• Book Club: Lord of the Butterflies

    McCosh health Center Princeton

    This event is organized by LGBT ERG Book club. October 11, 2019 12pm G20 McCosh Discussion Leader: Jordan E. Dixon

  • Gandhi Jayanti celebration

    Carl A. Fields Center 58 Prospect Ave, Princeton, NJ, United States

    Everyone is invited to attend Gandhi Jayanti celebration on Sunday, October 13th from 4:00-7:00pm in Carl Fields Center. IEGAP is co-hosting this event and Patricia Jones will say few words on behalf of IEGAP.   The audience will be mainly the winning students from Middle-High Schools, their teachers and parents who took part in the Art & Writing contest.. The topic of the Art & Writing contest was: “Intolerance is itself a form of violence and an obstacle to the growth of a true democratic spirit.”  -  Mahatma Gandhi  

  • Lunch and Language: Día de los Muertos

    Carl A. Fields Center 58 Prospect Ave, Princeton, NJ, United States

    In honor of Día de los Muertos our friends from Latino Princetonians: Lisa M. Linn de Barona and Oscar Torres-Reyna will be presenting at the next Lunch and Language event in Spanish . We welcome you to bring a picture of and/or something important to a loved one who has passed to add to our community ofrenda. If you do, please remember to take it with you when the event is over.

  • Volunteering at Habitat for Humanity ReStore

    ReStore 2465 South Broad St, Hamilton, NJ, United States

    7 volunteers for IEGAP will help with Replacing damaged ceiling tiles, light bulbs, hanging doors, building a register counter, repairing wallpaper, and more.

  • Unique Minds: Voices through Art

    Frist Center

    Opening reception of Unique Minds: Voices through Art at Frist on Monday, Nov. 4, 4-7pm. The exhibit will be up on the 200 level for the month of November. Exhibit features our IEGAP artist: Chanika Svetvilas  

  • ICS Movie: Birds of Passage

    Princeton Garden Theatre 160 Nassau St, PRINCETON, NJ, United States

    From the filmmakers behind 2016’s dazzling Embrace of the Serpent comes another poetic look at South American history. Set in Colombia during a volatile decade of drug trafficking, Rapayet and his indigenous family get involved in a war to control the business that threatens their lives and culture. BIRDS OF PASSAGE is bold and powerful filmmaking that documents a forgotten history of indigenous people in the 20th century.

  • Tiger Trot for Hunger

    Dillon Gym

    This year’s 5K run/walk will take place on Friday, November 22, 2019 at 3:00 pm.  Entry for the race requires a non-perishable food item or monetary donation. Registration for Tiger Trot: https://campusrec.princeton.edu/TigerTrot Please indicate ERG-IEGAP under Faculty/Staff - Which Department are you representing? Free ERG T-shirt if you register as ERG-IEGAP!

  • Beyond Equal Rights: LGBTQ+ Advocacy in an Age of Inequality

    Louis A. Simpson International Building

    Location Louis A. Simpson International Building, Room 271 Talk Description: On the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, the movement for LGBTQ+ rights has achieved legal rights and social visibility at an astounding speed for a once-vilified minority group. Even in the face of political backlash from a hostile Trump administration, LGBTQ+ advocacy continues to expand as more and more politicians, corporations, and voters provide support and resources for those facing discrimination on the basis of their sexualities or gender identities. During the same period that these victories have been won, the overall LGBTQ+ population has endured the skyrocketing economic inequality that has come to plague the vast majority of people in this country. Today, working people — queer and straight — are poorer, have less control over their conditions at work, and bear exorbitantly higher healthcare costs than they did a generation ago.   In light of this new reality, LGBTQ+ advocates today should address the roots of inequality and exploitation. They should do so in political campaigns and organizations that link the struggle for gender and sexual freedom with programs for robust, inclusive public goods such as healthcare, labor rights, a federal jobs guarantee, and housing. Joanna Wuest makes the case for this program by examining contemporary trends in equal rights and indicators of economic inequality, the history of queers in the labor movement, and transformations in the relationship between social conservative opponents of equal rights and a corporate class that increasingly favors such protections.   Speaker Bio: Joanna Wuest is a political scientist who studies identity and inequality in American politics. At Princeton University, she holds the Fund for Reunion-Cotsen Postdoctoral Fellowship in LGBT Studies in the Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts. Her published work has appeared in Politics & Gender, Jacobin, and the Philadelphia Inquirer. Her current book project, Born This Way: Science and Citizenship in the American LGBTQ Movement, is a comprehensive account of the “born this way” phenomenon as it has developed within the liberal LGBTQ movement.