Politics
Oppenheimer: July 28 UC Berkeley Panel Discussion Focuses On The Man Behind The Movie
"A 25-year-old J. Robert Oppenheimer arrived at UC Berkeley in fall 1929 as an assistant professor, and over the next dozen years established one of the greatest schools of theoretical physics in the U.S. — one that continues to this day. He made UC Berkeley’s physics department the center of American thought about the new field of quantum mechanics and how to apply it to atoms, nuclei and even neutron stars."
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Women's Congressional Policy Institute Weekly Legislative Update May 30, 2023: Bringing Women Policymakers Together Across Party Lines to Advance Issues of Importance to Women and Their Families
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, Cosmetic safety, supply chain transparency needed for companies to make safe cosmetics; A bill to increase the availability and affordability of menstrual products for individuals with limited access; A bill to expand the authority to provide a wig and treat traction alopecia under the TRICARE program; a hearing, “Solving the Child Care Crisis: Meeting the Needs of Working Families and Child Care Workers.” Child Protection - The Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to consider several bills, including S. 474, legislation to strengthen reporting to the Cyber Tipline related to online sexual exploitation of children.
Bringing women policymakers together across party lines to advance
issues of importance to women and their families.
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Jo Freeman Reviews Shirley Chisholm, Champion of Black Feminist Power Politics
"Best known for her 1972 campaign for President, where she received over 400,000 votes in multiple primaries, she always represented the views of her constituents in Brooklyn – poor, Black and disadvantaged. Neither the first woman to run for President nor the only woman to run that year, her campaign was highly publicized at a time when the emerging women’s liberation movement was making waves. It put her into the history books." more »
Research Raises New Questions About Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women; May 5, is Missing or Murdered Indigenous Persons Awareness Day in the US
"News coverage of missing and murdered Indigenous women has been long criticized as spotty and superficial. The news media 'largely ignore the victimizations of Native American females,' writes ... an assistant professor of criminal justice at Sacramento State University, in her 2020 paper, 'The Representation of Women and Girls of Color in United States Crime News.' A growing body of research demonstrates that missing white women typically draw significantly more media attention than missing minority women. The late PBS news anchor Gwen Ifill first used the term 'Missing White Woman Syndrome' to describe this disparity in 2004." more »