Faculty and students at institutions of higher learning have always been engaged in the issues of their times. They have often played an important galvanizing and sometimes game-changing role in their societies’ demands for equity, equality, and social and political justice. They have done so both in their academic and research production as well as their direct social and political activism within the community beyond academia, sometimes paying a heaving price for this activism. Historically, the choice to focus scholarship and engagement with the community on social justice issues has not always been an easy one for those in academia.
This conference aims to query aspects of this history in the MENA region and beyond, the debates and paradigms that define this engagement, as well as obstacles and resistance on the part of university administrations and society’s power elites. The conference will also seek to situate those dynamics within the current understanding(s) of the role of academic institutions, market-place economics and corporatization, and political orthodoxy.
S C H E D U L E
DAY ONE – Friday, March 11
8.30 – 9:00
Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship Arab Studies Institute
Second Annual Conference (March 11 – 13, 2016)
Academia and Social Justice Crown Plaza Hotel, Beirut
Agenda
Introductions and welcome panel
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Fadlo Khuri, President, American University of Beirut (AUB)
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Bassam Haddad, George Mason University & Arab Studies Institute
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Fateh Azzam, Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship, AUB
9.00 – 11:00 Panel 1: Academia and political society
Moderator: Omar Dewachi, AUB
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Ala Alazzeh, Birzeit University - Knowledge in a Colonial Space.
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Alan Sears, Ryerson University - Infrastructure of dissent.
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Sari Hanafi, AUB - The Demise of Public Life of Arab Academics: The case of writing
op-eds in Lebanese newspapers.
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Coralie Pison Hindawi, AUB - The role of Academia in Individual R2P
11.00 – 11.30 Break
11.30 – 1.00 Panel 2: Academia and the marketplace
Moderator: Nadya Sbaiti, AUB
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Mudar Kassis, Birzeit University - Do universities contribute to the consolidation
of contemporary slavery?
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Corinna Mullin, University of Tunis & SOAS - Global neoliberal governance and
higher education: power and resistance in post-uprising Tunisia
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Tory Bryklaksi, University of California-Davis - Organized labor as a form of
strategic resistance against the privatization of the academy
1.00 – 2.30 Lunch
2.30 – 4:00 Panel 3: Are public universities expressions of social justice?
Moderator: Nahla Chahal, As-Safir Al-Arabi Weekly Supplement
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Rehab Sakr, Cairo University - ‘Free University Education, the Quality of the
‘Product’ and the changing meaning of social justice: The Egyptian experience
from 1950s until now.’
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Nahla Abdel Tawab, Salma Abou Hussein, and Tarek Alam El Din, Population
Council - The Cost of ‘Free’ University Education in Egypt: Analyzing evidence of
equity in access.
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MennatuAllah Hendawy, Ain Shams University - Does Academia reinforce socio-
spatially just designs?
4.00-4.30 Break
4.30 – 6:00 Panel 4: The active role of students
Moderator: Aya Adra, Red Oak Club, AUB
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Mohamed Baba Mohda, Université Internationale du Sahel - When students
impose social justice through democratic means
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Mohammed Aljssem, Damascus University - Academic alienation in Syrian
universities and the Syrian social movement
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Pankhuri Dasgupta, Centre for Women’s Studies - ‘Occupy UGC’ – A closer look at
student movements in India in 2015
9.00 – 10.30 Panel 5: Academic organizing in Lebanon
Moderator: Sawsan Abdulrahim, AUB Faculty United, AUB
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Emile Shaheen, Author, formerly Lebanese University - The role of faculty and
students in the birth of the Lebanese University
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Jacques Kabbanji, Contemporary Arab Affair, Lama Kabbanji, Research Institute
for Development, and Hala Awada, researcher - The university public space and
the protest movement experience in Lebanon.
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Makram Rabbah, Georgetown University - Beyond the Gilded Walls: AUB and the
World Around it
10.30 – 11.00 Break
11.00 – 1:00 Panel 6: Advocating for Palestine in Western academic Institutions
Moderator: Steven Salaita, AUB
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Brenna Bhandar, SOAS - The Big Chill: Charities law and the politics of BDS
activism in UK universities.
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Rafeef Ziadah, SOAS - Silencing Dissent on Campus: the case of Israeli Apartheid
Week’
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Max Ajl, Cornell University - Opening Spaces for Speech: Organizing against
backlash
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Tareq Radi, Georgetown University - Repression Through Reform: The Student
Handbook as a Living Document
1.00 – 2.30 Lunch
2.30 – 4:00 Town Hall meeting; Guided open discussion Moderators: Fateh Azzam, Bassam Haddad, Rania Masri
DAY TWO – Saturday March 12
4.00 – 4.15 Mini-Break
4.15 – 5.30 Panel 7: The University and Beyond: Power, Ethics and Academic Freedom
Moderator: Seteney Shami, Arab Council for the Social Sciences
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Eileen Kuttab, Birzeit University – Gender, Equity, and Social Justice in the
University
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Ramy Aly, American University in Cairo (AUC) – Academic Freedom between the
University and the State
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Perla Issa, Institute for Palestine Studies – Reflections on conducting research
with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon
9.30 – 11.00 Panel 8: Pedagogy and social justice
Moderator: Elie el Hindi, Notre Dame University
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Rabab Abdulhadi, San Francisco State University - Resisting the New
McCarthyism: Palestine Studies and Justice-Centered Knowledge
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Sabiha Allouche, SOAS - No Longer Caught Between Two Worlds: Towards a
Decolonized Feminist Research in the Middle East
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Gregory Shupak, University of Guelph -Teaching Media and the Middle East in a
Western University
11.00 – 11.30 Break
11.30 – 1:00 Panel 9: Schools and alternative models
Moderator: Fateh Azzam, Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship, AUB
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Mike Orr, University of Edinburgh, and Samer Annous, University of Balamand -
Linguistic Imperialism, identity, and English medium instruction in Lebanon
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Ghada Feghali, Mmkn Association - Pedagogy for social justice: The experience of
Mmkn
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Sawsan El Sherif, AUC - Learning and knowledge-based society: the Community
Universities
1.00 – 2.30 Lunch
2.30 - 4.00 Closing Panel: Publicly Engaged Scholarship
Moderator: Huda Zurayk, AUB
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Patrick McGreevy, AUB - The idea of university autonomy and the challenges of
the 21st century
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Ahmad Dallal, AUB - The role of public intellectuals in the changing landscape of
higher education
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Bassam Haddad, George Mason University & Arab Studies Institute - Context,
opportunities and limits
DAY THREE – Sunday, March 13
9.30 – 11.00 Panel 8: Pedagogy and social justice
Moderator: Elie el Hindi, Notre Dame University
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Rabab Abdulhadi, San Francisco State University - Resisting the New
McCarthyism: Palestine Studies and Justice-Centered Knowledge
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Sabiha Allouche, SOAS - No Longer Caught Between Two Worlds: Towards a
Decolonized Feminist Research in the Middle East
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Gregory Shupak, University of Guelph -Teaching Media and the Middle East in a
Western University
11.00 – 11.30 Break
11.30 – 1:00 Panel 9: Schools and alternative models
Moderator: Fateh Azzam, Asfari Institute for Civil Society and Citizenship, AUB
-
Mike Orr, University of Edinburgh, and Samer Annous, University of Balamand -
Linguistic Imperialism, identity, and English medium instruction in Lebanon
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Ghada Feghali, Mmkn Association - Pedagogy for social justice: The experience of
Mmkn
-
Sawsan El Sherif, AUC - Learning and knowledge-based society: the Community
Universities
1.00 – 2.30 Lunch
2.30 - 4.00 Closing Panel: Publicly Engaged Scholarship
Moderator: Huda Zurayk, AUB
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Patrick McGreevy, AUB - The idea of university autonomy and the challenges of
the 21st century
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Ahmad Dallal, AUB - The role of public intellectuals in the changing landscape of
higher education
-
Bassam Haddad, George Mason University & Arab Studies Institute - Context,
opportunities and limits
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