Skip to main content

Politics Film Series: Selma

The epic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama culminated in President Johnson signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965, one of the most significant victories for the civil rights movement. "Selma" is a vivid portrayal of the courage of ordinary people to stand together peacefully and demand what the law guarantees, when actual danger to life and limb was a day-to-day reality.  Nominated for Best Picture, "Selma" won the Academy Award for Best Song ("Glory" by John Legend). 

Legal Observer Training

The training will cover how to monitor police, the legal rights of protesters and the public, and how to stay safe. Flynn is a long-time member of the National Lawyers Guild and a frequent legal observer. Sponsored by the Dean's Pre-Law Remsen Bird Fund.

Screening of "The End/Beginning: Cambodia"

Based on a 2009 TED Talk, but made after his mother passed away, the film uses audio recordings from interviews he conducted with her for a LIVES piece in the New York Times published in 2005, the 30th anniversary of the fall of Phnom Penh. The script for the documentary follows the eulogy he delivered at her funeral - a letter to her grandchildren about what she did to make their lives possible.

Carmen Takes Charge: Reflections on Cannery Women, Cannery Lives a public talk by Vicki Ruiz

When President Barack Obama awarded Ruiz a National Humanities Medal, the White House citation read: "Dr. Ruiz has pioneered the history of twentieth-century Latinas in a distinguished career that began with collecting oral testimony from Mexican immigrants who worked in U.S. canning factories." First published in 1987, Cannery Women, Cannery Lives was the first scholarly book-length study devoted to the lives of Mexican women in the United States.