Themester 2020 Archive of Recorded Events
Recordings of this semester's Themester-affiliated events will be linked here as they are shared by Themester partners.
Recordings of this semester's Themester-affiliated events will be linked here as they are shared by Themester partners.
Dr. Larry Diamond discusses a deepening global recession of freedom and democracy since 2006, which has accelerated in recent years with the spread of authoritarian populism. He identifies causes of the accelerating slide toward autocracy and proposes some policies that can arrest the slide.
Professors Larry Moss, Department of Mathematics, and Armando Razo, Department of Political Science, discussed the principal themes of their Themester 2020 course - POLS-Y 110 Mathematics and Politics: Conundrums of Representative Democracies - which reviews how math enables democracies to determine "the will of the people."
Former SNCC freedom activist, founder of the 1964 Freedom School movement in Mississippi, educator, and writer Charlie Cobb engages in a discussion with IU students about the connections between grassroots organizing for democracy in the South and its implications for today. How do memories of the fight for democracy shape the ongoing battle for racial and social justice in our own times? What lessons do the mobilization of young people on behalf of democracy and anti-racism during the 1960s hold for today’s activists?
Themester interns Noura Ahmed and Eliza Craig explore Themester 2020's theme with faculty members from the College of Arts and Sciences. In these discussions, College faculty share their expertise and insights from a wide range of disciplines, and challenge us to think more deeply about issues of governance and the ideals and realities of democracy today.
America’s longest war of nearly two decades, allegedly securing America from global terror and bringing peace, stability, and democracy in Afghanistan, has failed miserably. Why? Explore this question and more with Professor M. Nazif Shahrani.
Sarah Edmands Martin, assistant professor of graphic design in the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, discusses her project “Ongoing Matter: Democracy, Design, and the Mueller Report.” “Ongoing Matter” is a traveling, multi-platform collection of new poster designs that mobilizes political engagement.
IU's Global Gateways presents a four-part webinar series as part of the 2020 Themester "Democracy." Topics include challenges to liberal democracy, the pandemic's impact on governance, rising inequality, and professional work related to democracy.
Inspired by an influential mid-century obscenity case involving the Kinsey Institute (then the Institute for Sex Research), this four-part reflects explores government surveillance and censorship, and the importance of free expression in a democratic society.
This panel discussion explores the recently published book
Suffrage: Women’s Long Battle for the Vote by historian Ellen Carol DuBois (Distinguished Research Professor in the History Department of UCLA).
IU Cinema's virtual presentation of the documentary Whose Streets? featured a robust post-screening conversation and interactive Q&A with faculty, graduate students, and activists. Departments and organizations represented included African American and African Diaspora Studies, American Studies, BlackLivesMatter Bloomington, Communication and Culture, English, History, Gender Studies, Geography, and Indy10 Black Lives Matter.
Watch
Whose Streets? is currently available to watch on Tubi, Kanopy, and Pluto TV or on Netflix.