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CSUDH - Habermas - UWP - Archives
California State University, Dominguez Hills
University of Wisconsin, Parkside
Created: August 7, 2004
Reviewed:
Latest Update: August 7, 2004
jeannecurran@habermas.org
takata@uwp.edu
- Introduction
Why I chose to share this reading.- Focus:
Main point of this reading.- Reading
Full identification of source for reading AND excerpt.- Concepts:
Concepts and Key Words.- Discussion
Discussion questions.- Conceptual Linking to Substantive Courses
What this has to do with our class.* * *
- The effects of both poverty and incarceration on home neighborhoods when prisoners are released is a major social justice issue that has not been adequately addressed. This reading should give you some idea of the extent of the problem.
- I would like you to come away with a sense of the problem's existence and scope, and of at least a beginning approach to deal with the problem, that is, find agencies who can provide tentative help and begin an effort to long-term containment of the problem.
- shared reading: Up soon.
Links Between Prison and AIDS Affecting Blacks Inside and Out By Lynette Clemetson, NY Times, Friday, August 6, 2004. Backup. Published: August 6, 2004
- Patients With H.I.V. Seen as Separated by a Racial Divide By Linda Villarosa, NY Times, Saturday, August 7, 2004, at p. A1. Backup.
- Are the poor in this country protected with HIV and AIDS drugs when they need them?
Good question. Not according to these stories. We'll look at available data.
- Has AIDS become less threatening for all communities because of HIV drugs?
Apparently not for Black men. Again, we need to explore this further.
- Where do we start to look for information?
Government health sites:
- Guidelines for Treatment - National Institute of Health Site
- HIV/AIDS and Minorities National Library of Medicine Site.
- What Is the Role of Prisons in HIV, Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention?
- Prison HIV and Hepatitis C Sites Updated January 23, 2004
- The November Coalition Where and how to get treatment page.
- Newsletter of the Western Prison Project
- Spring 2004 Justice Matters Newsletter. See p. 10 for racial comparisons of who's in prison.
- Justice Matters Women in Prison. Newsletter of the Western Prison Project
Conceptual Linking to Substantive Courses:
- Agencies:
Sample linking: Ways in which underlying assumptions of assimilation affect services offered and clients' ability to access and use those services. How does this reading illustrate the need for social agencies, for more generalized agencies, for what Bolman and Deal would call "leadership" AND "management"? How does this reading suggest ways in which we could be more effective in rendering help, and what is the reading's relationship to a "safety net" for those who need help?
- Criminal Justice:
Sample linking: Ways in which some groups are underrepresented in the unstated assumptions of our theories. How does this reading serve to illustrate adversarialism, mutuality, retribution, revenge, illocutionary understanding, the definition and operation of the criminal justice system?
- Law:
Sample linking: Extent to which laws are made on the assumption that we are all essentially assimilated to the dominant culture. How does this reading help us see the need for contextual readings in law? How does it relate to our natural instincts to seek some kind of natural law? What facts and principles does the reading offer for discourse that could clarify for Others validity claims presented by an Obscure Other?
- Moot Court:
Sample linking: Ways in which to make validty claims of harm understood by those who have never experienced many of the world's different perspectives. How can this reading enlighten our praxis in terms of different kinds of discourse, like instrumental, illocutionary, governance?
- Women in Poverty:
Sample linking: The culture of poverty and assimilation. How does the reading deal with our underlying assumptions about poverty, especially poverty of the exploited, the NOT- male? What does the reading suggest of the interrelationship between our society and its children, generally cared for by women, often poor?
- Race, Gender, Class:
Sample linking: The extent to which silence has been imposed by these affiliations so that domination and discrimination have entered our unstated assumptions in interpersonal relations and the structural context arising from them. What does the reading tell us about exploitation and alternative ways to deal with one another? What does it tell us about institutionalized -isms and our denial of complicity? What does it tell us about our common humanity?
- Religion:
Sample linking: The spiritual component. Humans are spiritual creatures, creatures that recognize moments that go beyond ourselves to God, Allah, Isis, Gaia, the Universe, or a deep sense of responsibility to create our own meanng. How does the reading fit into our ability, our need to create such meaning in life?
- Love !A:
Sample linking: What's the aesthetic link in this reading? How does it bring us closer to one another as humans? What does it tell us about our need for love, unconditional love, not rewards for doing well or being well, but caring and acceptance for being who we are?