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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250401T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250401T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T133253
CREATED:20250318T194957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250404T215046Z
UID:3390-1743534000-1743541200@racepowerpolicy.org
SUMMARY:2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series: From Paradigm to Power
DESCRIPTION:  \nJoin us at The New School’s Auditorium on Tuesday\, April 1 for the second event of our spring 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, From Paradigm to Power: Building a Just Political Economy for Health. Presented by the Institute’s Health and Political Economy Project (HPEP)\, this conversation will feature a public lecture from Acting Health Commissioner and Chief Medical Officer of the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Dr. Michelle Morse\, who will then join a panel with Darrick Hamilton\, Jamila Michener\, and Brian Smedley\, moderated by Dr. Dave Chokshi. This discussion will explore the kinds of health investments and policies\, power-building strategies\, and narratives we need to see real change. \nSpeakers: \n\nDr. Michelle Morse\, Acting Commissioner\, NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene\nJamila Michener\, Associate Professor of Government and Public Policy\, Cornell University\nBrian Smedley\, Senior Fellow\, Urban Institute\nDarrick Hamilton\, Founding Director\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy\nDr. Dave Chokshi\, Co-Chair\, Health and Political Economy Project\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy (host)\n\n  \nThis event is part of the 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, which will bring leading thinkers\, changemakers\, policymakers\, journalists\, and activists to The New School to present their perspectives and explore the intersections of race\, social stratification\, and political economy that inspire economic and racial justice.  \nRegister Now\n  \n\nPresented in partnership with the Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy and the Milano School of Policy\, Management\, and Environment at The New School.
URL:https://racepowerpolicy.org/event/2025-henry-cohen-lecture-series-paradigm-power/
LOCATION:The Auditorium\, 66 West 12th Street\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event Series,In-Person,Lecture,Panel
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250408T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250408T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T133253
CREATED:20250327T190137Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T190401Z
UID:3425-1744138800-1744146000@racepowerpolicy.org
SUMMARY:2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series: The Freedom Budget
DESCRIPTION:  \nJoin us at The New School’s Starr Foundation Hall on Tuesday\, April 8 for the third event of our spring 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, The Freedom Budget: From Civil Rights to Economic Rights. Featuring Nina Turner\, Cori Bush\, Tamieka Atkins\, and Ash-Lee Woodard Henderson\, the discussion will examine the enduring relevance of the 1966 Freedom Budget for All Americans—which aimed to eradicate poverty by tackling issues such as unemployment\, substandard wages\, poor housing and inadequate access to health services and education—in addressing the growing challenges and inequities of our contemporary political economy. Building upon this historical foundation\, the panel will explore how an updated vision integrating new policy ideas—such as Baby Bonds—can reignite the Freedom Budget in our present moment and achieve a new era of inclusive economic rights. \nSpeakers: \n\nNina Turner\, Senior Fellow\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy\nCori Bush\, Former Congresswoman\, MO 1st District\nTamieka Atkins\, CEO\, ProGeorgia\nAsh-Lee Woodard Henderson\, Organizer\, activist\, and movement strategist (moderator)\n\n  \nThis event is part of the 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, which will bring leading thinkers\, changemakers\, policymakers\, journalists\, and activists to The New School to present their perspectives and explore the intersections of race\, social stratification\, and political economy that inspire economic and racial justice.  \nRegister Now\n  \n\nPresented in partnership with the Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy and the Milano School of Policy\, Management\, and Environment at The New School. \n\nEVENT RECAP \nWe were honored to host The Honorable Nina Turner\, The Honorable Cori Bush\, and Tamieka Atkins for an insightful panel discussion moderated by Ash-Lee Woodard Henderson. \nThe conversation explored the historical context of the 1966 Freedom Budget for All Americans\, proposed by A. Philip Randolph\, Bayard Rustin\, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It emphasized the urgent need to reclaim the civil rights movement’s broad vision of economic rights\, rooted in President Franklin Roosevelt’s “Four Freedoms.” \nThe panel examined how proposals from the original Freedom Budget—such as a job guarantee\, guaranteed income\, and universal healthcare—are too often disconnected from their origins in the civil rights movement. Looking forward\, the panelists shared utopian visions that could inform a contemporary Freedom Budget\, including new ideas such as baby bonds. \nThey also addressed key barriers to achieving economic justice\, including the pernicious influence of dark money and corporate interests in U.S. politics\, the weaponization of identity by neoliberal and neo-fascist agendas\, and the urgent need for infrastructure to support individuals and movements working for systemic change.
URL:https://racepowerpolicy.org/event/the-freedom-budget/
LOCATION:Starr Foundation Hall\, 63 5th Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event Series,In-Person,Lecture,Panel
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250415T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250415T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T133253
CREATED:20250409T195148Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T185751Z
UID:3498-1744743600-1744750800@racepowerpolicy.org
SUMMARY:2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series: The Poetry of Economics
DESCRIPTION:  \nJoin us at The New School’s Starr Foundation Hall on Tuesday\, April 15 as our 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series continues with an intimate conversation featuring Pulitzer Prize-winning Mojave poet\, activist\, and educator Natalie Diaz and Institute Founding Director Darrick Hamilton on the poetry of economics\, with special remarks from The Rockefeller Foundation’s Chief Innovation Officer Zia Khan. \nTogether\, Diaz\, Hamilton\, and Khan will examine the relationship between art and capital while reflecting on the role of data and discourse in the movement for justice. \nSpeakers: \n\nNatalie Diaz\, Senior Fellow\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy; Poet; Activist\nDarrick Hamilton\, Founding Director\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy\nZia Khan\, Chief Innovation Officer\, The Rockefeller Foundation\n\nThis event is part of the 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, which brings leading thinkers\, changemakers\, policymakers\, journalists\, and activists to The New School to present their perspectives and explore the intersections of race\, social stratification\, and political economy that inspire economic and racial justice.  \nRegister Now\n  \n\nPresented in partnership with the Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy and the Milano School of Policy\, Management\, and Environment at The New School. \n\nEVENT RECAP \nOn Power\, Poetry and Paradigms: A Dialogue for a Just Economy\nBy Madeline Neighly\, Senior Strategist and Researcher \nWe are living through a moment of transition\, a rupture that lays bare the fragility of our institutions. In moments of change comes opportunity. In this liminal space between what was and what can be\, we are tasked not simply with critique but with construction. The Poetry of Economics: Data\, Discourse and Justice brought together Pulitzer Prize-winning Mojave poet\, activist and educator Natalie Diaz\, Institute Founding Director Darrick Hamilton\, and The Rockefeller Foundation’s Chief Innovation Officer\, Zia Khan\, to explore the moral architecture of our economy and to elevate the cultural\, emotional\, and structural conditions necessary to build a more just and humane future. \nThe Need for a New Paradigm \nZia Khan\, reflecting on time the three shared at the Bellagio Center\, opened with the reflection that we are witnessing the collapse of old norms\, which presents both danger and opportunity. What we build next will depend on whether we are bold enough to center people\, not just as economic agents but as full human beings embedded in community\, culture\, and care. \nWhile the discipline of economics purports to be value-neutral\, devoid of emotion or ethics\, it is suffused with values. To bring economics in conversation with poetry\, which makes room for questions\, allows us to ask questions around justice\, to ask what are the values that suffuse our economy and for whom do they work? \nLove and Power: The Foundations of Justice \nHamilton brought the moral clarity of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King\, Jr. into the room with the quote\, “Power properly understood is nothing but the ability to achieve purpose. It is the strength required to bring about social\, political\, and economic change. What is needed is the realization that power without love is reckless and abusive\, and love without power is sentimental and anemic.” \nThis\, the speakers agreed\, is the crux of our moment. Love and power must walk together. At the Institute this is not just abstract\, it is our foundation\, guiding our work on ensuring that policy is both rigorous and rooted in human flourishing. \nDiaz carried this forward\, reminding us of the origins of our words. “Data\,” she shared\, once meant “to give.” It was an act of generosity not the extraction it so often is today. Similarly\, “power” once described what was possible\, keeping us on the precipice of possibility. These origins matter. They remind us that our current understanding of these words themselves\, and thus our thinking\, has been narrowed and weaponized. Poetry\, however\, offers a different way to live and to think\, one that returns these words to the body\, to community\, to care. \nThe Dangerous Story \nAs their dialogue continued\, Hamilton and Diaz explored the question of stories—how they’re told\, who gets to tell them\, and what power they hold. Diaz warned that today’s silencing\, much of it self-imposed from fear\, is a freeze not only of speech but of imagination. The most dangerous story\, she reminded us\, is the one that asks how we got here\, because it is the one connected to what we have left to do. \nHamilton confessed that he sometimes hides in the analytical language of economics because the stories of his community and his upbringing are painful. But those stories are the reasons he fights. Walking through his transformed neighborhood\, when he sees who is thriving and who is not\, he is aware that nothing is different about the people there before and those there today\, it is the conditions afforded them. This\, he notes\, gives you clarity and solution\, if conditions are changed then so will be outcomes.  \nDiaz read Etheridge Knight’s “Feeling Fucked Up\,” invoking the righteous anger and justifiable grief that fuel creative resistance. “We are allowed to be angry\,” she shared. “We should be angry.” It is dangerous not to find the language of anger. Anger\, like love\, can be a generative force. \nCuriosity as Resistance \nBoth Diaz and Hamilton critiqued orthodox economics’ lack of curiosity. It functions as a static definition of value imposed by those with the privilege to codify norms and the power to determine who counts. In this framework\, approaches rooted in lived experience\, community care\, and moral urgency are dismissed as subjective or sentimental.  \nBut the future demands a new lens. \nDiaz introduced the idea of the speculative as a necessary practice. We talk of the future as if it will simply arrive\, but justice demands we shape it. The speculative invites us to imagine conditions beyond the limitations of current policy. It demands we stay curious\, that we resist being diminished\, and that we hold space for beauty\, grief\, rage\, and joy. \nThe Work Ahead \nAt the core\, then\, is the question: what is economics for? \nIf economics is\, in fact\, the study of how we care for one another\, how we structure our collective lives\, then love must not be an afterthought. It must be central. Not only as a value\, but as a verb\, a design principle. Both an input and an output. \nIn this new future\, identity will have no transactional value\, no identity will be privileged above another. And\, our identities will continue to be our cosmologies\, the ways we dream. \nThe work ahead is clear. We must confront the hegemony of narrow metrics and usher in an economy rooted in love\, in justice\, and in truth. We must tell dangerous stories that refuse erasure and remember our past so that we can dream and imagine our future. Above all\, we must remain curious because\, as Khan noted\, on the other side of all these other sides is us.
URL:https://racepowerpolicy.org/event/2025-henry-cohen-lecture-series-poetry-economics/
LOCATION:Starr Foundation Hall\, 63 5th Avenue\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event Series,In-Person,Lecture,Panel
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250429T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250429T210000
DTSTAMP:20260421T133253
CREATED:20250424T160501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250502T171327Z
UID:3563-1745953200-1745960400@racepowerpolicy.org
SUMMARY:2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series: Justice Beyond Borders
DESCRIPTION:  \nJoin us at The New School’s Auditorium on Tuesday\, April 29 as our 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series continues with a panel discussion on the changing international\, economic\, and geopolitical environments \nSpeakers will explore key economic policies for promoting inclusive economic rights and the role of solidarity among different stakeholders. \nSpeakers: \n\nBrian Kagoro\, Managing Director\, Programs\, Open Society Foundation\nCathy Feingold\, Director\, International Department\, AFL-CIO\nKelly Fay Rodríguez\, Former Special Representative\, International Labor Affairs\, U.S. Department of State\nAmara Enyia\, Senior Fellow\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy; Co-Executive\, Movement for Black Lives; President\, Global Black\nDarrick Hamilton\, Founding Director\, Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy\n\nThis event is part of the 2025 Henry Cohen Lecture Series\, which brings leading thinkers\, changemakers\, policymakers\, journalists\, and activists to The New School to present their perspectives and explore the intersections of race\, social stratification\, and political economy that inspire economic and racial justice.  \nRegister Now\n  \n\nPresented in partnership with the Institute on Race\, Power and Political Economy and the Milano School of Policy\, Management\, and Environment at The New School. \n\nEVENT RECAP \nJustice Beyond Borders\nBy Madeline Neighly\, Senior Strategist and Researcher \nAt a moment marked by deep geopolitical uncertainty and economic upheaval\, the event Justice Beyond Borders convened a vital conversation on sovereignty\, debt\, infrastructure\, and the pursuit of a human rights-centered economy. The panel featured Brian Kagoro (Open Society Foundations)\, Darrick Hamilton (The New School)\, Cathy Feingold (AFL-CIO)\, Kelly Fay Rodríguez (former U.S. State Department Special Representative)\, and Amara Enyia (Global Black Collective)\, and offered a wide-ranging analysis of global economic justice rooted in history\, power\, and solidarity. The panel was bookended by remarks from The New School President Joel Towers situating the university in this moment as one with a history and future of resisting fascism and Dean Alex Aleinikoff reminding the audience that it is not enough to push back\, we must push forward. \nKagoro opened with a sobering critique of international economic structures\, noting how historical systems of extraction—from slavery to structural adjustment—continue to shape global inequality. He framed the present as a time of reckoning\, where questions of dignity\, value\, and humanity intersect with the architecture of international finance and histories of colonization\, exploitation\, and extraction. \nAfter Kagoro’s context setting\, the panelists emphasized that economic transformation requires more than policy shifts—it demands new norms and solidarities and that we ask new questions. Echoing the need for a new paradigm\, Hamilton stressed that neoliberalism not only naturalizes poverty but weaponizes debt as a tool of control. He urged the audience to define justice as ensuring people are resourced to thrive\, not just survive. \nSpeaking to the dual task of resisting retrenchment and building inclusive structures that empower communities long excluded\, the panelists warned against romanticizing old institutions while recognizing the urgency of defending hard-won rights. Unions and movements\, they argued\, must evolve—with a focus on unions becoming more inclusive\, imaginative\, and responsive to informal and globalized labor. Kagoro reminded us that the weaponization and privileging of identities is intentionally used to block solidarity\, obscuring the fact that our struggles are linked against common threats of corporate financialization\, militarization\, extraction\, and exploitation by the wealthy elites. \nThe discussion also explored the implications of artificial intelligence\, with panelists underscoring the need for democratic governance of technology. Hamilton and Kagoro warned that without addressing ownership\, AI risks reinforcing global hierarchies and racialized inequities. \nUltimately\, the event challenged attendees to imagine an economy grounded in human rights\, where infrastructure investment\, fair taxation\, labor rights\, and global solidarity are not fringe ideas\, but foundational. As Kagoro concluded\, justice beyond borders requires more than reform—it requires courage\, vision\, and the collective will to build what has not yet been written.
URL:https://racepowerpolicy.org/event/2025-henry-cohen-lecture-series-justice-beyond-borders/
LOCATION:The Auditorium\, 66 West 12th Street\, NY\, United States
CATEGORIES:Event Series,In-Person,Lecture,Panel
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