Sports and Standing up for Justice
This webinar is brought to you by Ryerson University, Alumni Relations, as part of our Intersections Lecture Series.
Date and time
Location
Online
About this event
Professional athletes in basketball, football, hockey, baseball and soccer are striking/boycotting to speak out against systemic racism. This session will explore the impact of the professional sport strike on the Black Lives Matter movement. Join to learn about how this collective action is helping push for social change and draw attention to social justice.
Moderator
Darrell Bowden, Executive Director, Office of the Vice-President Equity and Community Inclusion, Ryerson University
Darrell is an equity, diversity and inclusion social justice educator with over twenty-five years of experience working in higher education. He is skilled in program development and delivery in non-profit organizations, including career development, coaching, and diversity and social justice education and awareness. Throughout his career, Darrell has made significant contributions to the Black community, highlighted the issues of First Nation communities, and championed for greater accessibility for persons with disabilities.
Speakers
Savanna Hamilton, RTA ‘18
Savanna Hamilton is a Host and Producer at Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment. In front of the camera, she hosts a weekly Raptors show, Raptors Today, and is a featured host on the show NBA XL aired on NBA TV Canada. Digitally, she created a series called "Hold Space" that celebrates game-changers on and off the court which features diverse stories ranging from communities within the Leafs, TFC and Raptors. She has a background in basketball as a former varsity player as well as a degree in Radio & Television Sports Media from Ryerson University.
Nicole Neverson, Professor, Faculty of Arts
Nicole Neverson is an associate professor in Sociology at Ryerson University. She began teaching Sociology of Sport courses in 2006 and has been doing so at Ryerson since 2009. Her current research interests are grounded in the areas of the mediated representation of marginalized groups, sports culture, and critical pedagogies. Her most recent publication examines how winter sports culture in Canada offers us the opportunity to understand whiteness, race and white supremacy via seemingly benign and ritualistic cultural practices. Her collaborative work, Inhabiting Critical Spaces: Teaching and Learning from the Margins at Ryerson University, highlights the lived realities of racism and resistance to critical knowledge that instructors and students in the classroom, and wider campus, navigate across academic disciplines and programs.
Richard Norman, Professor, Ted Rogers School of Management
Richard Norman is a researcher + lecturer + futurist + strategic consultant who works with people to affect change towards a more socially just, sustainable, and resilient future. His work is focused on the lived experiences of peoples who have been marginalized in our society. Richard’s doctoral research at the University of Waterloo explored the intertwining of “race,” whiteness, and colonialism in the sport of curling, and the deconstruction of dominance within sporting cultures. The research privileges the use of narrative forms aligning with oral traditions held by First Peoples around the world, to explore new ways of knowing and understanding. Richard's research is committed to approaches that can open up dialogue and discourses towards a more humane and morally driven worldview. His commitment to research continues now with the “Sport, Diversity, & Race Project” as a post-doctoral fellowship in the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University.
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This is a free online event. Details about how to access the webinar will be emailed to registered attendees 24 hours in advance and on the day of the event.
We are committed to hosting an inclusive and accessible event for everyone. Please contact rsvp@ryerson.ca if you require accommodations.
Also, please feel free to submit your questions for the speakers in advance by emailing them to rsvp@ryerson.ca