Posts Tagged ‘Hip Hop For Change



15
May
17

Unify: 2nd Annual Hip Hop For Change Environmental Equity Summit

The environmental movement has a long history of elitism and racism. The Green 2.0 campaign released a study in 2015 showing that POC make less than 17% of the 300 environmental organizations surveyed. 95% of these groups’ governing boards were White. Experts in the field, such as Governor Jerry Brown’s senior advisor, Clifford Rechtschaffen, agree that diversity remains one of the central challenges of the environmental movement, yet also one of the central opportunities. As Oakland’s leading advocate for social justice through hip hop culture, we will host UNIFY: The 2nd Annual Oakland Environmental Equity Summit at the Greenpeace Actions Warehouse.The event will be free to the public and will raise money for local POC-led environmental justice groups and environmental education in Bay Area schools. The name is derived from one of the four principles of Hip Hop(peace, love unity and having fun).

Buy tickets HERE.

15
May
17

Hip Hop For Change Presents Concrete Roots

18
Oct
16

Hip Hop For Change presents: Dia De Los Muertos Featuring live performances by Los Rakas, Bayonics & MORE

 

WEDNESDAY, NOV 2

Hip Hop For Change presents:

Dia De Los Muertos

Featuring live performances by:

Los Rakas

Bayonics

DJ Leydis

Chuy Gomez (hosting and DJing)

@ Great Northern (formerly Mighty), 119 Utah St., San Francisco

9pm-2am, 21+, $10-$15 adv, $20 door

TICKETS

BUY LIMITED EARLY BIRD & VIP TICKETS TODAY & SAVE BEFORE PRICES GO UP!

For more information about how you can volunteer, participate as an artist to exhibit an altar or support Hip Hop For Change with your donations, emailjp@hiphopforchange.org

22
Jun
16

The Future of Hip Hop: America’s Newest Indigenous Art

14
May
16

Environmental Equity Summit

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SATURDAY, MAY 21
Environmental Equity Summit

Hip Hop For Change presents a Bay Area POC Environmental Summit, an arts and environmental advocacy event that provides a platform to discuss the environmental needs of POC, and grassroots POC environmentalist groups. It will unite like-minded environmental organizations to connect, exchange ideas, and foster lasting relationships. Attendees of all ages will enjoy a diverse line-up of exhibitors, vendors, DJs, artists, and speakers committed to environmental justice. This event will go to capacity!  Register now!

Featuring live performances by:
dead prezBambuKhafre Jay, plus more to be announced

DJs: Ren the Vinyl Archaeologist, Davey D (Hardknock Radio/KPFA) + more!

Panelists include:
Paloma Pavel (PhD), (President of Earth House Center / co-founder of the Breakthrough Communities Project)
Carl Anthony (Co-founder of the Breakthrough Communities Project)
Wanda Stewart (Executive director at the People’s Grocery and Obsidian Farm)
Zakiya Harris (Co-Director of Hack The Hood)
Davey D (Hardknock / KPFA)
and more TBA

@ The New Parish, 1743 San Pablo Ave, Oakland, CA 94612
1pm-6pm.  All Ages. FREE w/ RSVP.
More info: www.hiphopforchange.org

If you are a non-profit and would like a booth at the event, contact jp@hiphopforchange.org

Panelists:
Paloma Pavel
Paloma Pavel, PhD, President of Earth House Center, is co-founder of the Breakthrough Communities Project and served as Director of Strategic Communications for the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative at the Ford Foundation. Pavel’s academic background includes graduate study at the London School of Economics (LSE) and Harvard University. Her research at LSE addresses South African Economics in the pre- and post-Apartheid eras. Her dissertation (Organizational Culture and Leadership Development) was part of a five-year study by the Carnegie Foundation on the workplace in America, which culminated in the publication Good Work. She has taught at many Bay Area institutions, including the California Institute for Integral Studies, where she co-chaired the graduate degree program in Organizational Development. Pavel is a frequent lecturer and keynote presenter nationally and internationally on the theory of living systems and urban sustainability. At MIT Press, she co-edits the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Books series with Robert Gottlieb. Dr. Pavel is editor of the newly released book entitled Breakthrough Communities: Sustainability and Justice in the Next American Metropolis (MIT Press, 2009).

Carl Anthony
Carl Anthony, architect, author and urban / suburban / regional design strategist, is co-founder of the Breakthrough Communities Project. He has served as Acting Director of the Community and Resource Development Unit at the Ford Foundation, responsible for the Foundation’s world wide programs in fields of Environment and Development, and Community Development. He directed the Foundation’s Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative and the Regional Equity Demonstration in the United States. Carl funded the national Conversation on Regional Equity (CORE), a dialogue of national policy analysts and advocates for new metropolitan racial justice strategies. He was Founder and, for 12 years Executive Director, of the Urban Habitat Program in the San Francisco Bay Area. With his colleague Luke Cole at the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, he founded and published the Race, Poverty and the Environment Journal, the only environmental justice periodical in the United States. He has a professional degree in architecture from Columbia University. In 1996, he was appointed Fellow at the Institute of Politics, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.




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