Julianna Yau’s blog

Because I need to feed the geek in me.

 

Bookmarks for September 25th, 2008 through September 27th, 2008

Ma.gnolia bookmarks for September 25th, 2008 through September 27th, 2008:

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By Julianna Yau
On September 27, 2008
At 9:00 pm
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What’s On: An Update

I’m feeling like I’m all over the place recently (probably because I am).

I heard back from Andrew Telegdi’s office this week and we’re trying to arrange for a meeting soon. I’ve also contacted Cathy MacLellan for a meeting, but haven’t heard back yet. Along with Cindy Jacobsen (whom I’ve already met), they’re really the only candidates in my riding I’ll be trying to meet. I have no interest in wasting my time with the Conservative party, and I’m too busy to try to meet with the candidates for the other parties (which I doubt have a realistic chance at being elected).

You’ll probably mostly be seeing mini posts like this and bookmarks of other sources for the next week or so. I’m going to be very busy creating new sculptures, coordinating the upcoming events for Globe Studios and jump-starting an exciting new venture.

Other stuff happening:

The Writers Guild of Canada is organizing a pro-arts rally in front of the Canadian Broadcasting Centre at Front & John Street in Toronto on Wednesday, October 8 from 11:30am to 12:30pm. A PDF of the flyer can be found here.

The Department of Culture has also extended their Gone in 30 Seconds video contest deadline to 6pm on Oct 5th.

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Filed under : arts administration, reflections
By Julianna Yau
On September 26, 2008
At 7:12 pm
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Bookmarks for September 21st, 2008 through September 24th, 2008

Ma.gnolia bookmarks for September 21st, 2008 through September 24th, 2008:

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By Julianna Yau
On September 24, 2008
At 9:00 pm
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Bookmarks for September 15th, 2008 through September 21st, 2008

Ma.gnolia bookmarks for September 15th, 2008 through September 21st, 2008:

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By Julianna Yau
On September 21, 2008
At 10:02 am
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The Innovation Law & Theory Workshop: David Winickoff

I won’t be able to make it to this one, but it sounds like fun (to me, anyway!):

The Innovation Law & Theory Workshop

Presents

David Winickoff

Assistant Professor, Bioethics and Society, University of California, Berkeley

Topic: Justice and the Management of Genomic Biobanks: A Procedural Rejoinder to Benefit-Sharing

Date: Friday, September 26, 2008

Time: 12:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.

Place: Solarium, Falconer Hall, 84 Queen’s Park

Description: Assemblages of personal health information, human DNA, and other heterogeneous forms of capital known as “biobanks” remain controversial events in the ethics and politics of the life sciences. Recent disputes around property in medical records, genetic data, and tissue samples demonstrate that the now-famous Moore v. Regents case was but the tip of a large iceberg of normative unsettlement in this area. Even as new and larger biobanking initiatives are emerging across the globe, scholarship on biobank governance has comparatively ignored property in favor of focusing on consent, IRBs, and privacy. What is “genomic capital,” and how should it be structured in order to advance various goals? In this vein, governance in UK Biobank deserves attention and scrutiny, as it is staking out a new imagination of the genomic biobank as a common-pool resource. The talk will explore the ways in which, if pushed further, the ideal of “partnership” articulated in the UK might be translated into legal rights of joint control across funders, research participants, and research institutes. Such an approach seeks to advance notions of justice neither by soft norms of benefit sharing nor by rigid earmarks. Rather, such an approach seeks to create structural conditions for the negotiation of the potentially conflicting charitable goals of major participants—i.e., a procedural approach to just benefit distribution.

Bio: David Winickoff is Assistant Professor of Bioethics and Society at U.C Berkeley. Professor Winickoff develops policies for governments, foundations, universities and the private sector that help guide innovation to address the most pressing environmental and health problems. His bioethics scholarship spans topics of biotechnology, systems of property and intellectual property, race, environmental regulation, food safety, human subjects research, and public health. He has published 23 articles in leading bioethics, biomedical, law and science studies journals. In 2007, Winickoff was chosen to be a Greenwall Faculty Scholar in Bioethics, a national award to foster the careers to the most promising young faculty in bioethics. Winickoff is also Co-director of the Science, Technology and Society Center, and the founder and executive director of the Science, Technology, Ethics and Law Working Group at UC Berkeley. Winickoff has also taught at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Public Policy, and he holds degrees from Yale University, Cambridge University, UK, and Harvard Law School.

Lunch will be provided - No RSVPs are required
For further information please contact Andrea Slane at centre.ilp@utoronto.ca

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By Julianna Yau
On September 18, 2008
At 6:23 pm
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Faceless Until October 14

Faceless

On September 15, Facebook was dotted with profiles, sans profile pictures. This was done in protest of the recent arts funding cuts which were discovered, without warning, consultation or announcement, to show how the loss of arts & culture would mean a loss of cultural identity for Canadians.

I participated in this protest, and will join those who are remaining faceless until the election, such as Chris Foley. Being faceless for a day was very difficult for me, because I use the profile to showcase my recent sculptures, and my sculptures are part of who I am. Instead of seeing one of my creations, having to look at the ghostly silhouette of a nameless person was more than unsettling.

What was most telling of how intimitately connected our identity is with art & culture is the variety of Facless For the Arts profile pictures created by users so they can show they are faceless specificially in support of art & culture.

Faceless Faceless


So as part of my work to raise awareness about the impacts and implications of the arts funding cuts, I will be faceless not merely in Facebook, but in all my online social networks.

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Filed under : art, arts administration, internet
By Julianna Yau
On
At 5:53 am
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Making the case for culture to politicians

This is in response to the article Make the case for culture to ordinary Canadians, artists told from the CBC.

I’m disgusted by the fact that politicians believe we need to make a case at all, and that they don’t understand why we’re outraged by the arts budget cuts.

The spending on the arts was approved by Parliament, and so were the programs receiving the funding and the amount of funding being allocated to the programs.

The budget cuts were done in secret, without approval by Parliament, without consulation with the arts community, without clear, specific and direct explanations on why the particular cuts were made, without formal announcement to the public or the arts community, and without clear and direct information on where the excess of $60m was being redirected.

If the government really cared about arts & culture, they would already be aware of the many reports and studies on the importance of arts & culture. So-called “ordinary Canadians” live and breathe art & culture all the time; if they are not happy with the way the money is being spent on the arts, it’s either because of a lack of understanding of the jury process or because we need to improve the process with consultation with the arts community. I know of no other sector where funding is cut, without consultation with the stakeholders, because “ordinary Canadians” or ideologically-threatened policymakers don’t like the product. How do we allow cigarettes to be freely marketed, but arts funding to be cut at the whim of a minority government?

So, to those who need a case presented to them, here is a short list of resources which show why art & culture is important:

Please post any other resources in the comments.

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By Julianna Yau
On September 16, 2008
At 9:06 pm
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Bookmarks for September 11th, 2008 through September 14th, 2008

Ma.gnolia bookmarks for September 11th, 2008 through September 14th, 2008:

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By Julianna Yau
On September 14, 2008
At 12:00 pm
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Living it up in the real world

I’ve been doing more in the “real world” the past few days, and am terrified of the total count of blog posts waiting to be read. I’m very tempted to simply hit the wonderful “mark all as read” button!

What I’ve been up to:

What’s coming:

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Filed under : art, arts administration, technology in the arts conference
By Julianna Yau
On September 13, 2008
At 9:09 pm
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Meeting with Cindy Jacobsen, NDP candidate for KW

I met with Cindy Jacobsen today to discuss some of the concerns artists have with the actions and direction with the Conservative government. These are, of course, not exhaustive or exclusive, but represent some of the high-profile areas:

Copyright

C-10

Funding & appreciation of the arts

I felt really good about the meeting, and Cindy definitley understood the issues without me needing to convince her that there were problems.

I have still not heard back from Andrew Telegdi’s office with regards to a meeting.

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By Julianna Yau
On
At 8:49 pm
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