Log in

2023 Conference

The conference is a meeting place for evaluators and data analysts committed to social justice.


Important Details

See parking instructions

Thursday Agenda

Friday Agenda, log-in information will be sent on the day of

SPONSORS

Sponsorships are available! To keep registration at the same level as we had in 2017, we need sponsors to help with the costs of the event. See below and a general information form for details.

Abolitionist Sponsor $1,500                   Data Ethics Sponsor $800
La Lucha Lunch Sponsor $600                Reparations Sponsor $200
Peace & Joy Sponsor - sharing of in-kind resources

Philanthropy in Action $1,800




Dylan Rodriguez, Thursday Morning Speaker

Since the late-1990s, Dylan has participated as a founding member of organizations like Critical Resistance, the Abolition Collective, Critical Ethnic Studies Association, Cops Off Campus, Scholars for Social Justice, and Blackness Unbound, among others. Dylan is the author of three books, the most recent of which (White Reconstruction: Domestic Warfare and the Logic of Racial Genocide) won the 2022 Frantz Fanon Book Award. He was a co-editor of the field shaping text Critical Ethnic Studies: A Reader (Duke University Press, 2016), and has written for a wide variety of scholarly and popular venues, including TruthoutBlack Agenda ReportHarvard Law Review, American QuarterlySocial Text, and Radical History Review. Most importantly, Dylan appreciates participating in all forms of collective study, thought, and planning that build capacities to survive and revolt against oppressive conditions. He is a professor at UC Riverside, scholar, and collaborator who is committed to building and supporting abolitionist, liberationist, anti-colonial and other forms of radical community and movement. He was elected to serve as President of the American Studies Association in 2020-2021, and in 2020 was named to the inaugural class of Freedom Scholars.


Tamara Nopper, Friday Morning Keynote

Tamara K. Nopper is a sociologist, writer, educator, and editor. She is the editor of We Do This ‘Til We Free Us: Abolitionist Organizing and Transforming Justice, a book of Mariame Kaba’s writings and interviews (Haymarket Books), researcher and writer of several data stories for Colin Kaepernick’s Abolition for the People series and edited book, and guest editor of the recently published Critical Sociology forum “Race and Money.” Tamara’s research, academic publications, popular pieces, and public educational lectures focus on data literacy, surveillance, the U.S. criminal punishment system, immigrant and minority business capitalization, credit scoring, and the racial wealth gap. She is a currently an Associate Professor of Sociology at Rhode Island College and Senior Researcher for the Labor Futures Initiative at Data & Society. She is an Affiliate of The Center for Critical Race and Digital Studies and was previously a Fellow at Data for Progress, a member of the inaugural cohort of the NYU Institute for Public Interest Technology, and a 2021-2022 Faculty Fellow at Data & Society as part of a cohort focused on race and technology.


Collaborators:

Milwaukee Turners           

Connect With Us!



Powered by Wild Apricot Membership Software