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The Long Haul: Millions with COVID Face Chronic Illness as Biden Declares End to National Emergency
The Long Haul: Millions with COVID Face Chronic Illness as Biden Declares End to National Emergency
President Biden has declared an end to the COVID-19 national emergency, but people living with long COVID say the pandemic is far from over. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found nearly one in five people infected with COVID-19 go on to experience symptoms of long COVID. We speak to science writer Ryan Prior about the movement to expand research and resources for those with long COVID, and his own experience living with the chronic illness. Prior is the author of The Long Haul and writes the “Patient Revolution” for Psychology Today.
·democracynow.org·
The Long Haul: Millions with COVID Face Chronic Illness as Biden Declares End to National Emergency
Intersections of Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Intersections of Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Featuring Elliott Fukui and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha. In response to heightened levels of abuse and violence experienced by disabled people, disability justice organizers have developed tremendous knowledge and creative approaches to care, safety, and preventing and stopping violence without relying on the state. How do disability justice strategies and knowledge inform transformative justice practices? In this video, disability justice and transformative justice organizers Leah Lakshmi Piepzna Samarsinha and Elliott Fukui explore some of the intersections of these movements. Leah and Elliott will expand this conversation during an online event on April 10, 2020. Learn more and join the conversation here: http://bcrw.barnard.edu/event/moving-at-the-speed-of-trust-disability-and-transformative-justice/ This video is part of the Building Accountable Communities video series. The Building Accountable Communities Project promotes non-punitive responses to harm by developing resources for transformative justice practitioners and organizing convenings and workshops that educate the public. Created by Project Nia and the Barnard Center for Research on Women. Video produced by Mariame Kaba, Dean Spade, and Hope Dector.
·youtu.be·
Intersections of Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Moving at the Speed of Trust: Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Moving at the Speed of Trust: Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Elliott Fukui Live transcript (PDF): http://bcrw.barnard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Moving-at-the-Speed-of-Trust-live-transcript.pdf We are working on a word-for-word transcript that will be posted here when it becomes available. Slide deck (PDF) by Elliott and Leah featuring important definitions, notes, and frameworks for today’s conversation: http://bcrw.barnard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Moving-at-the-Speed-of-Trust.pdf During the event, you can send questions for the Q&A by emailing bcrw@barnard.edu or via Twitter @bcrwtweets #TransformingHarm On the screen: Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Elliott Fukui (speakers) Darryn Hollifield and Natalie Cuddy (ASL) Hope Dector (introduction) RELATED LINKS Other events from the Building Accountable Communities Project: - Transforming Harm: Experiments in Accountability – featuring Stas Schmiedt and Lea Roth, moderated by Mariame Kaba: https://bcrw.barnard.edu/event/transforming-harm-experiments-in-accountability/ - Building Accountable Communities – featuring Kiyomi Fujikawa and Shannon Perez-Darby, moderated by Mariame Kaba: http://bcrw.barnard.edu/event/building-accountable-communities/ Beyond Survival: Strategies and Stories from the Transformative Justice Movement, edited by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Ejeris Dixon: https://www.akpress.org/beyond-survival.html Elliott Fukui – madqueer.org Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha – BrownStarGirl.org Sins Invalid - Skin, Tooth, and Bone: The Basis of Movement is Our People: https://www.flipcause.com/secure/reward_step2/OTMxNQ==/20602 Event Description: “Disabled folks have never been able to rely on the systems that are in place or those systems have been incredibly harmful to us.” – Elliott Fukui In response to heightened levels of abuse and violence experienced by people with disabilities, disability justice organizers have developed tremendous knowledge and creative approaches to care, safety, and preventing and stopping violence without relying on the state. How do disability justice strategies and knowledge inform transformative justice practices? How are disability justice and transformative justice interconnected? “What would our transformative justice work look like if we put everyone’s access needs at the center?” – Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, in “Cripping TJ,” an essay in the groundbreaking new collection Beyond Survival co-edited with Ejeris Dixon How is anti-ableism essential to transformative justice? How do we start with the shared values of self-determination and the belief that no one is disposable to build capacity for personal and societal transformation?
·youtu.be·
Moving at the Speed of Trust: Disability Justice and Transformative Justice
Things People With Disabilities Wish You Knew
Things People With Disabilities Wish You Knew
Special Thanks: Pamela Rae Schuller @PamelaComedy Eman Rimawi @Eman_Rimawi Credits: https://www.buzzfeed.com/bfmp/videos/57021 Check out more awesome videos at BuzzFeedVideo! https://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedvideo https://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedblue1 https://bit.ly/YTbuzzfeedviolet GET MORE BUZZFEED: https://www.buzzfeed.com https://www.buzzfeed.com/videos https://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedvideo https://www.youtube.com/asis https://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedblue https://www.youtube.com/buzzfeedviolet https://www.youtube.com/perolike https://www.youtube.com/ladylike BuzzFeedVideo BuzzFeed Motion Picture’s flagship channel. Sometimes funny, sometimes serious, always shareable. New videos posted daily! Love BuzzFeed? Get the merch! BUY NOW: https://goo.gl/gQKF8m MUSIC First Day Of Summer_NoVox Licensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc. Walking On The Sun_Full Licensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc. Bliss Beach_Full Licensed via Warner Chappell Production Music Inc. VIDEO Abstract blue bokeh and blurred colorful nature background bouybin/Getty Images EXTERNAL CREDITS Pamela Rae Schuller @PamelaComedy + Eman Rimawi @Eman_Rimawi
·youtu.be·
Things People With Disabilities Wish You Knew
We Move Together: Disability Justice and Trans Liberation
We Move Together: Disability Justice and Trans Liberation
Captions are being created and will be available soon.A conversation with Patty Berne, Reina Gossett, Kiyaan Abadani, and Malcolm Shanks. Moderated by India ...
·youtube.com·
We Move Together: Disability Justice and Trans Liberation
Mia Mingus on Disability Justice (interview)
Mia Mingus on Disability Justice (interview)
[CC] "Disability Justice work is .. new in the sense that we're building the shared political framework and shared language, so it's also a very exciting time." - Mia Mingus Disability Justice deals with the oppression of disability, but at the same time also deals with other systems of oppression and injustice - it is a 'multi-issue politic.' It moves beyond rights- and equality-based approaches, beyond access and inclusion in unjust systems, instead working towards collective justice and liberation, towards transforming society as a whole. This interview with Mia Mingus, one of the leading articulators of what Disability Justice is about, was done recently in Ottawa, where she gave two talks on 'Beyond Access: An Introduction to Disability Justice.' Interview transcript available at: http://equitableeducation.ca/2013/mia-mingus-disability-justice Interview by Greg Macdougall, http://EquitableEducation.ca for The Icarus Project, http://TheIcarusProject.net Mia Mingus' website: http://LeavingEvidence.wordpress.com
·youtu.be·
Mia Mingus on Disability Justice (interview)
Disability Justice, COVID, and Abolition (an ASA 2020 Freedom Course)
Disability Justice, COVID, and Abolition (an ASA 2020 Freedom Course)
An American Studies Association 2020 Freedom Course Disability Justice, COVID, and Abolition In this panel, leading disability justice and abolitionist community organizers and thinkers - Mia Mingus, Talila "TL" Lewis, and Liat Ben-Moshe (moderated by Connie Wun)- discuss the importance of centering disability justice in addressing the ongoing public health crisis and abolition of the carceral state. What has and does centering disability justice, an inherently intersectional framework, under a pandemic mean? What are disability justice frameworks for abolition? And why are they necessary now? How do these frameworks help us to both challenge the current moment and build a different future? Informed by their decades of work and scholarship, they expand contemporary abolitionist discourses by examining the ubiquitousness of ableism and the need for disability justice and transformative justice across the entire carceral landscape. Panelists: Mia Mingus - Bay Area Transformative Justice Collective (BATJC) Talila "TL" Lewis - Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of Deaf Communities (HEARD) Liat Ben-Moshe - Criminology, Law and Justice, University of Illinois, Chicago Connie Wun - AAPI Women Lead Co-Sponsors: AAPI Women Lead and ASA Critical Disability Studies Caucus ASL Interpreters: Stephanie Chao, Tricia Vazquez
·youtu.be·
Disability Justice, COVID, and Abolition (an ASA 2020 Freedom Course)
Reproductive Justice is Disability Justice: Part 1
Reproductive Justice is Disability Justice: Part 1
In PART 1, watch Sins Invalid Director Patty Berne and Bianca Laureano, MA, CSE, CSES talk about the history of the reproductive justice movement! This conversation was originally planned as episode 14 of our Facebook Live talk show, Crip Bits. Unfortunately, we had significant tech issues and could not continue with the live broadcast in June 2019. We are uploading this video because the conversation is rich and critical! This video is also part 1 of 4. Stay tuned for parts 2, 3, and 4! Content warning: selective abortion, rape, incest Learn more about Bianca Laureano and her excellent courses at: http://www.anteuppd.com/ Learn more about Sins Invalid at: sinsinvalid.org
·youtu.be·
Reproductive Justice is Disability Justice: Part 1
Queer Disability Justice Dreams
Queer Disability Justice Dreams
November 18, 2020 Panel discussion with Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Sami Schalk on crip justice today. In the face of ongoing police brutality against disabled Brown and Black queer and trans folks, how can we think about intersections of disability justice and #BlackLivesMatter? As the pandemic wears on, what are the care- and community-centered responses to COVID-19 and able-bodied white supremacy? What is the place of pleasure and desire in the long history of disability justice organizing? This panel discussion will explore disability justice approaches to working toward and imagining otherwise. Cosponsored by CLAGS and Wesleyan University’s Departments of American Studies; Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; and Accessibility Services Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled nonbinary femme writer, performance artist, freedom dreamer and disability and transformative justice worker of Burgher/Tamil Sri Lankan, Irish and Roma ascent. She is a Lambda Award-winning author or co-editor of 9 books, including, with Ejeris Dixon, Beyond Survival: Strategies and Stories from the Transformative Justice Movement; Tonguebreaker; Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice; Bridge of Flowers; Bodymap; Dirty River: A Queer Femme of Color Dreaming Her Way Home; and The Revolution Starts At Home: Confronting Intimate Violence in Activist Communities. A lead artist with Sins Invalid since 2009, they are on the organizing team for the Disability and Intersectionality Summit and the 2020 winner of the Lambda Literary Foundation's Jean Cordoba Prize in Lesbian/Queer Nonfiction. Sami Schalk is an associate professor of Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Wisconsin Madison. Her research focuses on disability, race and gender in contemporary American literature and culture. Schalk’s first book Bodyminds Reimagined: (Dis)ability, Race, & Gender in Black Women's Speculative Fiction (Duke UP 2018), explores how Black women writers use nonrealist genres to reimagine the possibilities and limits of body-minds, challenging our understanding of the meanings of disability, race and gender. Schalk’s next project focuses on disability politics and Black activism in the post civil rights era. She identifies as a fat black queer femme disabled cis gendered woman. She can be found on Twitter as @drsamischalk and on her website, samischalk.com.
·youtu.be·
Queer Disability Justice Dreams
Disability Visibility Justice with ASL/CC
Disability Visibility Justice with ASL/CC
This webinar is co-organized by the Disability Visibility Project and the Longmore Institute on Disability. Join us for a conversation about disability justice with Patty Berne, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, and Alice Wong; moderated by Yomi Wrong. Patty and Leah are contributors in Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-First Century, a new anthology edited by Alice. Yomi Wrong is an Oakland-based consultant, activist and disability justice dreamer who formerly served as Executive Director of the Center for Independent Living. She currently works in healthcare compliance, where her role is to advance quality medical care for people with disabilities. Patty Berne is a Co-Founder, Executive and Artistic Director of Sins Invalid, a disability justice based performance project centralizing disabled artists of color and queer and gender non-conforming artists with disabilities. Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled autistic nonbinary femme writer and disability/transformative justice worker, a descendent of many gardeners, psychics, teachers, border jumpers, people with a hustle, queer cousins and weirdo/neurodivergent people. To view the event transcript, https://www.dropbox.com/s/7l5oqm2ffgbhzkj/Disability%20Visbility%20Nov%207%20transcript.txt?dl=0
·youtu.be·
Disability Visibility Justice with ASL/CC
Disability Justice Informing Communities of Practice (subtitles in English)
Disability Justice Informing Communities of Practice (subtitles in English)
On Feb. 28, 2017, Lydia X. Z. Brown (they/them), past president of TASH New England, chairperson of the Massachusetts Developmental Disabilities Council and a board member of the Autism Women’s Network, presented on inequities in health services for disabled people with an intersectional focus on race, sexual orientation and gender identity. They also explored potential tools for change, from policy and advocacy actions (e.g., strengthening regulations, trainings, education and building coalitions) to community empowerment (e.g., collecting data and stories, creating safe spaces and providing trainings—especially by disabled people of color, for disabled people of color).
·youtu.be·
Disability Justice Informing Communities of Practice (subtitles in English)
My Disability Justice | The Dancer
My Disability Justice | The Dancer
Dance is much more than the movement of bodies — it's a mode of communication. For Antoine Hunter, a Bay Area artist, choreographer and activist who is also Black and deaf, dance helps him create community for all people who want to learn to fully express themselves. To learn more about the disability justice movement, visit: https://dohadebates.com/disabilityjustice/ To take action and join the fight for equality, follow @WorldEnabled and sign the Global Compact on Inclusive and Accessible Cities: www.cities4all.org This series aims to advance the mandate of the UN Secretary General’s Special Envoy on Disability and Accessibility. ►► Subscribe & join the conversation: http://bit.ly/38fuJjZ ►► Subscribe to Course Correction: https://megaphone.link/QF2056074382 Don’t Settle for a Divided World. Think. Debate. Act. Let’s find solutions to the world's most pressing problems. Doha Debates examines the world's most pressing challenges through live debates, digital videos, a TV series, blogs and podcasts. This innovative approach includes Majlis-style conversations designed to bridge differences, build consensus and identify solutions to urgent global issues. ►► Follow us on Facebook: http://Facebook.com/DohaDebates ►► Follow us on Twitter: http://Twitter.com/DohaDebates
·youtu.be·
My Disability Justice | The Dancer
AAWWTV: Dreaming Disability Justice with Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Cyree Jarelle Johnson
AAWWTV: Dreaming Disability Justice with Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Cyree Jarelle Johnson
AAWW is a national literary nonprofit dedicated to the belief that Asian American stories deserve to be told. We host events in NYC and broadcast them here! Please support us by donating at https://aaww.org/donate so we can continue this work. You can also become a fanclub member and receive custom designed pins & stickers at https://aaww.org/fanclub/. Join us for a book launch and conversation for Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice by Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, and disability justice poetics conversation with Leah and Cyree Jarelle Johnson. What the hell is disability justice? How do collective care, disability justice and sick and disabled Black and brown femmes save the world and each other during this time of apocalypse—or do we? What are the histories and present day struggles and triumphs of disabled Black and brown queers in our movements and communities? Come discuss these and other provocative questions with writer, cultural worker and performer Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and poet and essayist Cyree Jarelle Johnson, and celebrate the launch of this long-awaited, beautiful new book. -- http://aaww.org http://facebook.com/AsianAmericanWritersWorkshop http://twitter.com/aaww AAWW is a national not-for-profit arts organization devoted to the creating, publishing, developing and disseminating of creative writing by Asian Americans–in other words, we’re the preeminent organization dedicated to the belief that Asian American stories deserve to be told. We’re building the Asian literary culture of tomorrow through our curatorial platform, which includes our New York events series and our online editorial initiatives. In a time when China and India are on the rise, when immigration is a vital electoral issue, when the detention of Muslim Americans is a matter of common practice, we believe Asian American literature is vital to interpret our post-multicultural but not post-racial age. Our curatorial take is intellectual and alternative, pop cultural and highbrow, warm and artistically innovative, and vested in New York City communities. Our curatorial platform is premised on the idea of a big-tent Asian American cultural pluralism. We’re interested in both the New York publishing industry and ethnic studies, the South Asian diasporic novel and the Asian American story of assimilation, high culture and pop culture, Lisa Lowe and Amar Chitra Katha, avant-garde poetry and spoken word, journalism and critical race theory, Midnight’s Children and Dictee. We are against both an exclusive literary culture that believes that race does not exist and Asian American narratives that lead to self-stereotyping and limit the menu of our identity. We are for inventing the future of Asian American literary culture. Named one of the top five Asian American groups nationally, covered by the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Poets & Writers, we are a safe community space and an anti-racist counterculture, incubating new ideas and interpretations of what it means to be both an American and a global citizen.
·youtu.be·
AAWWTV: Dreaming Disability Justice with Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Cyree Jarelle Johnson
Disability Justice [Version with Audio Description]
Disability Justice [Version with Audio Description]
This is the audio described (AD) version of this episode, provided for our blind and visually impaired followers. For the original version of the episode, please go to https://youtu.be/nf1MW7_f-vg (Recorded before Covid-19). In the first episode of our first season on national public TV, Laura interviews two performance artists whose work illustrates how difference and neurodiversity can make art and society richer and more equitable. Alice Sheppard is a disabled dancer/choreographer and the artistic director of the company Kinetic Light. Jess Thom is a performer and comedian with Tourettes and the founder of Touretteshero. In their conversations with Laura, they question our attitudes towards disability and explore how art can challenge our notions of the normative. Guests: Alice Sheppard is the Artistic Director of Kinetic Light, as well as a choreographer and dancer in the company. Jess Thom is a British performer, comedian and activist. Thom created Touretteshero to increase awareness of and expand perceptions of what is possible with Tourette’s Syndrome. SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: www.lauraflanders.org/subscribe/ FOLLOW The Laura Flanders Show Twitter: @theLFshow Facebook: @theLFshow Instagram: @theLFshow ACCESSIBILITY This version of the episode is presented with audio description to increase accessibility for our blind and visually impaired audience. The original closed captioned version of this episode is available here: https://youtu.be/nf1MW7_f-vg. A transcript, related podcast, and visual description of this episode are available at www.lauraflanders.org/disability-justice. If you would like to request accessibility-related assistance, report any accessibility problems, or request any information in accessible alternative formats, please email: info@lauraflanders.org #DisabilityJustice #disability #art #dance #theater #equity #accessibility
·youtu.be·
Disability Justice [Version with Audio Description]
Care for the Future [English Language]
Care for the Future [English Language]
Moderator: Dani McClain Plenarists: Loira Limbal, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, and Veralucia Mendoza We keep each other alive. Through mutual aid, through mothering, through the essential work of low-wage care providers and the care work of disabled kin for each other, Black and Brown communities have been honing the expertise to carry our world through the crisis of this pandemic to a future rooted in care. In particular, the femmes, the disabled, the queer and trans folks within our communities have done this labor and forged this genius. In this plenary conversation we will honor care work while resisting the urge to romanticize it. We will explore what needs to shift within our economy, political systems and our social justice movements to create the care-based world we need.
·youtu.be·
Care for the Future [English Language]
2 disability rights activists on the power of the ADA -- and where it falls short
2 disability rights activists on the power of the ADA -- and where it falls short
On the 30th anniversary of the groundbreaking Americans with Disabilities Act, we consider how this legislation changed the lives of people with mental or physical impairments -- and where it falls short. Civil rights activist Judy Heumann, previously a special advisor to the State Department, and Keri Gray of the American Association of People with Disabilities join Judy Woodruff to discuss.
·pbs.org·
2 disability rights activists on the power of the ADA -- and where it falls short
Americans with Disabilities Act | A Guide to Title I Employment
Americans with Disabilities Act | A Guide to Title I Employment
So, you want to know about the Americans with Disabilities Act? We've created this handy guide to Title I Employment laws, which are found in the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act). What does ADA employment regulations under Title I of the Americans with Disabilities act actually cover? Here, we talk about what this means both for employers and for individuals with disabilities seeking reasonable accommodations and other benefits provided by the ADA. Title I of the ADA prohibits discrimination and employee rights while also providing guidance for employers on identifying undue hardships and disability provisions. We want you to learn what types of rights disabled employees have in the workplace in this guide to Title I Employment Law. Check out our other videos for guides on the Americans with Disabilities Act. Like, subscribe and find us at: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ilrcks/ Website: http://ilrcks.org/home Google+: https://plus.google.com/102198440533057306230 Music: "Sunshine" - by Assimilation, "It's Not Me", by Mise. Both tracks covered under Creative Commons 3.0. Independent Living Resource Center - Empowering People with Disabilities!
·youtu.be·
Americans with Disabilities Act | A Guide to Title I Employment
Disability Law Lowdown in ASL - Show 1
Disability Law Lowdown in ASL - Show 1
In this episode, we give an overview of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The Disability Law Lowdown ASL Podcast uses sign language and captions to provide information on disability rights laws.
·youtu.be·
Disability Law Lowdown in ASL - Show 1
Celebrating the American with Disabilities Act at the White House
Celebrating the American with Disabilities Act at the White House
The White House marks the 26th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, a comprehensive piece of legislation signed by President George H.W. Bush that has paved the way for the over 50 million Americans with disabilities.
·youtu.be·
Celebrating the American with Disabilities Act at the White House
The Disabilty Law Show with Sivan Tumarkin
The Disabilty Law Show with Sivan Tumarkin
Canada's only long-term disabiltiy law show on TV and radio in Ontario, BC and Alberta. with disability lawyer Sivan Tumarkin.
·stlawyers.ca·
The Disabilty Law Show with Sivan Tumarkin