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“Sugar, Diabetes, and People of Color”

Panel Presentation / Conjuring the Caribbean: How Sweet It Is Symposium
Monday, December 7, 2015
4:00-5:00 PM
Room 100 (Gallery) Hatcher Graduate Library Map
Panel Discussion with Dana L. Thomas (Program Manager in the Office of Public Health Practice, School of Public Health), Jocelyn Stitt (Institute for Research on Women & Gender), Jessica Chee (MPH Candidate in Health Behavior and Health Education​), and Nesha Haniff (Afroamerican & African Studies), moderated by Jocelyn Stitt.

This panel is part of the weeklong symposium, "Conjuring the Caribbean: How Sweet It Is"

More about the Symposium:
Mon 12/7-Fri 12/11
Join artists, scholars and students in a five day exploration of Caribbean tourism, histories and gender identities. The symposiums calls for an interdisciplinary response to shifting imaginations about the power and potential of Caribbean studies viewed through the lens of a sugar-saturated past.
Building: Hatcher Graduate Library
Website:
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: Africa, African American, Discussion, International, Latin America, Public Health, Spanish Studies, Women's Studies
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Institute for Research on Women and Gender, School of Music, Theatre & Dance, School of Public Health, Arts at Michigan, Institute for the Humanities, Department of Afroamerican and African Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Center for World Performance Studies, Department of American Culture, Latina/o Studies