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Northern California
Democracy School Agenda

Friday, January 25 (6:00 pm - 9:30 pm)

*Arrival of Attendees
*Wine & cheese reception
*Introductions of Attendees (Begin: 7:00 p.m.)
*Discussion:

  • "What is our Current Pattern of Activism?"
  • "What is Law?"
  • "How is Law Used and for What Purpose is it Used?"
*How We Got Here: A Brief Overview of the School and the Evolution of POCLAD/CELDF
*Case Study: Traditional Organizing and Corporate Power -- Factory Farms

Saturday, January 26, 2007 (8:30 am - 6:00 pm)

*By the Few, of the Few, and For the Few: The Constitution's Replication of a Slave and Empire Form of Governance

  • The History and Rise of the English Slave and Empire State
  • The Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, Constitution
*A History of Peoples' Movements in the United States
  • The American Revolution
  • The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution
  • The Anti-Federalists
  • The Populists
  • The Abolitionists and the Fourteenth Amendment
  • Womens' Rights and the Nineteenth Amendment
  • The Labor Movement
*From a Slave State to a Corporate State
  • Early Corporate Chartering
  • Dartmouth College: Wrapping the Corporation in the Constitution
  • Transitioning from a Slave State to a Corporate State
  • Contemporary Corporate "Rights" and Powers
*Building New Models of Organizing (The Pennsylvania Model)
*The "Single Issue" Model: From Reframing to Winning
*Driving into Local Governing Arenas
  • Challenging and Contesting Corporations
  • Contesting Government Actions Empowering Corporations to Usurp Community Control
*From Reframing to Drawing the Corporate Response to Building New Constituencies to Winning
*Altering the Odds: Directly Challenging Corporate Rights
  • The Porter and Licking Township, Clarion County Experience: Using Law to Eliminate Legal Privileges Claimed by Corporations
*Building a Legal Framework to Support Elimination of Corporate Rights
  • The Legal Defense Fund's Model Legal Brief to Eliminate Corporate Rights
*FROST v. St. Thomas Development, Inc.: A Rural South-Central Pennsylvania
*Community Organization Takes on the Constitutional "Rights" of a Quarry Corporation

Sunday, January 27 (9:00 am - 3:00 pm)

*Building the Connections Amongst All Single Issues

  • Our History of Collaterally Challenging Illegitimate Corporate Authority
*Breakout: Reframing Single Issues by Rethinking Several Issues
  • An Exploration of Jurisdictions and Arenas
  • Other Constituencies
  • Critical Mass: Doing it Together and Building a Movement
*This is the Work: Groups Across the United States Applying New Models
*Discussion: How Do We Make Real the Promises of Democracy? (End: 3:00 p.m.)

TOTAL COST for Tuition Fee and some Meals: $325 ** Some partial scholarships may be available. We're sorry, but we are unable to refund tuition for cancellations after December 3rd.

Note: All attendees receive a 350 page background reading packet two weeks prior to the School, which contains curriculum materials for the School.


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This page last updated October 28, 2007
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