The panelists will analyze the recent movement
for sanctuary cities and campuses from the perspective of the United States’ history of internment and incarceration, Vermont’s tradition of democratic townships, Europe’s current refugee crisis, and Latin America’s
long tradition of autonomous national universities and highly mobilized students.
Panelists include activists, academics, and artists from three regions of the world in a deliberate attempt to create much-needed dialogue between groups who often work in isolation. The panelists will explore how we might expand the
concept of sanctuary to include historically criminalized and
marginalized groups and their interactions with the police.
The panel and satellite events will provoke dialogue about
sanctuary,
immigration, race and
national belonging, and the politics and poetics of the “point of no return."