Community Engaged Learning is back with our next opportunity to learn about community work! This month, we are hosting an in-person workshop on police abolition with WPCH, a community-centred police abolitionist group committed to defunding the Winnipeg Police Service and reallocating resources to life-sustaining services.


The movement to imagine and create a world without the police is a longstanding and ongoing struggle. Year after year, we see the high rates of police violence against Black, Indigenous, racialized, and other marginalized communities. Interactions with the police should not be a death sentence.

In this workshop, we will work together to address common questions related to police abolition:
- What does a world without policing look like in practice?
- What is “crime” and its root causes?
- What is the difference between police reform and police abolition?
 
Event Info
Date: Tuesday, February 13
Time: 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Location: Fort Garry campus - More directions will be provided after registration! 

Please register by February 12. This workshop is free and open to UM students and their friends and family. A light meal / snacks will be provided. We will try to accommodate dietary restrictions for people who register by February 9.

If you have any questions, please contact Anny.Chen@umanitoba.ca

 

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Anny Chen (she/her)

Lead, Community Engaged Learning

Tel: 204-474-6992

anny.chen@umanitoba.ca

http://umanitoba.ca/community-engaged-learning

 

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My home city, Winnipeg, sits on the original lands of the Anishinaabeg, Cree, and Dakota peoples and on the National Homeland of the Red River Métis. I am grateful to live and work on Treaty One Territory, and to have access to water from Shoal Lake #40 First Nation and hydroelectricity generated on the lands of many Indigenous communities in Northern Manitoba. As a descendant of refugees and immigrants who settled on Indigenous lands, I commit to challenging anti-Indigenous racism and supporting the work and leadership of Indigenous communities.