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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160906T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161218T170000
DTSTAMP:20260419T103359
CREATED:20180725T203931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190102T150529Z
UID:40810101647-1473156000-1482080400@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Bruce Dorfman: PAST PRESENT Paintings and Drawings in Combined Media
DESCRIPTION:Lecture: September 23\, 6:00 – 7:00 p.m. in Wilson Hall Auditorium \nOpening reception: Fri. September. 23\, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. \nBruce Dorfman has had fifty-three solo exhibitions throughout the United States and abroad. His work has been presented in numerous museum and university collections and gallery group exhibitions worldwide\, including currently “Ways and Means: A New Look at Process in Art”\, July 18 – October 7\, 2016 at UBS Art Gallery\, NYC; June Kelly Gallery\, NYC and “Making/Breaking Traditions: The Teachers of Ai Weiwei”\, Art Students League\, NYC (2014). \nDorfman is the recipient of many awards\, grants and fellowships including: New York State Council on the Arts; Fulbright Fellowship; Rockefeller Foundation; U.S. Department of State; New York World’s Fair Invitational; National Academy of Design; Butler Institute of American Art and a major grant from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. His work has been written about in The New York Times\, Art in America\, ARTnews and City Arts. \nBruce Dorfman has taught at the Art Students League of New York since 1964. Dorfman also taught at the New School\, Syracuse University\, the Everson Museum\, and was Artist-in-Residence at the Norton Museum\, Fla. From 1993 to 1996\, he was a guest-artist at museums\, and art institutions in Venezuela\, Portugal and France. \nBruce Dorfman studied at the Art Students League of New York. He is a graduate of the University of Iowa. \nBruce Dorfman is represented by the June Kelly Gallery\, NYC. \nFor more information: www.brucedorfman.com
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/bruce-dorfman-past-present-paintings-and-drawings-in-combined-media/
LOCATION:Joan and Robert Rechnitz Hall
CATEGORIES:Art and Design,Arts at Monmouth,Lectures,School of Humanities and Social Sciences
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/07/Media560.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161020T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161220T190000
DTSTAMP:20260419T103359
CREATED:20180725T203930Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190301T181756Z
UID:40810101644-1476954000-1482260400@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Bob Dylan: Photographs by Daniel Kramer Curated by the GRAMMY Museum ® at LA LIVE
DESCRIPTION:Curated by the GRAMMY Museum ® at LA LIVE \nCurated by the GRAMMY Museum\, in cooperation with Daniel Kramer\, Daniel Kramer: Photographs of Bob Dylan features more than 40 of Kramer’s photographs from his time on tour with Dylan in 1964 and 1965. Kramer’s photographs are a striking\, intimate account of the folk singer’s metamorphosis into a rock star. This photographic “backstage view” of the singer/songwriter showcases key moments in Dylan’s musical career during one of the most dynamic periods in American history. These seminal pictures of Dylan not only revealed the rising young star to international audiences\, but set a standard by which all other rock portraits would be judged. \nOpening Reception: Nov. 11. from 5-7 PM\nDaniel Kramer and Bob Santelli from the GRAMMY Museum will give a talk during the opening reception.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/bob-dylan-photographs-by-daniel-kramer-curated-by-the-grammy-museum-at-la-live/
LOCATION:Pollak Gallery
CATEGORIES:Arts at Monmouth,School of Humanities and Social Sciences
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/07/Dylan560.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161206T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161206T173000
DTSTAMP:20260419T103359
CREATED:20180725T203819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133424Z
UID:40810101452-1481045400-1481045400@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:The Barbera-Villegas International Social Work Lecture
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/the-barbera-villegas-international-social-work-lecture/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161206T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161206T190000
DTSTAMP:20260419T103359
CREATED:20180725T203817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190301T190913Z
UID:40810101449-1481045400-1481050800@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Barbera-Villegas International Social Work Lecture: Lena Dominelli
DESCRIPTION:Barbera-Villegas International Social Work Lecture\nDecember 6\, 2016\n5:30 p.m.\, Wilson Hall Auditorium \n5 p.m.\, Reception\, Wilson Hall Auditorium Lobby \n \nLena Dominelli\, Professor of Applied Social Sciences\, University of Durham\, United Kingdom\nBeyond Social Exclusion: Incorporating Environmental Justice with Social Justice\nLena Dominelli\, Professor of Applied Social Sciences and Academician in the Academy of the Learned Societies for Social Sciences\, is an experienced educator\, practitioner and researcher. Professor Dominelli is also a Co-Director for the Institute of Hazard\, Risk and Resilience Research with specific responsibility for the Vulnerability and Resilience Programme. In this latter capacity\, she endeavours to bring people together in research dialogues across the physical sciences\, social sciences\, health sciences\, arts and humanities. She is currently also the Chair of the International Association of Schools of Social Work’s (IASSW’s) Committee on Disaster Interventions\, Climate Change and Sustainability. \nProfessor Dominelli argues passionately for the realization of human freedom from social inequalities and injustices in her writings\, policy-making forums and communities seeking to change their social and physical environments. Her current research interests include: climate change and environmental social work; globalization; social and community development; social change; women’s well-being and welfare; motherhood; fatherhood; child well-being and children’s rights. \nAmong Lena’s most recent single authored books are: Social Work in a Globalizing World (2010); Introducing Social Work (2009); Anti-Racist Social Work (2008\, 3rd Edn.); Women and Community Action (2006\, 2nd Edn.); Social Work: Theory and Practice in a Changing Profession (2004). Key edited works include Social Work: Themes\, Issues and Dilemmas (3rd Edn.); Critical Practice in Social Work (2nd Edn.); and Practicing Social Work in a Complex World; (all 3 edited with R Adams and M Payne\, 2009); and Broadening Horizons: International Exchanges in Social Work (edited with W Thomas Bernard\, 2003). \nLena has received accolades for her contributions to social welfare in the international arena\, including a medal from the Social Affairs Committee of the French Senate; and an Honorary Doctorate from the Univeristy of KwaZulu Natal in Durban\, South Africa. \nAbstract to the Presentation by Professor Dominelli \nWealthy societies are becoming increasingly polarized as wealth is accumulated by a few wealthy individuals\, mainly but not all\, from the global North\, to the detriment of working class children\, women\, older people\, people from black and minority ethnic groups\, asylum seekers and refugees. Wealth distribution has become so distorted that Oxfam (2016) has published\, An Economy for the 1%\, to argue that 62 individuals hold more wealth between them than 50 per cent of the world’s population (3.6 billion people). Moreover\, 53 of this super-wealthy elite group are men. According to the Forbes list of billionaires\, the world’s richest man (Bill Gates) holds twice the wealth of the richest woman (Christy Walton). Women also hold only 24 Chief Executive Officer (CEO) positions in the Fortune 500 companies. While CEO salaries have become hugely inflated\, salaries at the bottom end have remained stagnant or been reduced. For example\, American CEOs have seen their salaries increase by 54 per cent since 2009 while salaries at the bottom have not moved. In India\, a CEO earns 416 times the salary of the average worker. Women are concentrated in the lowest-paid\, most precarious jobs\, including dangerous work in the sweatshops of the world. These inequalities have been exacerbated in Europe through what I term ‘state-induced inequalities’ whereby public expenditure cuts and privatized welfare states are becoming the norm\, and leading to rising social exclusion and inequality. Discourses about social justice are becoming marginalized\, and environmental justice is scarcely considered\, including in the post-Paris Agreement world.. The loss of re-distributive transfers through the welfare state mean that more and more people are struggling at society’s margins\, merely to survive. Substantial numbers of people rely on food-banks and begging in major\, affluent cities like London and Paris\, as institutionalized solidarity in the shape of welfare benefits as of right become harder and harder to obtain. \nIncome inequalities lead to other forms of inequalities\, including lost opportunities for the full growth and development of the talents of an individual. The ravages of a neo-liberal industrial model of development produce more losers than winners – the ‘one per cent and the rest’ as the Occupy Wall Street Movement put it. Intervening to prevent its march across the world demands a more sophisticated analysis than is evident to the public which is fed myths by a media that is dominated by right-wingers and right-wing politicians who have appropriated the words of progressive-minded individuals and turned them to their advantage. Such messages have legitimated racist discourses and intensified despair\, social protests\, loss of solidarity and empathy with those in difficulty\, and lack of hope for a future that can deliver basic rights ranging from civic to environmental rights for all peoples living within a particular nation-state. In this presentation\, I consider what social workers can do to promote a form of social justice that includes care for people\, plants\, animals and the planet in meeting human needs.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/barbera-villegas-international-social-work-lecture-lena-dominelli/
LOCATION:The Great Hall Auditorium
CATEGORIES:Alumni,Community Member,Current Student,Faculty,School of Social Work
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/07/Lena-Dominelli-Event-Promo.jpg
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