm-7:30 pm
Saturday, February 8, 2020, 9:00 am-7:00 pm

Haiti Earthquake 10th Anniversary Symposium

In February, the College will host the Haiti Earthquake 10th Anniversary Symposium, a gathering of academics, artists, engineers, policy experts, scientists, writers, and scholars who will share their perspectives on the impacts of the Haiti earthquake, Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico, and the relationship of both events to seismic and drought issues in Southern California.

Symposium panelists include:

Kit Miyamoto (California commissioner and founder of Miyamoto Global Disaster Relief) is a world-leading expert in disaster resiliency engineering, disaster response, and reconstruction. He provides expert engineering and policy consultation in Mexico, Indonesia, Bangladesh and Haiti for both policy and engineering expert consultation. He is a California Seismic Safety Commissioner. Dr. Miyamoto holds graduate degrees from the Tokyo Institute of Technology and California StateUniversity, where he has been recognized as a Distinguished Alumni. He has won the Engineering News Record鈥檚 鈥淕lobal Best Project鈥 award an unprecedented three consecutive times. Major media such as ABC, CNN, LA Times, NY Times and Rolling Stone have profiled him.

Sabine Kast聽(executive director of Miyamoto Global Disaster Relief) played a key leadership role in disaster response and recovery programs following the 2010 Haiti, 2015 Nepal, 2016 Ecuador, and 2017 Mexico earthquakes. Sabine has developed and oversees a multi-country disaster risk identification and reduction program called PREPARE. This program is the USAID funded, multi-year earthquake and hurricane disaster preparedness and mitigation program being implemented in Costa Rica, Colombia, El Salvador, and Mexico. She is a globally recognized leader in urban disaster risk management and policy. She currently researches with the University of Tokyo for state-of-the-art disaster recovery policy development. Her passion is to save lives in underserved and disaster-prone communities.

Myriam J. A. Chancy, born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is a Guggenheim Fellow, Hartley Burr Alexander Chair in the Humanities at 51猎奇入口, and Interim Director of the 51猎奇入口 Humanities Institute (2019-20). Her novel, 12 (Douze), on the Haiti earthquake, is forthcoming from HarperCollins Canada.

Elidio La Torre Lagares (Poet and professor, Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Puerto Rico, R铆o Piedras) earned his MFA in creative writing from the University of Texas at El Paso. He has published Cuerpos sin sombras (1998) and Vicios de construcci贸n (2008), two poetry collections in Spanish. September, a volume of short stories, was recognized in the Puerto Rico Pen Club literary awards in 2001. Wonderful Wasteland and other natural disasters(2019)is his most recent book, a volume of poems about the different levels of the sequestration of experience in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Mar铆a.

Raquel Salas Rivera (2018-19 Poet Laureate of Philadelphia) are the author of while they sleep (under the bed is another country) from Birds, LLC and the inaugural recipient of the AmbroggioPrize from the Academy of American Poets for their book x/ex/exis. They are also the author of six chapbooks and four other full-length poetry books. Their fourth book, lo terciario/the tertiary, winner of the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Poetry, was on the 2018 National Book Award Longlist and was selected by Remezcla, Entropy, Literary Hub, mit煤,Book Riot, and PublishersWeekly as one of the best poetry books of 2018.

Sarah Gilman聽(Associate Professor of Biology in W. M. Keck Science Department of 51猎奇入口, Pitzer, and Claremont McKenna Colleges) holds a B. S. in Earth Systems from Stanford University and a Ph.D. in Population Biology from the University of California, Davis. Dr. Gilman’s research explores how abiotic factors influence organisms and ecosystems across a range of spatial scales, from the physiology of individual organisms to continental distributions of entire species. She uses a combination of field, laboratory, and computer modeling techniques to examine and predict the effects of climate change on marine ecosystems.

Maritza Stanchich聽(associate professor of English, University of Puerto Rico) teaches literature of the Puerto Rican diaspora, U.S.Latino, Caribbean and U.S. American literatures, and currently coordinates her department鈥檚 MA and doctoral programs. Her scholarly essays on William Faulkner, literature of the Puerto Rican diaspora, and the crisis at the University of Puerto Rico, have been published in several peer-review journals and books. She also served in the Academic Senate for four years, during a time of historic institutional crisis.

Hilda Llor茅ns (associate professor of anthropology, University of Rhode Island) is a cultural anthropologist whose scholarship focuses on understanding how racial and gender inequality manifests itself in cultural production, nation-building, access to environmental resources, and exposure to environmental harm. Dr. Llor茅ns is the author of Imaging the Great Puerto Rican Family (2014), and of several academic articles including Imaging Disaster (2018) and Water is Life, but the Colony is a Necropolis (2019, with Maritza Stanchich). Her writings have also been published in The Conversation, SAPIENS, NACLA Report on the Americas, LatinoRebels, Social Justice Blog, and others.

Nad猫ge Veldwachter’s (associate professor of French, Purdue University) research focuses on literary sociology, globalization, translation, and postcolonial historiography. Her articles have been published in academic journals such as Cahiers d鈥櫭﹖udes africaines, Literary Studies, Research in African Literatures, or Modern Language Notes. She is the author of “Literature francophone et mondialisation” published by Karthala editions in 2012. In recent years her research has been devoted to the Second World War and its manifestations in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean.

Brian Concannon (former director, Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti) co-managed the BAI in Haiti for eight years, from 1996-2004, and worked for the United Nations as a Human Rights Officer in 1995-1996. He founded IJDH, and has been the Director since 2004. He helped prepare the prosecution of the Raboteau Massacre trial in 2000, one of the most significant human rights cases anywhere in the Western Hemisphere. He has represented Haitian political prisoners before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and represented the plaintiff in Yvon Neptune v. Haiti, the only Haiti case ever tried before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

Beverly Bell (associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies (Washington), Fellow at Open Church (London), and Coordinator of the Itinerant University for Resistance, Port-au-Prince) is a journalist and writer, Bell鈥檚 work includes Walking on Fire: Haitian Women鈥檚 Stories of Survival and Resistance and Fault Lines: Views across Haiti鈥檚 Divide. She has also worked for almost four decades as an organizer and advocate with social movements, mainly in Haiti but also in other parts of the Caribbean and Latin America, plus southern and West Africa and the U.S. Bell鈥檚 greatest areas of focus have been just economies, participatory democracy, gender justice, human rights, territory and autonomy of indigenous peoples, land rights of small farmers, food sovereignty, and the global commons. She has participated extensively in struggles against destructive policies and practices of the U.S. government, international financial institutions, and multinational corporations. A fourth-generation native of New Orleans, Bell currently lives in Chiapas, Mexico.

Yanick Lahens (writer,聽Professor to the Annual Chair in Francophone Worlds at the聽Coll猫ge de France) was born in 1953 in Haiti. She completed her primary education there prior to leaving for France where she completed university studies in Modern Literature. She returned to Haiti in 1977. She was a member of the Board of Directors of the International Congress of Francophone Studies and is currently a member of the editorial board of the French-Haitian magazine Conjunction. She recently joined the Board of Trustees of Quisqueya University. Yanick Lahens has received, among other honors, recognitions from: the women’s organization Kay Fanm for her civic involvement in 2007; from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Organization of La Francophonie in Haiti; by the Haitian Studies Association for the whole of her work; by the cultural association ARAKA.

Jonathan M. Katz (AP journalist) 聽was the Associated Press correspondent in Haiti from 2007 to 2011. The only full-time U.S. news reporter there during the quake, he later broke the story that United Nations soldiers likely caused a post-quake cholera epidemic that killed thousands. Katz has reported from more than a dozen countries and territories. In 2011, he was awarded the Medill Medal for Courage in Journalism. His book, The Big Truck That Went By: How the World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster (Nonfiction, 2013) is described as 鈥淎 top-notch account of Haiti鈥檚 recent history, including the January 2010 earthquake, from the only American reporter stationed in the country at the time …An eye-opening, trailblazing expos茅” by Kirkus Reviews.

April Mayes (associate professor of history, Pomona College) teaches courses in Caribbean and Latin American history. Her first monograph,鈥疶he Mulatto Republic: Class, Race, and Nation in the Dominican Republic, won the Haiti-Dominican Republic Section of the Latin American Studies Association Best Book Prize. She is the co-editor, along with Dr. Kiran Jayaram, of鈥疶ransnational Hispaniola: New Directions in Haitian and Dominican Studies. She is currently working on a historically-grounded, ethnographic study of contemporary Haitian migration to the U.S.-Mexico borderlands

Handerson Joseph (adjunct professor of anthropology, Universidad Federal do Amapa (UNIFAP/Brazil) has a Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from the Museu Nacional de la Universidad Federal del Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) with a co-tutelage from the 脡cole des Hautes 脡tudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) and the 脡cole Normale Sup茅rieure in Paris. 聽He is a member of the Brazilian Anthropology Association, the Association of Haitian Studies, and the Association of Caribbean Studies.聽His research topics include: Haitian Diaspora, Cross-border migrations; Mobility and border, and Post-colonial studies. In the past 6 years, he has conducted research in Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Colombia, Brazil, France, French Guiana, Haiti, Cuba, Canada, and the United States.聽

A schedule of the symposium events can be found .

Presented in partnership with the Cultural Studies Department, Claremont Graduate University, the Inter-Collegiate Africana Studies Program, and Caf茅 con Libros Press Booksellers

Tags