Stanford University, Reverse Town Hall, Reopening with Justice and Equity, records, 2020
Description
Type of resource | mixed material |
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Place | California |
Date created | 2020 |
Issuance | monographic |
Language | English |
Creators/Contributors
Associated with | Stanford Solidarity Network | |
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Associated with | Stanford University, Students for Workers’ Rights | |
Associated with | Abolish Stanford | |
Associated with | Stanford University, Black Graduate Student Association | |
Associated with | Stanford University, Graduate Student Council | |
Associated with | Sexual Violence Free Stanford | |
Associated with | Stanford Basic Needs Coalition | |
Associated with | Stanford Neighbor Accountability Coalition |
Subjects
Subject | Stanford University |
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Subject | East Palo Alto |
Subject | Student movements |
Subject | Graduate students |
Subject | Police brutality |
Subject | Campus police |
Subject | First-generation college students |
Subject | College Students > California |
Subject | Anti-racism |
Subject | Black studies |
Subject | Demonstrations |
Subject | Undocumented immigrants |
Subject | Undocumented students |
Bibliographic information
Note | Includes materials relating to the Reverse Town Hall organized by Stanford University student groups, held September 10, 2020 via video chat. |
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Biographical/Historical | The Reverse Town Hall, held September 10, 2020 over Zoom video chat, was organized by Abolish Stanford, the Black Graduate Student Association, the Graduate Student Council, Sexual Violence Free Stanford, Stanford Basic Needs Coalition, Stanford Neighbor Accountability Coalition, Stanford Solidarity Network, and Stanford University, and Students for Workers’ Rights. The event included a discussion of “A Roadmap to Reopening with Equity and Justice,” a community-led plan for ensuring the well-being of Stanford’s student body. The roadmap highlights multiple student movements and demands, including the departmentalization of African and African-American Studies, the defunding and disarmament of campus police, proactive advocacy and support for our noncitizen student community, fair implementation of the new Title IX regulations, the establishment and expansion of university resources dedicated to meeting students’ basic needs, and a long-term COVID response plan for graduate students. Regina Wallace-Jones, Mayor of East Palo Alto, also spoke on the history of East Palto Alto and its relationship to Stanford University. |
Location |
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Location | https://purl.stanford.edu/jm531cn4348 |
Location | Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives Stanford University Libraries Stanford, CA 94305 |
Preferred citation
- Preferred citation
- Stanford University, Reverse Town Hall, Reopening with Justice and Equity, records (SC1540). Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, Calif.