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Sept. 16, 2005
New Orleans experts to speak at Cornell on effects of race, class, environment in Katrina's aftermath
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Four speakers with close ties to New Orleans will discuss how Hurricane Katrina devastated that city's poor and African-American residents -- and how environmental damage may disproportionately harm those residents in the future. "Hurricane Katrina and Its Aftermath: Race, Class and the Environment," a free public forum hosted by the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University, the Cornell Black Professional Women's organization and Ujamaa Residential College, is scheduled for Monday, Sept. 19, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in Uris Hall Auditorium. The forum will include a panel and audience discussion, moderated by Robert L. Harris Jr., Cornell professor of Africana studies and vice provost for diversity and faculty development. Topics will include the effects of Hurricane Katrina on black and poor people in the New Orleans area, and the invisibility of poverty in a city that presented a public face of prosperity. The panel also will discuss environmental damage to the region and the injustice associated with environmental hazards for the poor in the United States. Panelists will include:
For more information on the forum, contact Salah Hassan, associate professor and director of Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell, at (607) 255-0528 or (607) 254-8668. -30-
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