Symposium Web Info

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Overview MJR&L is looking to return to our roots, while also aiming to be forward thinking at the same time, in celebrating our 15th year of publication. As a journal that has focused heavily on civil rights, we are using the symposium as a vehicle to explore our nation’s past in the fight for civil rights, to analyze how and why attorneys chose to address those problems, and to use that knowledge to create strategies to address the problems that our urban environments face today. As the country has evolved, expanded, and advanced, many cities still face problems that have yet to be solved, and a charge of our symposium will be to come up with new solutions to these problems. As students at the University of Michigan, we are especially aware of such troubles from looking at our neighboring city of Detroit. As our nation struggles with a large-scale economic depression and the problems stemming from it, we endeavor to bring to light the struggles of urban communities they have continuously faced, and ways in which change may be brought about, making such a symposium both timely and relevant. To that end, our symposium looks to examine civil rights struggles and why the traditional remedies worked, what the newer or existing problems are and why such solutions don’t work, as well as developing concrete solutions to such problems through a focus on Detroit.

Schedule of Events Preliminary Schedule Friday, February 5, 2010 4:00 – 5:00pm 5:00 – 6:30pm

Registration

Introductory Keynote Address: Jack Greenburg, Columbia Professor and former Director-Counsel of NAACP Legal Defense Fund

7:00 – 9:00pm

Alumni and Speakers’ Dinner

Saturday, February 6, 2010 8:15 – 10:00am Registration 8:30 – 10:00am Breakfast & Keynote Address Hardy Vieux, EIC Volume II, Second Editor in Chief of MJR&L, Associate, Blank Rome 10:00 – 12:00pm

Panel Discussion I: 20th Century Civil Rights: The Problems Veteran Civil Rights Attorneys Faced and Why They Were Successful 12:00 – 1:15pm Lunch

1:15 – 3:15pm

Panel Discussion II: 21st Century Civil Rights: New Issues and Why The Old Ways No Longer Work

3:45 – 5:45pm

Panel Discussion III: Creating the Solutions to the Problems that Plague Our Broken Cities

7:00 – 10:00pm Dinner Banquet Keynote Speaker: Mayor Ron Dellums, Mayor of Oakland, CA

Currently Confirmed Speakers: Alvin Bronstein, Civil rights veteran and current Director Emeritus, National Prison Project Eileen Gauna, Environmental justice advocate, Professor, UNM Law School Fred Gray, Lawyer to Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks Jack Greenberg, Columbia Professor and former Director-Counsel of NACCP Legal Defense Fund John Relman, Fair housing advocate, Director and Founder of Relman & Dane Sessions Session 1: 20th Century Civil Rights: The Problems Veteran Civil Rights Attorneys Faced and Why They Were Successful This panel will look to civil rights veterans, attorneys, activists, and scholars to discuss the problems they encountered throughout their careers and how those problems were able to be solved through legal avenues. What made them choose those strategies? Did they consider other strategies? Why were those strategies successful considering the sentiments of the public at the time? To help answer these questions, areas in which civil rights battles have been traditionally fought will be the focus of this panel including desegregation/integration, employment discrimination, voting rights, as well as other rights advanced by civil rights attorneys throughout the years. Session 2: 21st Century Civil Rights: New Issues and Why the Old Ways No Longer Work After discussing the methods that enabled change during the Civil Rights Movement and beyond, we will turn our attention to the current problems being faced within our broken cities. This panel will focus on identifying the problems that persist in these communities that the traditional remedies are unable to solve. Why can’t the traditional remedies solve the current problems? Are there other legal tools available that can bring about change in a way that veteran civil rights leaders were able to? Can the law no longer provide a solution to these ingrained problems?

Have those remedies simply been exhausted, forcing us to reinvent the wheel? What are we doing wrong? Panelists will be asked to express their opinion on what problems plague these broken cities, what keeps them from being fixed, and why the old ways are no longer effective. Panelists will also be asked to voice their approval or concerns with the current methods or attempts made by activists, organizations, and lawyers, in attempting to create change and solve the problems within our broken cities. Session 3: Creating the Solutions to the Problems That Plague Our Broken Cities The final panel will shift the focus from analyzing problems that face urban environments generally, to how we can implement new civil rights strategies to fix urban problems specifically, through a focus on Detroit. People frequently comment on cities such as Detroit, which at one time were thriving, but have turned into broken cities that we seem incapable of fixing. Persistent problems plague the cities, yet no concrete ideas have come into fruition to enable the dramatic changes necessary for cities like Detroit to be sustainable, successful cities again. Panelists will be asked to come up with definitive solutions that can actually be presented and put to use in fixing our broken cities, specifically Detroit in the panel, but can also be applicable to similarly situated cities. How can we effectively create change? What must be done differently? What must we stop doing? Where do we go from here? The hope is that this panel stimulates a serious and productive dialogue on how to fundamentally change the course of Detroit, revitalize it, and make it a place people want to live in and visit again.

Become A Sponsor MJR&L is looking for sponsors. If you're interested please contact Ashley Washington [email protected] LEVELS OF SPONSORSHIP: BRONZE—$300 - Acknowledgement in the Symposium Program - Acknowledgement on the MJR&L website as a Bronze Sponsor (with text-link to your firm’s website, if applicable) SILVER—$500 - One-eighth-page recognition (3.25" x 2") in the Symposium program - Acknowledgement on the MJR&L website as a Silver Sponsor (with text-link to your firm’s website, if applicable) - Placement of your firm’s promotions (recruiting materials, etc.) at the Symposium GOLD—$700 - Quarter-page recognition in the Symposium program - Acknowledgement on the MJR&L website as a Gold Sponsor (with text-link to your firm’s website, if applicable) - Placement of your firm’s promotions (recruiting materials, etc.) at the show

PLATINUM—$1,000 - Full-page recognition in the Symposium program - Acknowledgement on the MJR&L website as a Platinum Sponsor (with text-link to your firm’s website, if applicable) - Placement of your firm’s promotions (recruiting materials, etc.) at the show

Current Sponsors Law School-$18,000 School of Social Work-$1000 Taubman College-$500 Rackham Graduate School-$2,000 Varnum-$300

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