January 2004 - December 2004
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A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
January 26, 2004. No.185.
CIVIC
REVOLUTIONARIES
Civic Revolutionaries: Igniting the Passion for Change in America's
Communities-- offers a practical guide for renewing the great American
tradition of spirited, breakthrough community leadership. By their
very nature, revolutionary leaders help their communities reconcile
the competing values on which our nation was built: individualism and
community, freedom and responsibility, trust and accountability, economy
and society. [by Douglas Henton, John G. Melville, Kimberly A. Walesh.
ISBN: 0-7879-6393-3.October 2003, Jossey-Bass.] see review:
http://www.nifi.org/news/news_detail.aspx?itemID=427&catID=24
EDUCATING
AMERICA
No Child Left Behind, has widely been criticized for imposing unrealistic
standards on states and cities and the failing to provide adequate
funds. Beyond this immediate issue lies the larger challenge of rescuing
the the ideal of the common school so that, well, so that no child
is left behind. That project requires a national commitment of adequate
resources and inventive strategies, beginning with investments in
very young children who are currently not part of the education system at
all.
http://www.movingideas.org/issuesindepth/education.html
JOB WATCH:
TRENDS FOR LIBRARIES SERVING JOB SEEKERS
JobWatch web feature tracks current trends in the U.S. labor market
and offers up-to-date readings on its status. Over the longer term,
the past two years have been among the worst on record for payroll
employment growth, and the lack of job creation is leading many to
exit the labor market and cutting into the hours of work of those
who remain employed. The persistence of these weak demand conditions
have led to stagnant hourly and weekly wage trends that are falling
behind inflation and thus eroding the living standards of working
families. The fact that the labor market remains this weak more than two
years into a recovery highlights the failure of economic policy to
reach those sectors of the economy, specifically the job market, that
matter most to working families.
http://www.jobwatch.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
January 30, 2004. No.186.
NATIONAL
NETWORK FOR IMMIGRANT & REFUGEE RIGHTS
The National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (NNIRR) is
a national organization composed of local coalitions and immigrant,
refugee, community, religious, civil rights and labor organizations
and activists. It serves as a forum to share information and analysis,
to educate communities and the general public, and to develop and
coordinate plans of action on important immigrant and refugee issues.
http://www.nnirr.org/immigration/immigration_map.html
UNITED FARMWORKERS
OPPOSE IMMIGRATION PLAN
President Bush talked about his new immigration proposal during
his Jan. 20 State of the Union address. His plan is empty. It offers
no new path for hard-working immigrants to earn a green card and
the right to permanently be in this country legally.
http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/StopBush
LA RAZA ON
IMMIGRATION
Questions and Answers about President Bush's Immigration Proposal.
We fear that the President may want to implement something similar
to the old bracero program. The bracero program was a guestworker
program in the 1940s, '50s, and '60s. Under this program, over four
million Mexican workers came to the U.S. to work in agriculture and on
the railroads. Unfortunately, the bracero program was also known for
its exploitation and abuse of workers. Furthermore, the President
announced he would like to offer financial incentives to guestworkers
so that they return to their home countries. NCLR is deeply suspicious
of any plans to offer financial incentives to immigrant workers to
return home.
http://www.nclr.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
February 10, 2004. No.187.
NATIONAL
CONSUMER LAW CENTER
The National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) is the nation's consumer
law expert, helping consumers, their advocates, and public policy makers
use powerful and complex consumer laws on behalf of low-income and
vulnerable Americans seeking economic justice.
http://www.consumerlaw.org/
U.S. NATIONAL
DEBT CLOCK
The estimated population of the United States is 293,252,514 so
each citizen's share of this debt is $23,928.74. The National Debt has
continued to increase an average of $1.77 billion per day since September
30, 2003.
http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
= OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC
DEBT http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
REFUND
ANTICIPATION LOANS
Refund anticipation loans (RALs) are usurious short-term loans secured
by the taxpayer's expected tax refund. Over half of RAL consumers
are recipients of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), despite the
fact that EITC recipients only constitute 15% of all taxpayers. This
is the annual update from the National Consumer Law Center and Consumer
Federation of America on RALs. o Consumers paid an estimated $1.14
billion in RAL fees and an additional $406 million
http://www.consumerlaw.org/initiatives/refund_anticipation/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
February 10, 2004. ALERT.
FEBRUARY
11 is 2-1-1 DAY.
Please join efforts to obtain critical federal funds for your community.
We encourage you to contact your Senators and Representatives to
urge co-sponsorship of the Calling for 2-1-1 Act. The legislation
will provide federal money to states starting or enhancing a 2-1-1
system. The "Calling for 2-1-1" Act authorizes $200 million annually
from the Department of Commerce to help develop and sustain 2-1-1
nationwide. States would designate, if they have not already, a lead
entity for 2-1-1 which would develop a statewide plan for implementation
and administer the funds. States would be required to provide a 50%
match in order to draw down the federal dollars.
http://www.211.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
February 13, 2004. No.188.
Sources and Sites for Librarians Building Community.
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/a-librarian-at-every-table/
COLORLINES-Spring
2004.
" Man with a Plan." Interview with Walden Bello. one of the leading
critics of the current model of economic globalization, combining
the roles of intellectual and activist. As a human rights and peace
campaigner, academic, environmentalist, and journalist, he has made a
major contribution to the international case against corporate-driven
globalization. In 1995, he co-founded the Focus on the Global South,
a Bangkok-based research and advocacy organization. Bello is the author
of the recently-released Deglobalization: Ideas for a New World Economy.
The Belgian newspaper Le Soir recently called Bello" the most respected
anti-globalization thinker in Asia."
http://www.colorlines.com/
CENTER FOR
ARTS AND CULTURE
The Center for Arts and Culture aims to inform and improve policy
decisions that affect cultural life. The guiding principles of that
mission include freedom of imagination, inquiry and expression, as well
as freedom of opportunity for all to participate in a vital and diverse
culture.Founded in 1994 in Washington, DC, the Center is a nonprofit,
non-partisan organization, supported by foundations and individuals,
governed by a board of directors, and advised by a Research Advisory
Council.
http://www.culturalpolicy.org/
TEACHABLE
MOMENT
Teachable Moment provides educators with timely teaching ideas to
encourage critical thinking on issues of the day and foster a positive
classroom environment.
http://www.teachablemoment.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
February 16, 2004. No.189.
NO ROOM FOR
POVERTY
The Community Action Partnership is planning a rally on September
4, 2004. It will be a "call to conscience," a call to fulfill a 40-year-old
commitment because there is" No Room For Poverty" in America. The
Community Action Partnership was established in 1972 as the National
Association of Community Action Agencies (NACAA) represents Community
Action Agencies (CAAs) working to fight poverty at the local level.
http://www.communityactionpartnership.com/default.asp
WEAK LABOR
MARKET TAKES TOLL
The weak labor market is now hurting employed workers as well as
those looking for work. In 2003, real (inflation-adjusted) weekly wages
fell for low- and middle-wage men and were stagnant or fell slightly
for low- and middle-wage women. This trend is in sharp contrast to the
significant and sustained real wage growth over the 1995-2002 period
when unemployment was falling Despite the acceleration of gross domestic
product (GDP) growth in late 2003, the wage growth of production,
non-supervisory workers (over 80% of the workforce) actually slowed
in this period.
http://www.jobwatch.org/
FAMILY SUPPORT
AMERICA
In each state, a coalition of parents, state agency personnel, representatives
of community-based organizations, and others concerned about the
quality of human services are working in partnership with Family
Support America. These coalitions are developing cutting-edge strategies
for creating caring communities so that all families have access
to the resources they need to raise healthy children.
http://www.familysupportamerica.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
February 17, 2004. No.190.
REGIONAL
PROGRESS AND SUSTAINABILITY A new forum for displaying the results
of projects that measure regional sustainability across the United
States. Redefining Progress' primary measures of sustainability are
the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) and the Ecological Footprint.
If your region or community is interested in learning more about how
to measure its progress toward sustainability, please contact Redefining
Progress.
http://www.regionalprogress.org/
CENTER FOR
THE STUDY OF SOCIAL POLICY
This issue of SafeKeeping highlights the importance of information
in two national initiatives to keep children safe and strengthen
child welfare services for children, youth, and families by building
partnerships: Community Partnerships for Protecting Children (Community
Partnerships) and Family to Family. Over the past three years, Community
Partnerships and Family to Family have worked together and learned
from each other to create a solid foundation for reforming child
welfare.
http://www.cssp.org/whatsnew.html
LOCAL INITIATIVES
SUPPORT CORPORATION (LISC).
The LISC helps resident-led, community-based development organizations
transform distressed communities and neighborhoods into healthy ones--
good places to live, do business, work and raise families. By providing
capital, technical expertise, training and information, LISC supports
the development of local leadership and the creation of affordable
housing, commercial, industrial and community facilities, businesses
and jobs. We help neighbors build communities.
http://www.liscnet.org/
A LIBRARIAN
AT EVERY TABLE
February 23, 2004. No.191.
SWIMMING
IN SEWAGE
Sewage overflows cost Americans billions a year in medical treatment,
lost productivity and repairs, and current policies are compounding
the problem. This February 2004 report from Natural Resources Defense
Council and the Environmental Integrity Project describes the emerging
environmental and public health crisis resulting from our nation's
failure to effectively treat sewage, presents seven case studies
from around the country that illustrate how exposure to sewage pollution
has killed or seriously injured people and harmed local economies,
and recommends solutions to America's sewage problem.
http://www.nrdc.org/
LEAVING TOO
MANY CHILDREN BEHIND
" No Child Left Behind: A Federal-, State- and District- Level Look
at the First Year." Reports from the The Civil Rights Project at
Harvard University.The reports demonstrate that federal accountability
rules have derailed state reforms and assessment strategies, that
the requirements have no common meaning across state lines, and that
the sanctions fall especially hard on minority and integrated schools,
asking for much less progress from affluent suburban schools.
http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/directory/programs/civil-rights-project
NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF LA RAZA ON IMMIGRATION
We fear that the President may want to implement something similar
to the old bracero program. The bracero program was a guestworker
program in the 1940s, '50s, and '60s. Under this program, over four
million Mexican workers came to the U.S. to work in agriculture and
on the railroads. Unfortunately, the bracero program was also known
for its exploitation and abuse of workers. Furthermore, the President
announced he would like to offer financial incentives to guestworkers
so that they return to their home countries. NCLR is deeply suspicious
of any plans to offer financial incentives to immigrant workers to
return home. Under the bracero program, a portion of workers' salaries
were withheld and they were promised that this money would be returned
to them once they returned to Mexico. However, many braceros never
received their savings, and there is still litigation in the courts
today trying to recover that money for former braceros and their families.
http://www.nclr.org/
LIBRARIAN
AT EVERY TABLE
February 27, 2004. No.192
FAIRNESS:
The Civil Rights Act of 2004.
For forty years the Civil Rights Act of 1964 has attempted to level
the playing field in job opportunities, education, housing, voting
and other areas. On February 11, 2004 civil rights leaders and Democrats
introduced a multi-year initiative before Congress in an attempt
to pass a sweeping update of the nation's laws barring discrimination.
http://www.civilrights.org/campaigns/civil_rights_act/act_now.html
EQUAL RIGHTS
AMENDMENT
Section 1. Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied
or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.
Section 2. The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate
legislation, the provisions of this article. Section 3. This amendment
shall take effect two years after the date of ratification.
http://www.equalrightsamendment.org/
JOBLESS AID
DENIED
From late December, when the federal program designed to help the
long-term unemployed began phasing out, through the end of February,
an estimated 760,000 jobless workers will have exhausted their regular
unemployment benefits without receiving additional aid, according
to new projections by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
This suggests both that the job market continues to be soft and that
the federal unemployment program should be restarted.
http://www.cbpp.org/2-25-04ui-pr.htm
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
March 1, 2004. No.193.
USING SCIENCE
TO HELP THE POOR
The Earth Institute at Columbia University brings together talent
from throughout the University to address complex issues facing the
planet and its inhabitants, with particular focus on sustainable
development and the needs of the world's poor. The Earth Institute
is motivated by the belief that science and technological tools already
exist, and could be expanded, to greatly improve conditions for the
world's poor while preserving the natural systems that support life on
Earth.
http://www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/about/director/
LOCAL PURSUIT
OF EQUITY
PolicyLink, a national nonprofit research, communications, capacity
building, and advocacy organization, is enlarging the sphere of influence
that affects policy so that those closest to the nation's challenges
are central to the search for their solutions. PolicyLink believes
that the pursuit of equity must be guided by the wisdom, voice, and
experience of local constituencies.
http://www.policylink.org/mission.html
COMMUNITY
DEMOCRACY
The National Civic League, the United States' original organization
advocating for the issues of community democracy, envisions a country
where citizens are actively engaged in the process of self-governance
and work in partnership with the public, private, and nonprofit sectors
of society, and where citizens are creating active civic culture
reflective of the diversity of community voices.
http://www.ncl.org//
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
April 8, 2004. No.194.
FOOTPRINT
OF NATIONS
The 2004 Footprint of Nations concludes that the world's wealthiest
nations are mortgaging the future at the expense of today's children,
the poor, and the long-term health of the Earth. Through excessive
consumption of non-renewable resources, a handful of countries are
depleting global reserves at a faster rate than ever before. These
problems are compounded as wealthy nations continue to grow their
economies by exploiting the resources and economic potential of their
impoverished neighbors.
http://www.redefiningprogress.org/
THE CREATIVE
SECTOR
The UNESCO meeting report is now available that explores how cultural
participation and audience development differ among Europe, the United
States, and Latin America, titled the" International Creative Sector."
Sponsored by the Center for Arts & Culture, UNESCO, and the President's
Committee on the Arts and Humanities, the conference was second in
a series of UNESCO meetings about current issues in the arts and
cultural industries. A final report is now available:
http://www.culturalpolicy.org/pdf/UNESCO2003.pdf
BREAD &
ROSES
Bread and Roses is the not-for-profit cultural arm of New York's
Health and Human Service Union, 1199/SEIU. Its 220,000 predominantly
Latina and African American women members are employed in all job
categories in health care institutions throughout the metropolitan area,
New Jersey and Florida. Bread and Roses was founded in 1979 as a cultural
resource for union members and students in New York City who would
otherwise have little access to the arts. Special emphasis is given
to programs that signify and interpret their history while generating
new artistic expression.
http://www.bread-and-roses.com/index.html
A LIBRARIAN
AT EVERY TABLE
April 13, 2004. No.195.
NATIONAL
ISSUES FORUM
National Issues Forums (NIF) is a nonpartisan, nationwide network
of locally sponsored public forums for the consideration of public policy
issues. It is rooted in the simple notion that people need to come
together to reason and talk - to deliberate about common problems.
Indeed, democracy requires an ongoing deliberative public dialogue.
http://www.nifi.org/forums/about.aspx
SCIENTIFIC
INTEGRITY IN POLICYMAKING
At a time when one might expect the federal government to increasingly
rely on impartial researchers for the critical role they play in
gathering and analyzing specialized data, there are numerous indications
that the opposite is occurring. A growing number of scientists, policy
makers, and technical specialists both inside and outside the government
allege that the Bush administration has suppressed or distorted the
scientific analyses of federal agencies to bring these results in
line with administration policy.
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_environment/rsi/report.html
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
April 19, 2004. No.196.
PRISON TRACK TO COLLEGE TRACK
Taking aim at the "hidden, national crisis" that consigns nearly
five million out-of-school and unemployed young adults to a future
locked out of education and family-supporting jobs, Jobs For the Future
(JFF) calls on policymakers and educators around the country to get
behind educational dropout prevention programs that successfully connect
out-of-school youth with education and put them on a path to further
study and solid employment.
http://www.jff.org/Content/Newsroom.html
CHARTBOOK
ON HEALTH OF YOUTH
Quality of Health Care for Children and Adolescents: A Chartbook
is the first comprehensive national report on the quality of pediatric
care. The researchers, Sheila Leatherman and Douglas McCarthy,
reviewed over 500 studies and synthesized this information into 40
charts that provide a portrait of the current state of pediatric health
care. It also identifies geographic, racial, and ethnic disparities
in care for children across the United States and provides examples
of quality improvement programs that have successfully improved care.
http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/
FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE--SHELTERFORCE
The Fortress of Solitude, by Jonathan Lethem. Doubleday. 2003."
One of my favorite parts of the book is this recognition that, in
both a metaphoric and real way, the flip-side of gentrification is
the massive increase in the incarceration of African-Americans and
Latinos in the 1980s and 1990s. I wish that more community groups would
recognize this, and create programs like FAC's Developing
Justice, which seeks to create community-based alternatives, and
organizes to change the so-called criminal justice system. Lethem sees
both the stark prism of race - that the price of beautifying our
urban neighborhoods is not simply benign displacement but the creation
of a legion of "prisonaires" - as well as its many and deep ironies."
http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/133/lethemreview.html
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
April 23, 2004. No.197.
HOW DESEGREGATION
CHANGED US
Teachers College (Columbia). School desegregation fundamentally
changed the people who lived through it, yet had a more limited impact
on the larger society. Public schools faced enormous challenges during
the late 1970s as educators tried to facilitate racial integration
amid a society that remained segregated in terms of housing, social
institutions, and often employment. Nonetheless, desegregation made
the vast majority of the students who attended these schools less
racially prejudiced and more comfortable around people of different
backgrounds. After high school, however, their lives have been far
more segregated as they re-entered a more racially divided society.
http://www.tc.edu/desegregation
AMERICANS
FOR THE ARTS
Americans for the Arts is the nation's leading nonprofit organization
for advancing the arts in America,dedicated to representing and serving
local communities and creating opportunities for every American to
participate in and appreciate all forms of the arts. Three primary
goals: 1) increasing public and private sector support for the arts;
2) ensuring that every American child has access to a high-quality
arts education; and 3) strengthening communities through the arts. To
achieve our goals, we partner with local, state, and national arts
organizations; government agencies; business leaders; individual
philanthropists; educators; and funders throughout the country.
http://www.americansforthearts.org/default.asp
CHILD CARE
& EARLY EDUCATION
The "Child Care & Early Education Research Connections" promotes
high quality research and child care and the use of that research
in policymaking. Resources indexed and housed on the Research
Connections site cover a broad spectrum of research on child care
and early education and related policies. The collection brings together
original research, syntheses, datasets, and other research-related
resources from the wide range of social science disciplines and professional
fields that study early care and education.
http://www.childcareresearch.org/discover/index.jsp
A LIBRARIAN
AT EVERY TABLE
April 29, 2004. No.198.
WOMEN'S
LIVES
Over the past few years, vital data has been deleted, buried, distorted,
or has otherwise gone missing from government websites and publications.The
National Council for Research on Women has begun to document how
these changes and exclusions affect women's lives in a new report,
entitled MISSING: Information About Women's Lives. The MisInformation
Clearinghouse continues this work, by gathering new information through
the MisInformation Blog and a Resource Exchange.
http://www.ncrw.org/
SLIP-SLIDING
AWAY
The report, Slip-Sliding Away: The Erosion of Hard-Won Gains for
Women Under the Bush Administration and an Agenda for Moving Forward,
shows that many of the Administration's actions with harsh effects on
women are occurring almost completely without public scrutiny, and
some of its more well-publicized actions have a particularly harsh
impact on women that is not widely known. The report includes recommended
actions that should be taken to expand and protect women's rights and
opportunities. National Women's Law Center.
http://www.nwlc.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
May 7, 2004. No.199.
"No one shall
be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment." Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article
5
CONVENTION
AGAINST TORTURE
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment.Adopted and opened for signature, ratification
and accession by General Assembly resolution 39/46 of 10 December 1984.
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/h_cat39.htm
WORLD ORGANISATION
AGAINST TORTURE
The World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) is the world's largest
coalition of non-governmental organisations fighting against arbitrary
detention, torture, summary and extrajudicial executions, forced
disappearances and other forms of violence. Its global network comprises
nearly 300 local, national and regional organisations, which share
the common goal of eradicating such practices and enabling the respect
of human rights for all.
http://www.omct.org/
STOP TORTURE:
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Combating torture: a manual for action is an invaluable tool for
all those who want to understand and fight against torture in the 21st
century. It brings together the standards and recommendations of the
UN, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and other
sources from around the world, as well as Amnesty International's
recommendations, concerning the prevention of torture and ill- treatment.
There are chapters on the prohibition of torture under international
law, safeguards in custody, conditions of detention, torture in other
settings, and overcoming impunity.
http://web.amnesty.org/pages/stoptorture-actnow-eng
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
May 12, 2004. No.200.
CAN SEPARATE
BE EQUAL?
For many of our children, especially those who live in low income
urban school districts, the nation's educational system is failing.
Today, the reading level of the average, low-income twelfth grader is
the same as that of the average, middle-class eighth grader- regardless
of race. THE CENTURY FOUNDATION.
http://www.tcf.org/INDEX.asp
CITISTATES
The Citistates Group is a network of journalists, speakers and civic
leaders focused on building competitive, equitable and sustainable
21st century metropolitan regions.
http://www.citistates.com/whowhat.html
FORUM FOR
YOUTH INVESTMENT
The Forum for Youth Investment (the Forum) is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
organization dedicated to helping communities and the nation make
sure all young people are ready by 21 - ready for work, college and
life. This goal requires that young people have the supports, opportunities
and services needed to prosper and contribute where they live, learn,
work, play and make a difference. The Forum provides youth and adult
leaders with the information, technical assistance, training, network
support and partnership opportunities needed to increase the quality
and quantity of youth investment and youth involvement.
http://www.forumforyouthinvestment.org/about
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
May 20, 2004. No.201.
HUMAN RIGHTS
WATCH
Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of
people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent
discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect
people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders
to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and
hold abusers accountable. We challenge governments and those who
hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human
rights law. We enlist the public and the international community
to support the cause of human rights for all.
http://www.hrw.org/
CIVIL
RIGHTS
civilrights.org is a collaboration of the Leadership Conference
on Civil Rights and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education
Fund. Its mission: to serve as the site of record for relevant and
up- to-the minute civil rights news and information. Home to socially-
concerned, issue-oriented original audio, video, and written programming,
civilrights.org is committed to serving as the online nerve center
not only for the struggle against discrimination in all its forms,
but also to build the public understanding that it is essential for
our nation to continue its journey toward social and economic justice.
http://www.civilrights.org/index.html
HERITAGE
HEALTH INDEX
In July 2004, the Heritage Health Index questionnaire will arrive
at 16,000 archives, historical societies, libraries, museums, and
scientific organizations nationwide. This survey of the condition and
preservation needs of collections will-for the first time-produce a
national picture of the state of artistic, historic, and scientific
collections held by the full range of institutions that care for
them.
http://www.heritagepreservation.org/PROGRAMS/HHIhome.HTM
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
May 26, 2004. No.202.
Sources and Sites for Librarians Building Community.
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/a-librarian-at-every-table/
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORT 2004
Huge challenges confronted the international human rights movement
in 2003. The UN faced a crisis of legitimacy and credibility because
of the US-led war on Iraq and the organization's inability to hold
states to account for gross human rights violations. International
human rights standards continued to be flouted in the name of the
" war on terror", resulting in thousands of women and men suffering
unlawful detention, unfair trial and torture – often solely because of
their ethnic or religious background.
http://web.amnesty.org/report2004/index-eng
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
June 9, 2004. No.203.
HUMAN
RIGHTS
The Center for Constitutional Rights has remained dedicated to defending
and advancing the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution
and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Our work began on
behalf of civil rights activists in the Jim Crow South and the racist
North, and over the last four decades CCR has played an important role
in many popular movements for social justice. Currently
posted: copies of memo planning at high levels of government to
abuse and torture detainees.
http://ccrjustice.org/
SUSTAINABILITY
The Global Footprint Network supports a sustainable economy by promoting
the Ecological Footprint, a tool that makes sustainability measurable.
We coordinate research and develop methodological standards so that
decision makers have robust resource accounts to ensure that we live
within the Earth's budget.
http://www.footprintnetwork.org/index.html
JOB WATCH
The Council on Economic Advisors projected that, starting in July
2003, the economy would generate 228,000 jobs a month without a tax
cut and 306,000 jobs a month with the tax cut. Thus, it projected
that 3,366,000 would be created in the last 11 months. In fact, since
the tax cuts took effect, jobs have grown by 1,365,000—two million
fewer jobs than the administration projected would be created by enactment
of its tax cuts.
http://www.jobwatch.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
June 15, 2004. No.204.
HUMAN RIGHTS
VIDEO PROJECT
The Human Rights Video Project is a national library project created
to increase the public's awareness of human rights issues through
the medium of documentary films. To that end, we have curated a collection
of 12 documentary films on human rights issues. The project also
encourages
collaborations between public libraries and human rights advocacy
organizations to present film screenings and discussion programs.
The project was developed by National Video Resources in partnership with
the American Library Association Public Programs Office.
http://www.humanrightsproject.org/
HUMAN RIGHTS
& IRAQ
" Beyond Torture: U.S. Violations of Occupation Law in Iraq." Center
for Economic and Social Rights, June 10, 2004. This report by the
Center for Economic and Social Rights presents ten categories of U.S.
violations of the laws of occupation, documented by human rights groups,
journalists, eyewitnesses, and, at times, the U.S. military itself.
This “top ten” list, which is by no means comprehensive, demonstrates
how U.S. practices violate the full range of laws meant to safeguard
the rights of the Iraqi people. The systematic nature of these violations
provides compelling evidence of a policy that is rotten at its core
and requires a fundamental transformation of assumptions and objectives.
The occupation of Iraq is not leading to greater respect for rights
and democracy, as promised by the Bush Administration, but rather
entrenching a climate of lawlessness and feeding an increasing spiral
of violent conflict that will not end until the occupation ends and
underlying issues of justice are addressed. After providing details
of these war crimes and rights violations, the report offers recommendations,
conclusions, and a postscript summarizing the recent history of U.S.
policy towards Iraq. The overall report is intended to support the
growing peace and justice movements in the U.S. and worldwide in their
efforts to end the occupation and promote solutions to the Iraq crisis
based on respect for human rights and international law.
http://www.cesr.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
July 21, 2004. No.205.
SUSTAINING
THE PUBLIC SPHERE IN LIBRARIES
Public librarians stimulate community discussion on issues through
support of events like the National Issues Forum, reading discussion
programs, such as, "A Response to September 11," and reading viewing
programs. Public libraries activate the public sphere through support
of life-long learning and discussion programs and strengthen the
public's desire for opportunities to address issues that
are salient to the community.If discourse becomes more democratic
through consensus building, it is partly because authentic discourse
enables people to move from personal opinions to informed ideas.
--from Introduction to Public Librarianship, 2004.
http://www.neal-schuman.com/db/7/317.html
http://www.humanrightsproject.org/content.php?sec=essay&sub=%20sustaining
COMMISSION
ON ADULT ADULT BASIC EDUCATION
Purposes: To promote adult education and literacy programs, including
Adult Basic Education, Adult Secondary Education, English for Speakers
of Other Languages, Family Literacy, Skills Development, Workforce
Development, and other state, federal, and private programs which
assist undereducated
and/or disadvantaged adults to function effectively in society;
To provide leadership in advancing the education of adults in the
lifelong learning process by unifying the profession, developing
human resources, encouraging and using research, communicating with
the members and the public, offering other member services, and otherwise
advancing adult education and literacy;To advocate the
development and dissemination of publications, research, methods,
and materials, resources and programs in adult education and literacy;To
conduct and/or sponsor professional development conferences and activities
that provide a forum to provide staff development and advance adult
education and literacy.
http://www.coabe.org/
NATIONAL
EQUAL JUSTICE LAW LIBRARY
The National Equal Justice Library is our country's first national
institution established to house and commemorate the legal profession's
long and little known history of providing legal representation for
those unable to afford counsel. The Library is co- sponsored by the
American Bar Association, the American Association of Law Libraries
and the National Legal Aid and Defender Association and is
housed at the Washington College of Law at the American University
in Washington, DC. http://nejl.wcl.american.edu/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
July 23, 2004. No.206.
ADVANCEMENT
PROJECT
Advancement Project is a democracy and justice action group. We
work with communities seeking to build a fair and just multi-racial
democracy in America. Using law, public policy and strategic communications,
Advancement Project acts in partnership with local communities to
advance universal
opportunity, equity and access for those left behind in America.
[Thanks CM]
http://www.advancementproject.org/
11 MOST ENDANGERED
PLACES
This year’s list comprises a wide range of sites—from a modern Big
Apple icon to an ancient Native American "art gallery." Read about
this year's endangered places and find out how you can help protect them
and other irreplaceable pieces of America's history. For more than
50 years, the National Trust has been helping Americans protect the
irreplaceable. A private nonprofit organization with more
than 200,000 members, the National Trust is the leader of the vigorous
preservation movement that is saving the best of the country's past
for the future.
http://www.nationaltrust.org/
CULTURAL
COMMONS
The Cultural Commons is an virtual commons, or open meeting place,
designed to engage all who care about creativity and culture. The
Cultural Commons seeks to attract new interest and new thinking about arts
and cultural issues, engage a broad and diverse constituency in a
lively exchange of ideas, and provide resources and ideas for further
involvement -- such as event participation, employment in the cultural
policy sector, research, or even new partnerships for organizations.
http://www.culturalcommons.org/index.cfm
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
July 26, 2004. No.207.
POVERTY &
RACE ACTION COUNCIL
PRRAC is a non-partisan, national, not-for-profit organization convened
by major civil rights, civil liberties and anti-poverty groups. Our
purpose is to link social science research to advocacy work in order
to successfully address problems at the intersection of race and
poverty.
http://www.prrac.org/index.php
NATIONAL
NEIGHBORHOOD COALITION
The NNC serves as a crucial link to Washington for neighborhood
and community-based organizations and an important networking resource
for representatives of regional and national organizations involved
in community development, housing and a wide range of other neighborhood
issues. http://www.neighborhoodcoalition.org/
SEARCH FOR
FAIR HOUSING (HISTORICAL RESEARCH).
Housing and School Segregation: Government Culpability, Government
Remedies." Historical studies, funded by a multi-year grant from
the Ford Foundation, trace the development of federal housing and
transportation policies in relation to increasing housing and school
segregation in American Metropolitan areas. Several reports: "The
Last and Most Difficult Barrier: Segregation and Federal Housing Policy
in the Eisenhower Administration, 1953- 1960;" "The Interstates and
the Cities: Highways, Housing, and the Freeway Revolt;" "Democracy's
Unfinished Business: Federal Policy and the Search for Fair Housing,
1961-1968."
http://www.prrac.org/index.php#ford%22
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
July 28, 2004. No.208.
THE LONG
SHADOW OF JIM CROW
Voter Intimidation Didn’t Disappear with Jim Crow.No matter what
we’re taught in school, voter intimidation, oppression, and suppression
weren’t swept away with the passage of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. A joint PFAW Foundation - NAACP report,
The Long Shadow of Jim Crow,reviews the subtler, more cynical tactics
that have replaced the poll taxes, literacy tests and physical violence
of the Jim Crow era. PFAWF President Ralph G. Neas' July 15 testimony
at the
Civil Rights Commission highlighted the continuing disarray in election
preparation and detailed the nationwide nonpartisan coalition program
to protect voters' rights: Election Protection. http://www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/
ALLIANCE
OF I & R. 2-1-1-TOOLKIT.
The 2-1-1 Toolkit is field tested, 2-1-1 approved.The Alliance of
Information and Referral Systems has designed the AIRS 2-1-1 Toolkit
to help 2-1-1 planners create cost effective, high quality, and investor
friendly business plans. The AIRS 2-1-1 Toolkit is the only 2-1-1
planning process developed by experienced 2-1-1 consultants and tested
by 2-1-1 planners in the field. Developed through a
grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the tools are
based on facilitated local planning in Portland OR and Seattle WA,
as well as statewide planning in FL, TX, OR, and WA. The resulting
tools have also been reviewed and refined by an experienced team
of 2-1-1 developers from the field
and from the AIRS and UWA national offices.
http://www.211toolkit.org/
PROLIFERATION
NEWS AND RESOURCES
The Nonproliferation Project of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace has established itself as the full-service Web site for studying
weapons of mass destruction. It provides country-by- country assessments
of WMD capabilities, strategic analyses for coping with today's proliferation
crises, and daily links to the latest news.
http://www.ceip.org/files/nonprolif/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
July 30, 2004. No.209.
NO ROOM FOR POVERTY RALLY
The Community Action Partnership is holding the “No Room for Poverty”
National Rally September 4, 2004, on the Ellipse in Washington, DC.
to unify the nation around the need to end poverty. Focus on five
key areas: health care, jobs, housing, education, and the Digital
Divide.The Partnership is calling for a White House Conference on American
Poverty because they believe that only the White House can assemble
expert theorists, practitioners, and policymakers needed to address
this issue. They also feel it is of utmost importance for the nation
to tackle fundamental issues that particularly impact low-income Americans.
http://www.communityactionpartnership.com/
CITY PARKS
FORUM
The City Parks Forum is dedicated to providing information on how
healthy parks are fundamental to many aspects of community prosperity.
These include improving economic health and vitality, reducing crime,
improving public physical and mental health, creating a strong sense
of community, supporting overall quality of life ... the list is
quite long. All these issues are important to communities across
the country, and to those both in and outside the parks profession.
http://www.planning.org/cpf/briefingpapers.htm
ASSESSING
JOB QUALITY
June 2003 to June 2004, real average hourly wages have fallen from
$15.83 to $15.65. Similarly, real average weekly wages have fallen
from $533.58 to $525.84. This decline is due to a combination of: (a) the
lingering effects of the jobless recovery and the considerable existing
labor slack that has lowered workers' bargaining power; (b) rising
inflation that lowers workers' purchasing power; and (c) the fact
that faster-growing industries pay less, on average, than shrinking
or slower-growing industries.
http://www.epinet.org/content.cfm/issuebriefs_ib200
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
August 2, 2004. No.210.
Sources and Sites for Librarians Building Community.
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/a-librarian-at-every-table/
CULTURAL
LIBERTY
[Human Development Report 2004].
Cultural Liberty in Today’s Diverse World.
Accommodating people’s growing demands for their inclusion
in society, for respect of their ethnicity, religion, and
language, takes more than democracy and equitable growth.
Also needed are multicultural policies that recognize
differences, champion diversity and promote cultural
freedoms, so that all people can choose to speak their
language, practice their religion, and participate in
shaping their culture—so that all people can choose to be
who they are. http://hdr.undp.org/reports/global/2004/
REAL DANGERS
FOR POOR FAMILIES
H.R. 4, the House-passed TANF reauthorization bill, requires
more hours of work for people receiving TANF, would reduce
the amount of education and training that counts towards the
core work requirement, and would require a much greater
proportion of families receiving TANF to participate. States
will get credit towards meeting their work participation
requirements by further reductions to the caseload, no
matter what happens when families leave. Only $1 billion in
additional child care funding would be assured over 5 years,
far too little to cover inflation, to meet the needs of
growing waiting lists in states, and to pay for the
increased work requirements.
http://www.chn.org/
CULTURE OF
PEACE NEWS NETWORK
Culture of Peace News Network, a global network of interactive
Internet sites in many languages where readers exchange information
about events, experiences, books, music, and web news that promote
a
culture of peace. It is a project of the United Nations International
Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children
of
the World. http://cpnn-usa.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
August 4, 2004. No.211.
LA RAZA
The National Council of La Raza - the largest national constituency-
based Hispanic organization and the leading voice in Washington,
DC
for the Hispanic community - is a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan,
tax-exempt organization established to reduce poverty and
discrimination and improve life opportunities for Hispanic Americans.
Four major functions provide essential focus to the organization’s
work: capacity-building assistance; applied research, policy
analysis,and advocacy; public information efforts; and special
and
international projects. These functions complement NCLR’s work
in
five key strategic priorities - education, assets/investment,
economic mobility, health, and media/image/civil rights.
http://www.nclr.org
H-MUSEUM
The H-MUSEUM list addresses themes and questions primarily relating
to museological topics. Museums are intended to be interdisciplinary,
so that archaeological, historical, cultural and artistic information
can be posted. Also important are informations about memorial
museums
and places, monuments and the culture of remembrance. Articles
relating to the activities of archives and libraries will also
be
listed. Another focus is the history and development of museums.
A
particular feature is the emphasis on museums and the internet.
http://www.h-net.org/~museum/index.html
PUBLIC EDUCATION
NETWORK
PEN seeks to build public demand and mobilize resources for quality
public education forall children through a theory of action that
focuses on the importance of public engagement in school reform.
PEN
believes community engagement is the missing ingredient in school
reform, and that the level of public involvement ultimately
determines the quality of education provided by public schools.
http://www.publiceducation.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
August 6, 2004. No.212.
GOING NOWHERE
Reality Check: Going Nowhere Workers' Wages Since the Mid-1970s
.
Experience since 2000 suggests that the long period of stagnant
wages
is dragging on. In marked contrast to the 1947–74 period—when
wages
for almost all workers were rising steadily and faster than the
inflation rate—average wages after the mid-1970s failed to grow
consistently. Household incomes continued to rise somewhat fitfully
over that period, but only because family members were working
more
hours. Bernard Wasow analyzes the causes of slow wage growth and
looks at which Americans are losing out because of it. [click
on link
on right].http://www.tcf.org/
AMERICA'S
CHILDREN
The State of America's Children 2004:A Continuing Portrait of
Inequality Fifty Years After Brown v. Board of Education. Features
the most recent data available on our nation's children and reviews
developments in family income and child poverty, hunger and food
assistance, child health, child care, Head Start and school-age
care,
education, children and families in crisis, and juvenile justice
and
youth development. [Children's Defense Fund].
http://childrensdefense.org/
HUNGER MAP
The United Nations World Food Programme map of the areas with
hungry
and malnourished people around the world. The map will serve as
an
educational tool to teach the geography of hunger in schools and
other educational institutions.Demonstrates the agency’s mission
to
stop global hunger. http://www.wfp.org/
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
August 24, 2004. No. 213.
"Wherever
men and women are condemned to live in extreme
poverty, human rights are violated. To come together to ensure that
these rights be respected is our solemn duty." Father Joseph Wresinski,October
17, 1987 - Trocadéro -
FOURTH WORLD
MOVEMENT
The Fourth World Movement is an international organization whose
actions throughout the world fight extreme poverty and promote
human rights. The Movement originated in 1957 in an emergency housing
camp for homeless families at Noisy-le-Grand, near Paris, France.
http://www.4thworldmovement.org/
ERADICATE
EXTREME POVERTY AND HUNGER
The Millennium Development Goals call for reducing the proportion
of
people living on less than $1 a day to half the 1990 level by
2015-from 28.3 percent of all people in low and middle income economies
to 14.2 percent. The Goals also call for halving the proportion
of people who suffer from hunger between 1990 and 2015.
http://www.developmentgoals.org/Poverty.htm
DECADE FOR
ERADICATION OF POVERTY
First United Nations Decade for the Eradication of Poverty (1997-
2006). In December 1996, the General Assembly declared the theme
for the Decade as a whole to be "Eradicating poverty is an ethical,
social, political and economic imperative of humankind."
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/poverty/poverty.htm
WORLD DAY
TO OVERCOME EXTREME POVERTY
http://www.oct17.org/en
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
September 3, 2004. No. 215.
PUBLIC
LIBRARIES & COMMUNITY PARTNERS
" Public Libraries and Community Partners:
Working Together to Provide Health Information"-- web resourceto
encourage health information partnerships between
public libraries, members of the NN/LM, and local health or
community-based organizations. Includes background information
about consumer health as well as suggestions for providing health
information services. Six Guides provide extensive
information for organizations interested in preparing health
outreach projects in their local communities. These projects are
examples of how public libraries and other agencies can apply
for
funding from the NN/LM or other sources.
http://nnlm.gov/libinfo/community
NO ROOM FOR
POVERTY-TOMORROW
As poverty rates continue to soar and as the nation is just months
away from electing the next president, the Community Action Partnership
is taking an aggressive approach toward ending poverty by holding
the No Room for Poverty National Rally September 4 on the Ellipse
in Washington,DC. During this groundbreaking event, the Partnership,
its 1,000 Community Action Agencies, and nearly 40 national partner
organizations will join Americans from across the country in calling
for a White House Conference on American Poverty. The group is
urging the presidential candidates to
agree to convene such a conference next year.
http://www.povertyrally.org/f-home.htm
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
September 13, 2004. No. 216.
AMERICA'S
LITERACY DIRECTORY
America's Literacy Directory is a national database of literacy
programs available via the Internet and the National Institute
for
Literacy's toll-free number. The ALD connects employers, learners,
volunteers, social service providers, and others to current information
about literacy programs in all 50 states and the U.S. territories.
http://www.nifl.gov/
300 CRIMES
AGAINST NATURE
The Sierra Club's members are 700,000 of your friends and neighbors.
Inspired by nature, we work together to protect our communities
and the
planet. The Club is America's oldest, largest and most influential
grassroots environmental organization.
http://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/200409/
ACCESS FOR
ALL
Social Exclusion defined: 'What can happen when people or areas
suffer from a combination of linked problems such as unemployment,
poor skills, low incomes, poor housing, high crime environments,
bad
health, poverty and family breakdown.' ACCESS FOR ALL is a self-
assessment tool aligned with the principles in the Inspiring Learning
for
All learning and access framework. It builds on the social inclusion
and
cultural diversity toolkits developed for the Museums, Libraries
and
Archives (MLA)Council 2003, and the disability toolkit produced
in 2002.
MLA believes passionately that access to knowledge is what empowers
people
to learn, to be inspired. It enables us to understand ourselves
and the
world around us and to develop better communities for the future.
http://www.mla.gov.uk/action/learnacc/00access_04.asp#3
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
September 16, 2004. No. 217.
Dia de la Independencia!
REFORMA:
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION TO PROMOTE
LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SERVICES TO LATINOS
AND THE SPANISH- SPEAKING.
REFORMA is committed to the improvement of the full
spectrum of library and information services for the
approximately 56.2* million Spanish-speaking and Latino
people in the United States. Established in 1971 as an
affiliate of the American Library Association (ALA),
REFORMA has actively sought to promote the development
of library collections to include Spanish-language and Latino
oriented materials; the recruitment of more bilingual and
bicultural library professionals and support staff; the
development of library services and programs that meet the
needs of the Latino community; the establishment of a
national information and support network among individuals
who share our goals; the education of the U.S. Latino
population in regards to the availability and types of library
services; and lobbying efforts to preserve existing library
resource centers serving the interests of Latinos.
http://www.reforma.org/
UNITED FARM
WORKERS.
Founded in 1962 by Cesar Chavez, the UFW has
consistently battled for 40 years to organize farm workers,
raise wages, improve working conditions and win new
collective bargaining, legal and legislative protections for the
poorest and most abused working people in America.
Today, the union, under the leadership of UFW President
Arturo Rodriguez, continues Cesar Chavez's legacy of
fighting for social justice by actively participating in the
legislative and political process as well as engaging in labor,
water, pesticide, health care, housing and economic
development issues. http://www.ufw.org/
NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF LA RAZA
The National Council of La Raza - the largest national
constituency-based Hispanic organization and the leading
voice in Washington, DC for the Hispanic community - is a
private, nonprofit, nonpartisan, tax-exempt organization
established to reduce poverty and discrimination and
improve life opportunities for Hispanic Americans. Four
major functions provide essential focus to the organization™s
work: capacity-building assistance; applied research, policy
analysis, and advocacy; public information efforts; and
special and international projects. These functions
complement NCLR™s work in five key strategic priorities -
education, assets/investment, economic mobility, health,
and media/image/civil rights.
http://www.nclr.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
October 4, 2004. No. 218.
OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE-INFORMATION PROGRAM
The mandate of the OSI Information Program is to promote the equitable
deployment of knowledge and communications resources - providing access
to content, tools and networks - for civic empowerment and effective democratic
governance. A secondary mission of the program is to enhance the effectiveness
of other OSI/Soros foundations programs and activities through the use of
knowledge media and ICTs. The Information Program is not primarily a technology
program. The program's mission is social. Technology is an important tool
for achieving this mission, but not the only one; the program uses the most
appropriate combination of new and traditional media, as well as policy
advocacy, training and institution-building, to pursue this mission. http://www.soros.org/initiatives/information
DEMOCRACY PROGRAM AT THE CARTER CENTER
The Democracy Program works in three principal ways: conducting international
election monitoring; strengthening the capacity of civic organizations to
participate in government policy making; and promoting the rule of law.
In all of its work, the Democracy Program incorporates a commitment to the
protection and advancement of human rights values, upon which former U.S.
President Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter founded The Carter Center.
http://www.cartercenter.org/peaceprograms/program10.htm
VOTEWATCH
Votewatch is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, citizen-driven organization founded
to promote transparency in American elections, and ensure that every vote
cast is counted fairly and accurately for ALL Americans, irrespective of
where they live, where they vote, or their background (socioeconomic status,
age, race, ethnicity, etc.). Votewatch works as a Public Service Intermediary
to bring together citizen input, expert survey research methods, and leading-edge
technology in a way that strengthens each American's ability to uncover,
document, analyze and report on election problems. http://votewatch.us/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
October 11, 2004. No. 219.
POOR EXCUSES: HOW NEGLECTING POVERTY COSTS ALL
AMERICANS
Poor Excuses examines how, after strong economic growth in
the 1990s, poverty in America has been on the rise since 2000.
This Reality Check traces the root of the problem back to areas
of concentrated poverty that exacerbate the situation by
disconnecting their residents from the job market and providing
substandard schools. The authors find that the best remedy to
this problem is the reversal of recent government efforts to
curtail programs that assist the poor. By Matha Paskoff and
Libby Perl. http://www.tcf.org/
TIME FOR A RAISE
It™s been seven years since Congress last increased the
minimum wage - the second longest stretch of government
inaction since the minimum wage was enacted in 1938. In a
signed statement, released today by the Economic Policy
Institute, 562 economists, including four Nobel Prize winners in
economics, support a modest increase in the minimum wage,
saying it ścan significantly improve the lives of low-income
workers and their families.ť These
economists also support raising state minimum wages, including
proposed raises in Florida, Nevada, and New York. (Oct.7,2004).
http://www.epinet.org/content.cfm/minwagestmt2004
TCRP: TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH
The mobility, environmental, and energy objectives of a growing
population and economy calls for public transportation systems
in the United States to expand their services and improve their
efficiency. Practical research that yields near-term results can do
much to help “ by solving operational problems, adopting useful
technologies from related industries and, in general, finding
ways for the public transportation industry to innovate. The
Transit Cooperative Research Program is a key instrument for
carrying out such useful research. The program places primary
emphasis on putting the results in the hands of organizations
and individuals that can use them to solve problems.
http://www.tcrponline.org/index.cgi
October 12, 2004. No. 220.
Sources & Sites for Community Building.
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/a-librarian-at-every-table/
CIVIL RIGHTS
President Bush has neither exhibited leadership on pressing civil
rights issues, nor taken actions that matched his words. The
report reaches this conclusion after analyzing and summarizing
numerous documents, including historical literature, reports,
scholarly articles, presidential and administration statements,
executive orders, policy briefs, documents of Cabinet-level
agencies, federal budgets and other data. Top Right
Link.http://www.usccr.gov/
COLORLINES
In the post-Sept.11 era, state and local governments are being
forced to choose sides on the immigrant rights debate.
http://www.usccr.gov/
http://www.colorlines.com/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
October 19, 2004. No. 221.
SMARTER,CLEANER,STRONGER
A coalition of labor and environmental advocates are hailing the findings
of this new report that clearly demonstrates how smarter environmental policies
can lead to significant job creation. The report Smarter, Cleaner, Stronger:
Secure Jobs, Clean Environment, and Less Foreign Oil details for the first
time on a national and a state-by-state basis, the economic benefits that
will result from energy policies that stimulate the development of clean
energy technologies. http://www.rprogress.org/index.htm
WORKING HARD, FALLING SHORT
More than one in four American working families now earn wages so low that
they have difficulty surviving financially. An Annie E. Casey report finds
that too many jobs pay poor wages and provide no benefits, and that American
workers are poorly prepared and supported to move into better paying jobs.The
report provides a unique and in-depth look at conditions affecting working
families with children in the U.S. as a whole and across the 50 states.
In doing so the report finds that too many working families are insufficiently
served by federal and state policies in such areas as education, training,
health care and tax and wage policies. (Thanks CG).
http://www.aecf.org/MajorInitiatives.aspx
PLACEMAKING FOR COMMUNITIES
Project for Public Spaces is dedicated to creating and sustaining public
places that build communities. We provide technical assistance, education,
and research through programs in parks, plazas and central squares ; buildings
and civic architecture ; transportation ; and public markets . Since our
founding in 1975, we have worked in over 1,000 communities in the United
States and around the world, helping people to grow their public spaces into
vital community places. http://www.pps.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
October 20, 2004. No. 222.
VOTING RIGHTS
The right to vote, and to have one's vote accurately and fairly
counted, is as fundamental a right as we have in this country. In
1965, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, one of the most
effective civil rights laws ever enacted. The Act immediately
outlawed the worst Jim Crow laws in the South, such as literacy
tests and other devices that kept black citizens out of the voting
booth. Today, however, the hard won gains of the civil rights
movement, and the Voting Rights Act, are in danger of being
extinguished. It is now abundantly clear, for instance, that this
precious right was repeatedly violated in the much contested
Presidential election of 2000. In the state of Florida and at polling
booths across the country, flaws in the voting system
disproportionately affected people of color, effectively excluding
them from the voting process. [The ACLU is our nation's
guardian of liberty-join today].http://www.aclu.org/
ELECTION LINE
electionline.org, produced by the Election Reform Information
Project, is the nation’s only non-partisan, non-advocacy website
providing up-to-the-minute news and analysis on election reform.
Whether it’ hanging chads or HAVA, absentee ballots or
touchscreen machines, legislation or commission reports,
electionline.org is ready to be your first stop on the Internet for
any election reform information you’e seeking.
http://electionline.org/index.jsp
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
October 28, 2004. No. 223.
VOTING AND THE NOVEMBER 2 ELECTION-RADREF
Includes state by state election laws; elections observers; and is
a one-stop source for action on November 2 and beyond.
http://radicalreference.info/elections
LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS
5 things you need to know on election day and why it matters.
1)Your ballot, your vote; 2) I.D.--don't go without it; 3)Writing on
the Wall; 4)When In Doubt-- Ask; 5) In and Out.
http://www.lwv.org/
RIGHT TO VOTE
The mission of the Right to Vote Campaign is to remove barriers
to voting faced by people with felony convictions, so they may
freely participate in the democratic process. To achieve this goal,
we aim to change policies, practices and perceptions concerning
felony disfranchisement at the local, state and national levels.
http://www.righttovote.org/
NO STOLEN ELECTIONS
Efforts to protect the vote--especially in minority communities in
2004.
http://libertytreefdr.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
November 8, 2004. No. 224.
EXAMINING OUR HARSH PRISON CULTURE
Since the infamous photos of abuses at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq first
came to light, much has been said about the role that the U.S. military
and CIA have played in connection with the human rights violations. But
reports of similar abuse in the United States are all too common, which
suggests that America’s dehumanizing prison culture has now been exported
elsewhere in the world.In the October 2004 issue of Ideas for an Open Society,
Judith Greene, a criminal justice policy analyst and Soros Fellow, points
out specific instances of abuse in U.S. prisons and jails—deaths resulting
from excessive force, degrading and humiliating strip searches, inadequate
and sometimes rotten food, and denial of medications, medical care, and mental
health treatment. http://www.soros.org/\
RAISE FOR WORKING FAMILIES
ACORN and Floridians for All won a raise for working families in Florida
on November 2nd, by the overwhelming margin of 72% -- 28%. Members all over
the state worked hard in order to get Amendment 5 on the ballot, register
voters and then get out the vote on election day. By raising the minimum
wage to $6.15 (with subsequent increases due to indexing), a full time worker
will earn an additional $2,000 in wages, enough to make a significant difference
in the lives of low-income workers and moving many out of poverty. ACORN,
the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, is the nation's
largest community organization of low and moderate- income families, with
over 150,000 member families organized into 750 neighborhood chapters in
more than 60 cities across the country. http://www.acorn.org/
COMMON GROUND: COMMON SENSE
We call all Americans to raise their voices against special interests and
stand up for our democracy. In this diverse nation of ours, we come from
different backgrounds and live different lifestyles. But there is so much
that unifies us. It is vital that we seek that common ground! We all share
a spirit of Democracy, love of Liberty, and pride in our patriotic history.
Every American is united in their quest for economic security, their desire
for a cleaner environment, good schools for this nation’s children, more
affordable healthcare for all – and of course, freedom and justice. Americans
know that this is more than a dream; these things are within reach. We shouldn’t
have to surrender our civil liberties for national security. It’s time for
a common sense approach. http://commongroundcommonsense.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
November 15, 2004. No. 225.
SECOND HARVEST
The mission of America's Second Harvest is to create a hunger- free America.
We distribute food and grocery products through a nationwide network of
certified affiliates, increase public awareness of domestic hunger, and
advocate for policies that benefit America's hungry. http://secondharvest.org/
WORLD HUNGER YEAR (WHY).
WHY is a leader in the fight against hunger and poverty in the United States
and around the world. WHY is convinced that solutions to hunger and poverty
can be found at the grassroots level. WHY advances long-term solutions to
hunger and poverty by supporting community-based organizations that empower
individuals and build self-reliance, i.e., offering job training, education
and after school programs; increasing access to housing and healthcare;
providing microcredit and entrepreneurial opportunities; teaching people
to grow their own food; and assisting small farmers. WHY connects these
organizations to funders, media and legislators.
At WHY, we envision a world without hunger and poverty. If we can shift
the prevailing viewpoint on why hunger and poverty exist, then we can influence
the policymakers and put an end to this human tragedy. http://www.worldhungeryear.org/
CENTER ON HUNGER AND POVERTY
The Center on Hunger and Poverty promotes policies that improve the lives
of low-income children and families. Center activities include research
and policy analysis, public education initiatives, and assistance to policy
makers and organizations across the country on poverty- and hunger-related
issues. The leader of the Harvard initiative, Dr. J. Larry Brown, created
the Center as a vehicle to address not only hunger, but its cause - growing
poverty and income inequality in America. http://www.centeronhunger.org/
A LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
November 26, 2004. No. 226.
ALLIANCE FOR JUSTICE.
The Alliance for Justice is a national association of environmental, civil
rights, mental health, women's, children's and consumer advocacy organizations.
Since its inception in 1979, the Alliance has worked to advance the cause
of justice for all Americans, strengthen the public interest community's
ability to influence public policy, and foster the next generation of advocates.
http://www.afj.org/
POLICY CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO PRIVATIZATION
IN THE FOOD STAMP PROGRAM
The Food Stamp Act requires that state civil servants make all decisions
about individual households’ eligibility for benefits. Throughout the program’s
history, state civil service administration has been taken for granted.
Last year, however, USDA approved a waiver for Florida to partially privatize
administration of the Food Stamp Program in several counties. Now, at least
two states are developing plans to contract with private entities to take
over substantial parts of the eligibility determination process.
http://www.cbpp.org/10-28-04fa.htm
ECONOMIC SEGREGATION
Pulling Apart: Economic Segregation among Suburbs and Central Cities in
Major Metropolitan Areas.The overall per capita income gap between central
cities and suburbs remained unchanged between 1990 and 2000, in stark contrast
to the widening gaps in the previous two decades. However, the city and suburban
income gaps in the Northeast and Midwest are still wide and growing while
smaller gaps in the South and West are narrowing.
http://www.brookings.org/metro/pubs/20041018_econsegregation.htm
A
LIBRARIAN AT EVERY TABLE
December 1, 2004. No. 227.
Sources & Sites for Community Building.
http://www.cas.usf.edu/lis/a-librarian-at-every-table/
http://alaet.blogspot.com/
Dear sister and brother ALAET subscribers,
I began A-LIBRARIAN-AT-EVERY-TABLE in 2001, not long before the tragic
events of September 11. As a professor working at a Florida university (Jeb
Bush is governor), I have experienced a sustained shrinkage of the public
sphere since 9/11/2001. The student discussion list at the School of Library
and Information Science (where I teach) was shut down when the students
and some faculty discussed the war in Iraq in March 2003. Just before the
2004 election Terry Tempest Williams, an environmentalist, was banned from
speaking at Florida Gulf Coast University because she was critical of the
governor’s brother’s environmental policies.
To ensure that I can continue to identify community building sites without
administrative censorship I am moving ALAET to a blog called, “Librarian.”
The address is http://alaet.blogspot.com/
I will still use the ALAET website as an interface to alert you to new
posts and to sign up new readers, but the actual annotations will be at
“Librarian.”
Thank you for your interest and contributions over the past 227 issues
of A- LIBRARIAN-AT-EVERY-TABLE. I hope the blog, “Librarian,” will carry on the same
spirit.
Yours in solidarity,
Kathleen
Proud member, United Faculty of Florida, USF Local
"Rule 6C4-10.109.B-6 Official Disclaimer:
The University of South Florida
requires that all faculty members make clear at all times
that their opinions are their own and
not those of the University of South Florida."
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Please
e-mail all comments to Kathleen de la Peńa McCook at kmccook@tampabay.rr.com.