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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20160119T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20160119T131500
DTSTAMP:20260421T001146
CREATED:20151211T142850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160104T210248Z
UID:12883-1453204800-1453209300@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Dr. Karen Mock Lunch and Learn
DESCRIPTION:From Multiculturalism to Anti-Racism to Equity\nOngoing Challenges and Recent Developments in Anti-Oppression Education and Practice\n  \nTuesday\, January 19\, 2016\n12:00-1:15pm\nRoom 720 \n  \nWhat does it mean when we say we must create safe spaces to ensure silenced and marginalized victims of discrimination and oppression can build trust and have their voices heard? What if some of those spaces are safe for some and not others? What happens when the oppressed becomes the oppressor? Or the victim becomes the victimizer? \nIn our increasingly troubled world\, at times it seems more and more difficult to put theory and policy into practice. How do we stay true to our principles when we may have had different lived experiences in areas of conflict and very different narratives to describe our experiences? And why is it more important than ever to create an environment for real dialogue during times of conflict and extremism? \nThese are some of the questions that will be addressed in this session\, which will include an anti-racism approach to building allies in our struggle for equity and understanding. \n  \nDr. Karen Mock is a human rights consultant\, educational psychologist and teacher educator. She is former Executive Director of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation (CRRF)\, former National Director of the League for Human Rights of B’nai Brith Canada\, and Past Chair of the Canadian Multiculturalism Advisory Committee (CMAC) to the Secretary of State.  Considered a pioneer in the field\, she was a founding member of the Anti-Racist Multicultural Education Network of Ontario (AMENO)\, Blacks and Jews in Dialogue\,  the Women’s Interfaith Dialogue (WIN)\, the Canadian Association of Jews and Muslims (CAJM)\, and the Arab Jewish Leadership Dialogue Group. She chaired the Hate Crimes Community Working Group for the Attorney General and the Minister of Community Safety and Corrections\, and was Senior Policy Advisory to then Minister of Education\, Hon. Kathleen Wynne\, for the development and delivery of Ontario’s Equity and Inclusive Education Strategy. Dr. Mock has published widely and has received many awards and honours for her work — most recently the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee medal “for service to her peers\, community and country.”
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/kmock-lecture/
LOCATION:FIFSW\, 246 Bloor Street W.\, Toronto\, ON\, M5S 1V4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Students
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20160119T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20160119T131500
DTSTAMP:20260421T001146
CREATED:20160106T144546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160106T144653Z
UID:12980-1453205700-1453209300@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:Colloquium Presentation with Clara Berridge
DESCRIPTION:Autonomy in the Balance: The Fraught Terrain of Technology-Based Remote Monitoring in Home and Community-Based Services\nA Colloquium Presentation with Clara Berridge \nTuesday\, January 19\, 2016\n12:15p.m. – 1:15p.m.\nRoom 548\nA pizza lunch will be provided \n  \nWe are at a critical moment grappling with questions about how to understand privacy in today’s context where ubiquitous trackability\, digitized selves\, and predictive analytics proliferate. Passive monitoring technologies that include GPS\, activity sensors\, and monitoring cameras are now allowable in some U.S. state Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services (HCSB) waiver programs if they reduce or replace the amount of personal care provided. This rapidly evolving policy presents an urgent need to identify the considerations that shape older adults’ preferences for how and when they are monitored and to translate them into decision-making guidelines. Findings will be presented from U.S. Medicaid policy analysis and a qualitative study involving forty-nine in-depth interviews conducted with ethnically diverse and immigrant elder residents\, family members\, and social work staff in low-income\, independent living apartments where a passive monitoring system had been offered for six years. \nDr. Berridge’s research reveals ways passive monitoring may change elder care in ethically problematic ways. It illustrates conflict between values of autonomy and risk management and describes how respect for privacy and autonomy falls out of focus against hope that the technology will enhance safety. Techniques developed by social workers will be discussed to navigate this tension and the importance of understanding what is at stake in these negotiations. \n  \nClara Berridge\, PhD\, MSW\, is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Brown University’s Department of Health Services\, Policy & Practice in the Center for Gerontology and Healthcare Research. Clara has a broad-based approach to the study of social\, cultural\, and ethical implications of technology-based services intended to enable most-integrated housing and reduce vulnerabilities among low-income older adults and people with disabilities. These include telepresence robots and remote monitoring of biometrics and behavioral data. Her research examines the ways diverse stakeholders interact with and assess these technologies as well as the ways policy is taking shape around monitoring technologies in Home and Community-Based Services. Clara has studied decision making about adoption\, discontinuation\, actual use\, creative ‘misuse’\, and resistance to explain how values of privacy\, autonomy\, independence\, and risk management are evolving along with new monitoring practices. Her second area of focus concerns the use of surveillance cameras in assisted living and nursing home resident rooms. Clara received her PhD in Social Welfare at the University of California\, Berkeley with the University Designated Emphasis in Women\, Gender and Sexuality\, and her MSW with a specialization in public policy and multigenerational practice from the University of Washington\, Seattle.
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/colloquium-presentation-with-clara-berridge/
LOCATION:FIFSW\, 246 Bloor Street W.\, Toronto\, ON\, M5S 1V4\, Canada
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