Alicia Ely Yamin
Alicia Ely Yamin, JD MPH is a Lecturer on Global Health and Director of
the joint JD/MPH program at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public
Health, as well as Policy Director of the François-Xavier Bagnoud
Center for Health and Human Rights at Harvard University. Yamin’s 20+
year career at the intersection of health, human rights and development
has bridged academia and activism. Yamin has published dozens
of articles and books relating to health and human rights, and has been
awarded multiple distinctions in respect of her work, in particular her
leadership on sexual and reproductive health and rights. She frequently
consults for UN and other global agencies, and currently serves on
the Lancet-O’Neil Institute Commission on Global Health and the Law.
She was also recently honored by being named the Visiting Gladstein
Professor of Human Rights 2015-16 at the University of Connecticut.
Blair Johnson
Blair T. Johnson, Ph.D., is Board of Trustees Professor of Psychology
at the University of Connecticut. For over two decades, he has focused
his scholarship on health promotion and especially HIV prevention,
serving as the principal investigator of several National Institutes
of Health grants on these subjects. His recent research has helped
to show the prominent roles that networks and community resources
play in the success of behavioral interventions targeting individuals
at risk for acquiring HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Prof. Johnson is
also a dedicated methodologist, especially in relation to meta-analysis,
which he labels “the original big data.” He developed some of
the first computer software to conduct meta-analysis and often writes
and teaches about the best ways to conduct meta-analyses and
other systematic reviews. When he is not doing science, he enjoys
playing piano and activities with his family.
David Richards
David Richards is an Associate Professor at the University of Connecticut,
with appointments in both the Department of Political Science
and the Human Rights Institute. He currently serves as Director
of Graduate Studies at the Human Rights Institute. His work focuses
on human rights, and has appeared in a variety of journals and books.
These published works include studies of gender-violence law, the
measurement of government respect for human rights, public support
for torture, economic globalization, and national elections, among others.
His current book, Violence Against Women and the Law, is coauthored
with Jillienne Haglund and uses original data from about 196
countries to examine gender-violence laws globally.
Dowon Choi
Dowon Choi was born in Seoul, South Korea where she was a singersongwriter
and released two albums. She has taught English, music,
Japanese, and various enrichment courses, including her popular
“History of Noodles,” to various groups of students in South Korea and
the US. Currently, she is studying Educational Psychology focusing on
Gifted Education and Talent Development. She was inspired to pursue
her master’s degree after teaching students with autism spectrum disorders
at a boarding school here in Connecticut. This summer, Dowon
moves to Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam for another adventure. She dedicates
her talk to her students, for embracing her with so much warmth
and respect, and for giving her a glimpse of true humanity.
Jane Gordon
Jane Gordon teaches in Political Science and Africana Studies with
affiliation in El Instituto at UCONN-Storrs. She previously taught
in the Department of Political Science at Temple University, where
she was a 2009-2010 faculty fellow at the Center for the Humanities.
Gordon is the author of such books as Why They Couldn’t Wait,
which was listed by the Gotham Gazette as one of the four best
books on civil rights in the past 40 years, Creolizing Political Theory,
and the co-authored Of Divine Warning: Reading Disaster in the
Modern Age. Her co-edited work includes A Companion to AfricanAmerican
Studies, Not Only the Master’s Tools, and Creolizing Rousseau.
She is President of the Caribbean Philosophical Association.
Jane Gordon teaches in Political Science and Africana Studies with
affiliation in El Instituto at UCONN-Storrs.
Johanna DeBari
Johanna DeBari is the Publicity Liaison for the Human Rights Institute.
She is a Master’s student in the International Studies program with a
concentration in Human Rights. Her research interests include sexual
violence against women, human security, and prevention research. Prior
to coming to UConn, she was awarded a Keene State College Summer
Undergraduate Research Fellowship during the summer of 2013
to pursue her project on rape as a tool of genocide. Most recently, she
was awarded the 2014 Outstanding Women of New Hampshire Award
in March of 2014 for her activism, strength of character, and academic
achievements in the Keene State College community.
Kathleen Smith-Wenning
Known as Prof. Kathy to her respiratory care students at Rutgers University
and anthropology students at Middlesex County College, she
claims to be an amalgam of these two worlds. Kathy is devoted to the
care of the medically underserved and coordinates patient care, along
with the respiratory care students, at hospitals and outpatient clinics in
Newark. She also is an active volunteer and member of the U.S. Board
of Oaxaca Streetchildren Grassroots, an organization dedicated to the
education of 600 of the poorest children in the City of Oaxaca, México.
This past summer Prof. Kathy also volunteered at La Posada Providencia
Refugee Shelter in the southern Rio Grande Valley of Texas, addressing
the health literacy needs of unaccompanied minors crossing
the border and fleeing violence in Central America.
Merrill Singer
Merrill Singer, PhD, a medical and cultural anthropologist, is a Professor
in the departments of Anthropology and Community Medicine, and a
Senior Research Scientist at Center for Health, Intervention and Prevention
at UConn. Additionally, he is affiliated with the Center for Interdisciplinary
Research on AIDS at Yale University. The central issue in his work
is the social origins of health inequality. Over his career, his research and
writing have addressed HIV/AIDS in highly vulnerable and disadvantaged
populations, illicit drug use and drinking behavior, community and structural
violence, and the political ecology of health including the impacts of
climate change. In recent years, his research has focused especially on
the nature and impact of both syndemics (interacting epidemics) and pluralea
(intersecting ecocrises) on health.
Phoebe Godfrey
Dr. Phoebe Godfrey is an Assistant Professor-in-Residence in Sociology at UConn.
She teaches sociology courses on climate change, sustainable societies, food, education
and many others but in all, her focus is on engaging students in order to help
them explore their potentials. She is the co-director and Board President of the new
non-profit CLiCK (Commercially Licensed Co-operative Kitchen) in Windham that
encourages local food businesses, health and nutrition education as a social justice
center. She considers her teaching and her non-profit work as central to her commitment
to social and ecological justice.
Devin Samuels is one of Professor Godfrey’s undergraduate students,
who she asked to particpate in her talk. In addition to being a
UConn student, he is an artist activist from Providence, RI who
has been performing on national stages for years.