RSS Feed   
  • Latest News:

    Another world is possible
  • Indigenous Justice & Restorative Justice

    A Talk
    Navajo Nation march

    Monday, June 18, 6:00 – 9:00 pm
    Community Church of Boston,  565 Boylston Street
    presented by Free School University and Decolonize to Liberate


    One of the positive hallmarks of the Occupy and Decolonize movements is recognition of the reality of indigenous peoples and indigenous rights. This talk will highlight the importance of indigenous rights in the United States, using the example of the Dine’, the Navajo People of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah in terms of both Dine’ rights and the rights of alj the 99%.

    The United Nations Indigenous Forum recently concluded discussions of the falsity of the “Discovery Doctrine,” and discussions of the pretexts of Europe in the theft of lands and liberties in the Americas are relevant to the Occupy movement.

    How is it that the same discourses of conquest that were, and are, used to dominate indigenous peoples are also being used to dominate and exclude the 99% from effective power?

    The situation of Navajos, who have treaties with Spain, Mexico and the United States but who have a dependent international state, is relevant to us all.  We need to discuss their situation to better understand our own.

    Join FSU, Occupy, Dr. Zion and Indigenous Justice Monday 6/18 at 565 Boylston St.

     

    RESTORATIVE JUSTICE – COMMUNITY JUSTICE

    The 99% are the new poor, and a primary reason for that is that they are poor in terms of power and access to it.  They are the victims of abuses of authority and power, authoritarianism, and the abusers of power are the state, corporations, the parties of fear and the new Know Nothings.  The assignment is to speak to restorative and community justice.

    Indigenous Justice Restorative Justice Forum

    “Restorative justice” is a term with many meanings, and it takes many forms, but it assumes that the best people to resolve a problem or conflict are those who have it.  Most systems use a mediator or some other third party to guide practical discussions on means of resolution.  “Community justice” is a fairly new concept in justice system planning that attempts to reach out to communities by siting resources within them or otherwise involve community members.

    Justice systems have taken overly-cautious approaches to both and ignore the major issue as posed by a leading critic of justice system alternatives when she observed that the real issue is how we are going to attain “justice for the masses; the many.”  We need justice mechanisms that respond to the wants and needs of the people and those that address the core problem of poverty in the sense of ending imbalances of bargaining position.

    This talk will challenge audiences to consider the value of restorative and community justice (with short descriptions of the two) and how to articulate how to address actual need by way of balancing power relationships and promoting inclusion to challenge legal systems to be truly responsive.

     

    Monday, June 18, 6:00 – 9:00 pm, 2012, Community Church of Boston,  565 Boylston Street, Boston, MA
    presented by Free School University and Decolonize to Liberate

     

    James W. Zion, the presenter, is a longtime advocate of restorative justice, with close involvement with establishing the system of Navajo peacemaking of the Navajo Nation that is considered a model of restorative justice.
    -Rita – Occupy Boston –

    Additional resources

    Rebuilding Communities – Forgotten Navajo People

    Bio:  DR. JAMES W. ZION

     

    Indigenous Justice Restorative Justice forum 565 Boylston St. 6/18

    James W. Zion is a public interest lawyer who lives in Albuquerque and practices law in the Navajo Nation and international fora-  UN Indigenous Forum,  UN Commission on the Elimination of Racial  Discrimination, Geneva, etc. . His client base is primarily individual Navajos, Navajo nonprofit corporations and Navajo community organizations. He is the international counsel for the National Indian Youth Council.  Zion has been in practice 43 years. His focus is public interest law in Indian Country.

    He is licensed to practice in the Navajo Nation, Connecticut and the United States Supreme Court.  He has published in the fields of customary Indian law and international indigenous human rights,  and his latest book is Marianne 0. Nielsen & James W. Zion, eds., Navajo Nation Peacemaking:  Living Traditional Justice (U. of Arizona Press, 2005). He is a 2012 Givelber Distinguished Lecturer at Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, on the topic Ma ‘ii Adil ‘inigii? Indian Law for Coyotes.

    Zion’s particular interests are traditional American Indian justice and customary law, international human rights law, poverty law and advocacy of the rights of the new poor, the 99%. He is a member of the board of directors of the National Coalition of Concerned Legal Professionals, and advocacy group for the rights of the victims of injustice and counsel to various Navajo public interest organizations, including the Shiprock Home for Women and Children, the Shiprock Community Development Corporation, The Forgotten People and Dine’ bi Siihasin.

    Big Mountain Mining and the Navajo Nation

    solcommunications.org Sol Communications – GoMauro establishes the evidence of on-going religious intolerance and systemic practices of genocide by the US Government and Peabody Western Coal Company owned by Lehman Brothers against the Big Mountain Navajo at Black Mesa Arizona….” – BlairBushProject

    Big Mountain Vanishing Prayer Part One – Via 

    Big Mountain Vanishing Prayer Part Two

    Hopi and Navajo Residents Stop Peabody’s Coal Mine Expansion on Black Mesa – Via ENN

    Published January 11, 2010 10:54 AM – “BLACK MESA, Ariz.- Peabody Western Coal Company’s Black Mesa Coal Complex has suffered a major setback as an administrative law judge for the U.S. Department of the Interior vacated a permit for the massive coal-mining complex. The judge vacated the permit in response to one of several appeals filed by Navajo and Hopi residents as well as a diverse coalition of tribal and environmental groups. The permit, issued by Interior’s Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation and Enforcement, allowed Peabody to operate and expand the Black Mesa and Kayenta mines under a single permit.”


    Sol Communications – “SOL Communications Inc. is a 501c3 NGO dedicated to environmental and social projects that bring together people of many ethnicities and backgrounds. SOL has successfully supported indigenous populations, homeless advancement projects, environmental preservation, and a variety of multi-media projects designed to bring awareness to human and environmental crisis.”

    Broken Rainbow – “1985 documentary film about the government-enforced relocation of thousands of Navajo Native Americans from their ancestral homes in Arizona. The Navajo were relocated to aid mining speculation in a process that began in the 1970s and continues to this day. The film is narrated by Martin Sheen. The title song was written by Laura Nyro. Buffy Sainte-Marie … Translator Voice (voice) Burgess Meredith … Historical Voices (voice) Won Oscar

    The OB Media Rundown for 6/16/12

    Transit fare hikes getting you down? Blame the banks

    This week, the Refund Transit Coalition, a group of transit advocates, workers and supporters, including the Amalgamated Transit Union and the Transportation Equity Network, released an interesting report. It alleges that a major cause of many recent fare hikes and service cuts is due to interest swaps: financial arrangements that transit systems across the U.S. made with banks on a percentage of their debts, which ended up working in favor of the banks when interest rates plummeted in 2008 and were kept artificially low because of the recession.

    We got wind of the report, “Riding the Gravy Train – How Wall Street is Bankrupting our Public Transit Agencies,” through WNYC, which ran a story on how the deal has caused the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (N.Y. MTA) to lose almost $114 million a year and how the agency will likely continue to lose money on the deals for the next 30 years.

    Since the transit systems need to pay for operations, they have to raise fares and cut service to make up for the substantial losses, which are further exacerbating budgets alongside lower tax revenues. Adding insult to injury, many of these Wall Street banks, which were bailed out with taxpayer money, the report pointed out, “use their profits to lobby against laws that aim to curb their abuses, to create and inflate the next economic bubble, to find ways to avoid paying their fair share in taxes and pay out billions of dollars in bonuses.”

    http://tinyurl.com/d669tno

    DREAM Act occupiers skeptical about Obama’s offer of ‘prosecutorial discretion’ – ‘We’ve been down this road before’

    Triangle immigration activists were skeptical Friday of the Obama administration’s announcement that it would stop deporting some young illegal immigrants who were brought into the United States as children.

    The co-founders of the N.C. Dream Team, a group that backs national legislation that would provide some illegal immigrants a path to citizenship, said President Barack Obama’s announcement falls short of guaranteeing that deportations will be halted. The activists questioned whether the announcement was a political ploy to get the Hispanic vote.

    Last year, the administration announced that prosecutors would use discretion in deportation cases, mainly focusing on threats to national security. But deportation numbers continued to rise. “We’re not going to believe the president until we see it happen,” Jose Rico, 22, of Raleigh, a co-founder of the N.C. Dream Team, said about Obama’s Friday announcement. “We’ve been down this road before.”

    Immigration groups have attempted to occupy Obama campaign offices across the country to force the administration’s hand on the immigration issue.

    http://tinyurl.com/7yb3vfa

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 6/16/12” »

    Technology and Direct Democracy

    Friday June 22 7pm-9pm at E5 (5th floor, 33 Harrison Ave, Boston, MA)

    Facilitated by OBIT and Jeremy Stark

    OBIT is proud to present a consensus building tool focused on
    accessing direct democracy and using technology to influence political
    outcomes at the state and federal levels.

    While many carry beliefs that electoral politics are tainted by
    corrupt practices and big money Super PACS, there are others who still
    believe that it is important that voters leverage their power through
    actively challenging their elected officials to speak for the people

    On June 22 we will look at the various ways that technology is being
    used to impact true democratic practices and get more people involved
    in the drafting and revision of proposed legislation.

    Join us for an invigorating discussion about the roles of electoral
    politics and the promotion of tools that facilitate more direct
    involvement in voting and challenging our representatives to speak and
    act for the people and not the profiteering corporations and lobbying
    organizations such as ALEC.

    We are meeting at E5 on Friday June 22 from 7pm-9pm and the community
    is invited to participate in sharing thoughts, opinions and
    frustrations about the state of electoral politics and search for some
    viable solutions.

    “A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves.”
    – Edward R. Murrow

    ALERT – the lecture is postponed but the film is still being shown tonight

     

     

    INDIGENOUS JUSTICE

     
    Great Seal of the Navajo Nation

    INDIGENOUS JUSTICE:  THE NAVAJO NATION SITUATION

     

    Event: Film: Broken Rainbow, Friday, June 15th , 6:30-8 PM, First Parish in Cambridge, 3 Church Street Cambridge, MA 02138 (across from Harvard T stop).

    1985 documentary film about the government-enforced relocation of thousands of Navajo Native Americans from their ancestral homes in Arizona. The Navajo were relocated to aid mining speculation in a process that began in the 1970s and continues to this day. The film is narrated by Martin Sheen. The title song was written by Laura Nyro. Buffy Sainte-Marie … Translator Voice (voice) Burgess Meredith … Historical Voices (voice) Won Oscar/.  This provides good background for Monday’s teach in.
    Watch the Movie here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=W5z8OgMfXXc 

    Navajo Nation march
     

    One of the positive hallmarks of the Occupy movement is recognition of the reality of indigenous peoples and indigenous rights.  

    The United Nations Indigenous Forum recently concluded discussions of the falsity of the “Discovery Doctrine,” and discussions of the pretexts of Europe in the theft of lands and liberties in the Americas are relevant to the Occupy movement:

    How is it that the same discourses of conquest that were, and are, sued to dominate indigenous peoples are also being used to dominate and exclude the 99% from effective power?

    The situation of Navajos, who have treaties with Spain, Mexico and the United States but who have a dependent international state, is relevant to us all.  We need to discuss their situation to better understand our own.

    The OB Media Rundown for 6/15/12

    Obama Trade Document Leaked, Revealing New Corporate Powers And Broken Campaign Promises

    A critical document from President Barack Obama’s free trade negotiations with eight Pacific nations was leaked online early Wednesday morning, revealing that the administration intends to bestow radical new political powers upon multinational corporations, contradicting prior promises.
    . . .

    The newly leaked document is one of the most controversial of the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact. It addresses a broad sweep of regulations governing international investment and reveals the Obama administration’s advocacy for policies that environmental activists, financial reform advocates and labor unions have long rejected for eroding key protections currently in domestic laws.

    Under the agreement currently being advocated by the Obama administration, American corporations would continue to be subject to domestic laws and regulations on the environment, banking and other issues. But foreign corporations operating within the U.S. would be permitted to appeal key American legal or regulatory rulings to an international tribunal. That international tribunal would be granted the power to overrule American law and impose trade sanctions on the United States for failing to abide by its rulings.

    http://tinyurl.com/cdpa7ay

    Campaign cash is the gift that keeps on giving

    Look at the Wisconsin recall campaign of Republican Gov. Scott Walker. At least 14 billionaires rushed to the support of the corporate right’s favorite union basher. He outraised his Democratic opponent, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, by nearly 8-to-1. Most of his money came from out of state. More than $60 million was spent, $45 million of it for Walker alone.
    . . .

    These are the people who are helping to fund what the journalist Joe Hagan describes as a “tsunami of slime.” Even as they and their chosen candidates are afforded respectability in the value-free world of plutocracy, they can hide the fingerprints they leave on the bleeding corpse of democracy in part because each super PAC comes with that extra special something every politician craves: plausible deniability. When one of their ads says something nasty and deceitful about an opponent – when it slanders and lies – the pol can shrug and say: “Not my doing. It’s the super PAC that’s slinging the mud, not me.”

    http://tinyurl.com/chhv7ec

    Coming weeks may prove crucial to world’s faltering economies

    The U.S. economy is stumbling, the global economy is slowing and the next few weeks are likely to be crucial in determining the pace of business activity for everyone from Boston to San Francisco, Beijing to Sao Paulo.

    http://tinyurl.com/6plmu6w

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 6/15/12” »

    Contact us

    Occupy Boston Media <Media@occupyboston.org> • <Info@occupyboston.org> • @Occupy_Boston