"When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor are
poor, they call me a troublemaker."
- Dom Helder Camara
"Global Health Policy 2011: Progress in Peril"
TONIGHT at 6:00 p.m.
Haldeman 041
Matthew Kavanagh of Health GAP (Global Access Project), an influential coalition
of international global health activists, will explain today's global health
funding crisis and discuss the crucial role that activism has played in winning
access to lifesaving medical care for people around the world.
The teach-in will be followed by an optional training workshop focused on campus
organizing and activism related to social justice at Dartmouth and around the
world.
Matthew Kavanagh, Director of US Advocacy: Matthew has worked with a wide
variety of NGOs and social-movement organizations in the US, Latin America, and
Southern Africa. He was previously the global campaigns director for the RESULTS
Educational Fund and executive director of Global Justice, working on policy and
organizing surrounding global health, trade, and development issues. His
organizing work has ranged from water rights and Apartheid reparations campaigns
in Johannesburg to racial justice work with the Boston Youth Organizing Project.
Matthew has been interviewed in outlets ranging from the Washington Post to the
BBC to Al Jazeera and writes regularly for the Huffington Post. He holds a BA in
political science from Vassar College and a Masters in community organizing and
education from Harvard University. Matt lives in DC and is an active member DC
Fights Back.
Sponsored by the Dartmouth Coalition for Global Health & Social Equity and
Students for Africa.