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LEFT FORUM 2007: Forging a Radical Political Future March 9-11 The Cooper Union, New York City http://www.leftforum.org
We live in dark times, but also hopeful times. The Bush administration has plunged the world into an endless war against the Iraqi and Afghani people, and now threatens to expand its colonial aspirations to other locales. As the cost of these wars to the American people rises into the trillions of dollars, much of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast still languish in unattended rubble, a year and a half after Katrina. The refusal of this administration to address these contradictions may visit incalculable devastation on our planet and its people, which even the most privileged will be unable to ignore. Yet 2006 has been a year during which the Right—in the United States, Latin America and elsewhere—has suffered severe setbacks, with social movements and voters alike decisively rejecting its economic and social policies, and its wars. While it would be excessive to claim that the Left has taken the offensive, for the first time in a generation many are prepared to contemplate an alternative to the cockeyed market optimism of the neoliberals. These events offer a provocative challenge to left movements around the world. Is protest and resistance a suffi cient strategy to stay the hand of the forces of global devastation? Is reform the farthest horizon of our own hopes, or, if not, what are the steps towards fundamental economic, political and social transformation? Can the Left advance an alternative vision capable of capturing the popular imagination? Left Forum 2007, Forging a Radical Political Future, will address the strategic and practical steps needed for us to move forward. We will offer debate on the oft-neglected issue of political organization. Panels will engage the struggles for popular power of social movements here and across the globe. In short, this Left Forum poses the questions necessary to forging a radical political future. Middle East Panels:
The Left in the Arab World: History, Conditions, and Prospects (LF) Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University (Chair) Younes Abouyoub, Columbia University Hussein Ibish, Senior Fellow, American Task Force on Palestine (ATFP) Hatem A. Bazian, University of California, Berkeley Real Solutions for the Middle East (LF) Nir Rosen, New American Foundation Phyllis Bennis, Institute for Policy Studies Gilbert Achcar, University of Paris VIII Israel/Palestine: One State or Two? (LF) Bashir Abu-Manneh, Barnard College (Chair) Joel Kovel, Bard College Uri Ram, New York University Noura Erakat, US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation Iraq: What’s At Stake? (LF) A.K. Gupta, NYC Indymedia/The Indypendent (Chair) Christian Parenti, The Nation Gilbert Achcar, University of Paris VIII Anthony Arnove, ISO, Haymarket Books Nir Rosen, New American Foundation Imperial Debacle? Lebanon, Iraq, and Palestine (Socialist Register) Irene Gendzier, Boston College (Chair) Gilbert Achcar, University of Paris VIII Bashir Abu-Manneh, Barnard College Sabah Alnasseri, York University The Left, Islam and the War on Terror (International Socialist Review) A.K. Gupta, NYC Indymedia/The Indypendent Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University Irene Gendzier, Boston University Ahmed Shawki, International Socialist Review US, Iran and Israel: What's Ahead? (Union for Radical Political Economics, URPE) Leili Kashani (Chair) Tom O'Donnell, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Reza Ghorashi, Richard Stockton College Evan Siegel, New Jersey City University Attacks on Arabs & Muslims (International Socialist Review) Deepa Kumar, Rutgers University (Chair) Deepa Fernandes, WakeUp Call, WBAI Mostafa Omar, Adalah - The Coalition for Justice in the Middle East Dalia Hashad, Director, American Program, Amnesty International |