The Trinity College Branch of the Free Legal Advice Centres (FLAC) has organized a conference for March 8th around the title, “Poverty, Social Exclusion and the Law”. Speakers at the conference will deal with issues ranging from the interrelation of poverty with crime and educational disadvantage to the plight of travellers and refugees and the ideological content and function of law in modern bourgeois democracy. This conference will be of particular interest to those within Irish society concerned with tackling the cancer of social exclusion, so every organization and party should make an effort to be in attendance. The full details are below. This story had been posted previously, but given the recent comments made by the Community and Social pillar in the partnership talks it has a renewed relevance.
FLAC TCD presents:
‘POVERTY, SOCIAL EXCLUSION AND THE LAW’
Saturday, March 8th
Ed Burke Theatre, Arts Block
Trinity College Dublin
Conference Registration: 9.30am
Speakers:
Joan O’Flynn, Combat Poverty Agency
Cliona Hannon, Trinity Access Programme
Gerard Whyte, senior lecturer, Head of Trinity College Law School and author of Social Inclusion and the Legal system : public interest law in Ireland
Paul O’Mahoney, author and lecturer
Cabrini Gibbons, Irish refugee council
Davey Joyce, Irish Travellers Movement
Tickets:
Individuals: €30
NGO’s: €20
Students, OAP’s & the unwaged: €10
(Light lunch included)
All proceeds to FLAC, 49 south William street, Dublin 2
Make cheques payable to FLAC TCD
Send to Box 11, Regent House, Trinity College Dublin
No tickets will be sent, reserved names on list on the door
Or pay in cash or cheque on the door on the day
Comments (1 of 1)
Jump To Comment: 1The 'socially excluded' are as much a product of the system as are the golden circle of gombeen men who reap the reward of corruption. Their only form of public accountability is to appear before these endless tribunals where their lawyer friends further enrich themselves at public expense. Welfare for the rich and criminalization for the poor.
Indymedia Ireland is a media collective. We are independent volunteer citizen journalists producing and distributing the authentic voices of the people. Indymedia Ireland is an open news project where anyone can post their own news, comment, videos or photos about Ireland or related matters.