HUMAN RIGHTS OF IN

MAY 8, 2012

PROGRAM

WELCOME ADDRESS 9:00 – 9:15 AM Rodolfo Dirzo, Director Center for ,

OPENING ADDRESS 9:15 – 10:15 AM Introduction: Larry Diamond, Director Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law, Stanford University , President of (2001 to 2006)

Panel Session 1 Discussant: Logan Hennessy 10:15 – 10:30 AM The Indirect Effects of War: Understanding Trends in Indigenous Child Health during the Guatemalan Civil War - Kelly L. Staves, Claire E. Watt, and Paul Wise 10:30 – 10:45AM Ecosystematic Innovation for Indigenous People in Latin America Paul Kim, Karla Alfaro, and Leign Anne Gilbert 10:45 – 11:00AM Moral Reasoning and Communicable Inequalities in Epidemiology and Human Rights Clara Mantini-Briggs 11:00-11:30AM – Q&A

Panel Session 2 Discussant: Sergio Puig 11:35 – 11:50AM Shootings and Shamans: Local Civilian Authority Structures and Civil War Violence in Colombia – Oliver Kaplan 11:50 – 12:05AM To Find the Colors of the World Inside Ourselves: The Spectacular Zapatista’s Deconstruction Spectacle & Reenchantment of Formal Rational Mind Shara Esbenshade 12:05 – 12:30 AM Q&A

12:30 - Lunch

Keynote Talk 1:00 – 2:00PM Eliane Karp-Toledo, Anthropologist, Economist and former First Lady of Peru (2001 -2006) 1

Panel Session 3 Discussant: Marília Limbrandi-Rocha 2:05 – 2:20PM Indigenous Knowledge and the Rule of Law: Reflections from Brazil – Paul Little 2:20 – 2:35PM A Lost Continent: Writing without an alphabet – Enrique Chagoya 2:35 – 2:50PM Indigenous Policy Review in Brazil: Ideologies, rights and perspectives – Rodrigo Martins dos Santos and Melissa Volpato Curi 2:50 – 3:20PM Q&A

Panel Session 4 Discussant: Helen Stacy 3:25 – 3:40PM Indigenous Peoples and Climate Change: False promises, false solutions – Alberto Saldamando 3:40 – 3:55PM What Does it Mean to Survive Violence in Colombia? - Tania Lizarazo 3:55 – 4:10PM Human rights of indigenous peoples from a historica perspective: the 1796 slaughter of 75 indigenous people in Paraguay (Viceroyalty of Río de la Plata), its causes and consequences – Benita Herreros 4:10 – 4:25PM Gender in Times of Global Governance: Money and Power, Violence and Sex in Peru – Miriam Abu Sharkh 4:25 – 4:45PM Q&A

Panel Session 5 Discussant: Rachel Rosenberg 4:45 – 5:00PM Moving Toward Energy Independence: Environmental and Social Impacts of the Diquís Hydroelectric Project – Ellen Moore 5:00 – 5:15PM Quechua Oqrakashqa [lost – perdida]: The effects of mining consortia and globalization on local Quechua communities in the Peruvian – Karen Sue Rolph and Marco Obregon Lazaro 5:15 – 5:30PM One Step Forward, Two Steps Back? The Inter-American System and Indigenous Property Rights – Alexia Romero and James Cavallaro 5:30 – 6:00PM Q&A

CLOSING REMARKS

6:00PM Students for a Sustainable Stanford

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