Café! Café! CLAIS Latin American Studies Majors and Fellows
Join LatAm Studies majors and faculty, CLAIS fellows, staff, and student workers for light refreshments and good conversation!
Join LatAm Studies majors and faculty, CLAIS fellows, staff, and student workers for light refreshments and good conversation!
Dr. Melanie Y. White is an Assistant Professor of Afro-Caribbean Studies in the Department of African American Studies and the Women’s and Gender Studies Program at Georgetown University. She holds a Ph.D. in Africana Studies from Brown University, an M.A. in African and African Diaspora Studies from the University of Texas at Austin, and a B.A. in Cultural Anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania.
What is the future of economic growth in the face of climate change, and how should we measure it? How will low-income countries achieve significant poverty reduction without using carbon-intensive approaches or further degrading the environment? Have we been able to measure the economic value to natural resources accurately? How well do macroeconomic models capture the assumptions in climate models, and vice versa?
What is the future of economic growth in the face of climate change, and how should we measure it? How will low-income countries achieve significant poverty reduction without using carbon-intensive approaches or further degrading the environment? Have we been able to measure the economic value to natural resources accurately? How well do macroeconomic models capture the assumptions in climate models, and vice versa?
In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, join the Yale Latino Networking Group (YLNG) Co-Chairs, Janitza Matta and Ilsa Oltero, for a cooking demonstration of sofrito on Wednesday, September 27th from 5-7 pm at 60 Temple Street, 1st Floor Conference Room. Supplies will be provided for all attendees.
Sofrito is a flavorful and aromatic base used in many Hispanic and Latin American cuisines. While it may not be exclusive to Hispanic traditions, it has become a significant and widely recognized component in Hispanic and Latin culinary cultures.
All students interested in the Global Affairs major and Global Affairs courses are invited to an info session with faculty, staff, and students to learn more about the major and the application process. The Global Affairs major is designed to give students the social science research tools necessary to solve today’s most pressing global problems.
Light refreshments will be served.
This conference focuses on the ways in which the protest- in particular young feminist and student protest in México City- can be visualized, translated, most of all read and theorized as crucially pedagogical and critically political. Much of what is expressed, drawn, painted during the protest (graffiti, murals, pintas) fades or vanishes below the surface. My aim is to stay with what vanishes and fades, with what is incommensurable or difficult to be narrated or placed together, and may be constitutive of a political discourse or a pedagogical intervention.
“Las estrategias y acciones de las Transnational Advocacy Networks en defensa de las mujeres en situación de violencia aplicadas a los casos de Brasil y México” Expone: Eduarda Lattanzi.
“El rol del empoderamiento jurídico en la lucha contra la violencia de género”
Expone: Suyai Lutz.
Zoom link: https://yale.zoom.us/j/93677330894