Institute for Bioethics & Health Humanities Events Seminar Series Upcoming Seminars - All Are Welcome A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and Beyond Samuel G. Dunn Lectureship in the Medical Humanities A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and BeyondSpeaker:Richard McKinley Mizelle, Jr., PhDAssociate ProfessorDepartment of HistoryUniversity of HoustonThursday, Dec. 14, 202312 to 1 p.m.Health Education Center #3.222Event flierThe ongoing lead poisoning disaster in Flint, Michigan belies the reality that lead poisoning has long been an environmental disaster shaping public health and environmental space. In Chicago, public housing units built by the 1940s were wrapped up in debates about exposure to lead paint. Public housing administrators blamed the paint industry for the danger and vice-versa. Both the lead industry and housing officials would also blame inner city Black, Puerto Rican and Latina/o residents for their own leaded bodies, suggesting their suffering was the result of an inner biological inferiority that made them inherently prone to disease. By the Civil Rights era, Chicago activists were vocal about the dangerous lead that surrounded them. The Chicago Student Organization for Urban Leadership (SOUL) was formed in 1964 to combat lead poisoning among children and adults in Chicago. Drawing on the leadership style and structure of existing civil rights organizations, SOUL included both high school and college students who distributed pamphlets to residents on the dangers of lead poisoning and collected paint from the windowsills of homes and urine samples from residents to be examined by local public health departments. Event Information A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and Beyond December 14, 2023 - 12pm-1pm Add to Calendar: Outlook Google Calendar Departmental Events Reproductive Ethics Conference January 9-10, 2025 - 8am-5pm The Ninth Annual Reproductive Ethics Conference will be held Jan. 9 and 10, 2025, in Galveston. Abstracts for individual presentations, panels, and posters are accepted through Aug. 1, 2024. Lecture by Dr. Amy Hinterberger April 10, 2025 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Amy Hinterberger will present on April 10 Lecture by Dr. Emily Anderson May 15, 2025 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Emily Anderson will present on May 15 All Previous Events Lecture by Dr. Kirstin R.W. Matthews December 12, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Kirstin R.W. Matthews presented on December 12, 2024. Lecture by Dr. Jeremy Greene November 21, 2024 - 11am-12pm Dr. Jeremy Greene will present on Nov. 21 Lecture by Dr. Elizabeth Petrick November 7, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Elizabeth Petrick will present on Nov. 7 Developing Metrics for Responsible Data Stewardship in Genomics October 10, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Vasiliki N. Rahimzadeh will present Developing Metrics for Responsible Data Stewardship in Genomics Lecture by Dr. Gregory Koblentz September 24, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Gregory Koblentz will present on Sept. 24 The TSU SHAPE Initiative "A SWAG Movement" September 11, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Grace Loudd will present The TSU SHAPE Initiative "A SWAG Movement"
A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and Beyond Samuel G. Dunn Lectureship in the Medical Humanities A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and BeyondSpeaker:Richard McKinley Mizelle, Jr., PhDAssociate ProfessorDepartment of HistoryUniversity of HoustonThursday, Dec. 14, 202312 to 1 p.m.Health Education Center #3.222Event flierThe ongoing lead poisoning disaster in Flint, Michigan belies the reality that lead poisoning has long been an environmental disaster shaping public health and environmental space. In Chicago, public housing units built by the 1940s were wrapped up in debates about exposure to lead paint. Public housing administrators blamed the paint industry for the danger and vice-versa. Both the lead industry and housing officials would also blame inner city Black, Puerto Rican and Latina/o residents for their own leaded bodies, suggesting their suffering was the result of an inner biological inferiority that made them inherently prone to disease. By the Civil Rights era, Chicago activists were vocal about the dangerous lead that surrounded them. The Chicago Student Organization for Urban Leadership (SOUL) was formed in 1964 to combat lead poisoning among children and adults in Chicago. Drawing on the leadership style and structure of existing civil rights organizations, SOUL included both high school and college students who distributed pamphlets to residents on the dangers of lead poisoning and collected paint from the windowsills of homes and urine samples from residents to be examined by local public health departments. Event Information A Condition of “Depression”: Racism and Lead Poisoning During the Civil Rights Era and Beyond December 14, 2023 - 12pm-1pm Add to Calendar: Outlook Google Calendar
Reproductive Ethics Conference January 9-10, 2025 - 8am-5pm The Ninth Annual Reproductive Ethics Conference will be held Jan. 9 and 10, 2025, in Galveston. Abstracts for individual presentations, panels, and posters are accepted through Aug. 1, 2024.
Lecture by Dr. Amy Hinterberger April 10, 2025 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Amy Hinterberger will present on April 10
Lecture by Dr. Kirstin R.W. Matthews December 12, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Kirstin R.W. Matthews presented on December 12, 2024.
Lecture by Dr. Elizabeth Petrick November 7, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Elizabeth Petrick will present on Nov. 7
Developing Metrics for Responsible Data Stewardship in Genomics October 10, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Vasiliki N. Rahimzadeh will present Developing Metrics for Responsible Data Stewardship in Genomics
Lecture by Dr. Gregory Koblentz September 24, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Gregory Koblentz will present on Sept. 24
The TSU SHAPE Initiative "A SWAG Movement" September 11, 2024 - 12pm-1pm Dr. Grace Loudd will present The TSU SHAPE Initiative "A SWAG Movement"