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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 28
tuftsdaily.com
Friday, March 19, 2021
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
Stacey Abrams discusses youth civic engagement, voter suppression in virtual Tisch College event by Peri Barest
Assistant News Editor
Stacey Abrams spoke to the Tufts community about her journey into politics, grassroots organizing in Georgia and youth civic engagement in a livestreamed conversation on Thursday. Abrams, a voting rights activist, politician and author, was invited to speak as part of the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life Distinguished Speaker Series. Abrams served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 2007–17 and was the Democratic nominee in the 2018 Georgia gubernatorial election. Kelly Sims Gallagher, academic dean and professor of energy and environmental policy at The Fletcher School, opened the event. “Stacey Abrams is the embodiment of courageous and ethical leadership,” Gallagher said. “She recognizes the inherent dignity in every person and has held our institutions and leaders accountable, most recently in the 2020 election.” Alan Solomont, dean of Tisch College, moderated the event. He
(SOPHIE DOLAN / THE TUFTS DAILY)
Stacey Abrams, an American politician, lawyer, voting rights activist and author is pictured talking to Dean Alan Solomont in a webinar hosted by Tisch College. began by asking Abrams about her heroes. “My parents are extraordinary people,” Abrams said. “They grew up in the abject poverty that you think about in Mississippi, during Jim Crow.” Abrams then discussed her route to politics. Growing up in a family committed to social justice, she often missed the Saturday morning cartoons when accompanying her parents to protest, vote and volunteer at local soup kitchens, homeless shelters and juvenile justice facilities. Abrams said she was influenced by lessons her parents taught her. “[My parents] said, ‘Look, it’s government’s job to do many
of these things for people who have fallen through the cracks,’” Abrams said. “‘It’s government that should be trying to solve the challenges of poverty and literacy’ … I was really mad at government because government was making sure I didn’t get to watch the Super Friends [cartoon].” When asked what advice she has for students hoping to become involved in politics, Abrams said that politics should be a tool for policy, not the other way around. “The minute we start making choices so we can win elections, instead of winning elections so we can make better choices, you have fallen far afield from what should be driving here,” she said.
Abrams said that much of her success in Georgia was the result of the mathematics of changing demographics as well as the strategy of a 10-year plan she formed a decade ago. “I put together in 2010 … this 10-year plan, and it really did track the trajectory of voting and the trajectory of demographic changes,” Abrams said. “It was doing that work that led to a lot of the outreach that I built, both as leader organizations that I started, including The New Georgia Project, investment in younger people to go into [communities] and build operations but also training them to run campaigns and to think about policy.”
Abrams emphasized local politics in discussing how to expand her strategy to other states. She said that it is important not to wait until presidential election years, which often have high voter turnout but low return on investment, to become civically engaged. “For most people, the challenges that they face in their lives for the communities we need to engage, they feel the pain at the local level,” she said. “It’s whether or not the school board decided that they needed access to the internet, when they decided to go to remote learning.” Abrams added that this process takes time and that it is important not to get dissuaded by a lack of instant results. Instead, it is important to be clear about what was accomplished and what remains to be solved. Abrams also discussed her work to involve more young people in the voting process. “Part of what I saw as my responsibility as [Georgia House of Representatives minority] leader was to help build the party and see ABRAMS, page 2
Tufts Women in IR opens dialogue Somerville opens new high around Intro to IR curriculum diversity school amid slow return to in-person learning
AVA IANNUCCILLO / THE TUFTS DAILY
The Fletcher School, Tufts’ graduate school of international affairs, is pictured on Oct. 14, 2020. Ellie Murphy, who studies international relations and by Ava Autry Contributing Writer sociology and is the current senior adviser and former co-presiTufts Women in International dent of Women in International Relations has opened a dia- Relations, explained why the logue with students and facul- organization wanted to address ty regarding the lack of equal this disparity. “Last semester, WIIR decided representation of female and nonbinary voices, as well as to have an internal discussion people of color, in the curric- about how race impacts studying ulum for the Introduction to International Relations at Tufts,” International Relations class. Murphy, a junior, wrote in an This action was inspired by email to the Daily. “After hearing students who have voiced con- many group members reflect on cerns over the inequality in their qualms about the curriculum, it became clear that many authorship.
of us felt that the syllabus did not incorporate enough female and nonbinary scholars, and scholars of color into the curriculum.” Murphy said she felt many of the readings in the Introduction to International Relations course were written by white, male authors and that many non-Western perspectives were missing. “I still believe that there is a tendency to assume that Western thought is the ‘standard’ way of studying political science/international relations,” Murphy said. “I felt that I wasn’t exposed to the full breadth of the field as the focus was on Western schools of thought.” Women in International Relations is a student-run organization for “femme-identifying people interested in the field of international relations,” according to the group’s mission statement. It strives to build “a safe space for dialogue, empowerment, and career building.” The student group hosts events in tandem with its sponsor organization, the Institute for Global Leadership. Within the past year, Women in International Relations’ programming has included hostsee WIIR, page 2
by Sam Klugherz News Editor
Somerville opened a new high school on March 4, welcoming only a group of younger students in high needs special education programs into the building, as part of Somerville Public Schools’ ongoing phased return to in-person learning. The first days of in-person learning at the new high school have gone well, according to Susana Hernandez Morgan, chief communications and development officer for SPS. Somerville Mayor Joe Curtatone celebrated the opening of the new building in a press release, yet acknowledged and lamented the fact that many high school students will not have access to the building at the moment. “To our high school students and families, I want you to know we are working on options to get you access to the building sooner, and of course we look forward to when it will be safe for all of our students to return to their usual schools,” Curtatone said.
OPINION / page 7
FEATURES / page 3
ARTS / page 4
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Celebrating Jethro Tull half a century later
“For now, I want to recognize your sacrifice and thank you for allowing our highest needs students into the space as we work toward broader opening.” The students currently learning in the new building are attending in person four days per week, two hours each day, with remote learning on Wednesdays. A second group of students, scheduled to begin in-person instruction on March 18, will attend school in person four days per week for the full day. They will also learn remotely on Wednesdays. The group includes additional populations of high needs students and multilingual learning lab students in grades 9–12, among others. Morgan explained that SPS has instituted a comprehensive set of health and safety measures as it welcomes more students into classrooms. Though it took Somerville a longer time to establish these guidelines than expected, Morgan noted that they will help minimize risk as students and staff return to school buildings. see SOMERVILLE, page 2 NEWS
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