Difference between revisions of "Judith Roderick"

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'''Judy Roderick'''...lead organizer the [[Redemption Project]], [[Boston]] [[Massachusetts]].
 
'''Judy Roderick'''...lead organizer the [[Redemption Project]], [[Boston]] [[Massachusetts]].
  
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==Black Radical Congress==
 
==Black Radical Congress==
  
In 2000 Judy Roderick was a Boston contact for [[Black Radical Congress]]<ref>BRC Today Vol 1,Issue 4 p 11</ref>.
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In 2000 [[Judy Roderick]] was a Boston contact for [[Black Radical Congress]]<ref>BRC Today Vol 1,Issue 4 p 11</ref>.
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==Boston Social Forum==
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At the 2004 [[Boston Social Forum]] '''Bringing the Movement into Electoral Politics''' . Panelists were [[Mel King]], [[Chuck Turner]], [[Felix Arroyo]], [[Steve Backman]], [[Lydia Lowe]], [[Patrick Kearney]], [[Judy Roderick]].<ref>[http://bostonsocialforum.org/archive/bsf_2004_program_book.pdf Boston Social Forum program page 23]</ref>
  
 
==Jobs Not Jails==
 
==Jobs Not Jails==

Latest revision as of 06:21, 5 July 2016

Template:TOCnestleft Judy Roderick...lead organizer the Redemption Project, Boston Massachusetts.

FRSO

Roderick was in 2001 active in the Boston Black Radical Congress, fighting prison injustice and high stakes testing in public schools. She was associated with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.[1]

Black Radical Congress

In 2000 Judy Roderick was a Boston contact for Black Radical Congress[2].

Boston Social Forum

At the 2004 Boston Social Forum Bringing the Movement into Electoral Politics . Panelists were Mel King, Chuck Turner, Felix Arroyo, Steve Backman, Lydia Lowe, Patrick Kearney, Judy Roderick.[3]

Jobs Not Jails

Circaa 2011, Jobs Not Jails: Statewide coalition to redirect costly prison spending towards jobs, training and support for Massachusetts' lowest income communities.

Steering committee;

References

Template:Reflist