From:
Date: September 23, 2019
Subject: HRHP Weekly Newsletter 9/23



Happy Monday! Have a beautiful week, and do the best that you can. We believe in you!
  • We highly encourage you to attend the ISHR 2019 Welcome Reception. We have a broad Human Rights and Humanitarian community beyond our SIPA cohort, throughout Columbia University, and we love connecting to the whole network. You never know who you might meet!
  • HRHP will now be accepting course substitution requests through CampusGroups
  • We are working on rescheduling the walking tour. To all who signed up, keep a look-out for a confirmation shortly. Thank you all for your patience!
  • Please join us for our first HRHP Community Hour of the academic year on Tuesday, October 1st from 1-2pm in IAB 801. Provide feedback on our Fall Retreat, and let us know what you'd like to see from your HRHP Program. Lunch will be provided. Can't make it to the Community Hour? Send us your feedback via the Retreat Survey at the end of this Newsletter!
  • The first 10 students to respond to this email will receive HRHP Notebooks!

Michelle Chouinard

mc4225@columbia.edu
HRHP Concentration Coordinator

Alejandro Bonil Vaca

ab4672@columbia.edu 
HRHP PA
Humanitarian Policy

Eva McAvoy

em3374@columbia.edu 
HRHP PA
Human Rights

OUR DIRECTOR'S OFFICE HOURS
  • Professor Susannah Friedman will host office hours this semester in 901A on Thursdays from 1-2pm.
  • Professor Elazar Barkan will host office hours by appointment.

Upcoming Events:
The Danger of Forgetting: Memorialization, Memory, and Transitional Justice (Co-sponsored by ISHR & AHDA)
September 24, 2019, 12.10pm to 1.10pm,  Jerome Greene Hall, Room 105  

NYU Film Screening: Love Sonia
September 24, 2019, 7:00pm-9:00pm

Institute for the Study of Human Rights 2019 Welcome Reception
September 30, 2019, 5:00-7:00pm
Buell Hall

HRHP Community Hour
October 1, 2019, 1:00-2:00pm
IAB Room 801

 
Assistant Professor of Justice Studies, Woodrow Wilson Center Global Fellow, Montclair State University. Website: arnaudkurze.com.
October 24, 2019, 12.30pm to 2pm
IAB room 1219.


Internships and Opportunities:


HRHP Student Spotlight




Love Sonia Screening Logo

EVENT

Love Sonia Screening

Tuesday, September 24, 2019
7:00pm - 10:00pm
NYU, Room 102, 19 University Place, New York 10003, United States
Link
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Love Sonia is a 2018 Indian drama film directed by Tabrez Noorani and produced by David Womark. The film is the harrowing account of two sisters robbed of their innocence when one is sold by her debt-ridden father, and the other follows after her in the hope of rescuing her but becomes trapped in the sex trade herself. While on the troublesome and challenging journey that takes us through the red light areas of Mumbai, the latent innocence in the younger sister and the grit to rescue her sister and eventually herself stays intact.

VIEW EVENT
Period. End of Sentence. Film Screening and Critical Panel Logo

EVENT

Period. End of Sentence. Film Screening and Critical Panel

Thursday, September 26, 2019
6:00pm - 7:30pm
754 Schermerhorn Ext. Building, 420 West 118th Street, New York, New York 10027, United States
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Please join the Menstrual Health and Gender Justice Working Group for a screening of 'PERIOD. End of Sentence,' the Oscar-winning documentary about menstruation. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion.

Panelists include:
Lauren Houghton, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health
Shobita Parthasarathy, Professor of Public Policy at University of Michigan's Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
Emily Hoppes, Program and Partnerships Coordinator at Huru International

While the film focuses on the production of pads, ensuring menstrual health requires reaching far beyond that. Our panel will address critical questions related to menstrual stigma, agency, and power relations. How can we use the current attention to menstruation to bring about transformative change that advances gender justice?

REGISTER
HRHP Community Hour Logo

EVENT

HRHP Community Hour

Tuesday, October 1, 2019
1:00pm - 2:00pm
IAB 803, 420 West 118th Street, New York, New York 10027, United States
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Join us at the HRHP Community Hour to provide retreat feedback and engage in general programmatic discussion. Also eat free lunch.

REGISTER
The Voices of the Victims: The Rohingyas and their

EVENT

The Voices of the Victims: The Rohingyas and their "Subhuman" life

Thursday, October 10, 2019
6:15pm - 7:45pm
IAB room 802, 420 West 118th Street, New York, New York 10027, United States
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The Rohingyas, widely known as the world's most persecuted ethnic minority, experienced an unprecedented brutality committed by Myanmar security forces along in collaboration with some ethnic extremists and Buddhist fundamentalist. Under the pretext of counter insurgency following an alleged attack by ARSA on August 25, 2017 onwards, Myanmar security forces indiscriminately killed, randomly raped and intentionally burnt houses and properties of the civilian Rohingya people in Rakhine state. A report prepared by a three-member-panel appointed by the United Nations published in August 2018 showed that the brutal military crackdown in 2017 triggered an influx of 725,000 [until now 750,000] Rohingyas to Bangladesh, more than 10,000 were killed on the ground in the first two months, hundreds of girls and women were ganged raped, and around 392 villages were partially or totally destroyed. Combined with previous waves of refugees, now 1.3 million Rohingyas live in Ukhia and Teknaf refugee camps which are considered as the world's largest camps. The intensity of atrocity was so extreme that the UN Human Rights Council's Chief termed it as "a textbook example of ethnic cleansing" whilst many scholars and many credible media outlets called it "genocide."

Accounts gathered by Nasir Uddin from the Rohingyas living in Ukhia and Teknaf unfold the horrible ways they were dealt with as if they were lesser than human beings what Uddin terms "subhuman" life. This talk presents the first-hand narratives of the Rohingya refugees, the voices of the victims, in the broader spectrum of statelessness, refugeehood and human rights in the world.


CU Events Calendar Posting: https://events.columbia.edu/cal/event/eventView.do?b=de&calPath=%2Fpublic%2Fcals%2FMainCal&guid=CAL-00bb9e24-6d248143-016d-26591f11-0000532fevents@columbia.edu&recurrenceId=

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