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Full Agenda for those attending the Youth Track
November 21-23, 2003 Washington, DC Convention Center A broad coalition of pro-democracy organizations has joined to organize a major conference on the theme of Claim Democracy: Securing, Enhancing and Exercising the Power of the Right to Vote. The conference will take place at the Washington, D.C. Convention Center on the weekend of November 21-23. The conference agenda is a lively and substantive mix of high-profile plenaries, hands-on workshops book-signings and break-out sessions specifically geared to the interests of youth, reformers, and those interested in democracy and the law. Below is the conference agenda. Friday, November 21 (Washington College of Law, American University) 7:30 pm: "Late Night with the Democracy Movement / Democracy
Showcase": an innovative evening of culture and politics at the
Washington College of Law at American University: This pre-conference
event will be a free-wheeling democracy revue,with: Directions to the
Washington College of Law Saturday, November 22 (Washington, D.C.
Convention Center) Saturday Breakout Session Tracks: Youth: Will focus on key democracy issues affecting 16-26 year-olds. Participants will find out ways that they connect with reform movements happening around the country and how these reforms are affecting them. This track will be addressing innovative ways young people are currently, and can be engaged in democratic reforms and get-out-the-vote (GOTV) efforts. It will depart from traditional panel formats. 8:00 am – 9:00 am: Registration / Exhibit Room Open 9:00 am – 10:15 am: Opening Plenary
10:30
am – Noon: Break-out
Sessions on “Securing the Vote” · Youth Track: Malia Lazu (Democracy Action Project) and Ludovic Blain (Demos) will facilitate a conversation on securing the vote focused on felony voting rights, election day registration and lowering the voting age. Noon – 1:30 pm:
Lunch / Exhibit Area Booths / Book-Signings Focused on reforms to increase the power of one’s vote. Specific areas of reform will include campaign contribution limits, public financing, instant runoff voting, fusion, full representation, Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, access to the airwaves and strategies to promote more candidates who are women and people of color. · Youth: Nicole Johnson (Listen Inc.) will moderate
a panel with Cietta Kiandoli (Public Campaign), Rashad Robinson
(Center for Voting and Democracy) and Jen Bonardi (Democracy
Matters), that will focus on public financing of elections,
instant runoff voting, full representation and strategies to promote more
diverse candidates.
3:15 pm – 4:45 pm:
Break-out Session on “Exercising the Vote” · Youth : Youth Vote's Veronica de la Garza will introduce and moderate a panel with Ivan Frishberg (PIRG), Tracy Sturdivant (Black Youth Vote), Portia Pedro (USSA), Channing Hawkins (SEIU), Hans Riemer (Rock the Vote) and Ben de Guzman (NAPALC). 5 pm – 6 pm: Plenary -- Is There a
War on Democracy?
6 pm – 6:30 pm: Exhibit Booths Highlighted. Book Signing with Scott Beale, author of Millenial Manifesto. 6:30 pm – 9 pm:
“Celebrating Democracy” reception and dinner at the nearby Four Points-Sheraton (with separate admission): 8 pm – 9:30 pm (DC Convention Center): Sunday, November 23 (Washington, D.C. Convention Center) 8:00 am – 9:00 am: Exhibit Room Open 8:45 am – 9:45 am: Opening Plenary
Sunday will feature four sessions, each with
13 workshops, panels
and debates. Below
is the schedule for these sessions and descriptions of the featured
debates. 10:00 am – 11:15 am: Session 1 (13 workshops and panels) * Featured debate on “Is It Time for Multi-Party Democracy?” With Ralph Nader and Theresa Amato to debate defenders of the two-party system. Moderated by Hendrik Hertzberg, New Yorker magazine, to be followed by speeches from third party presidential cadidates on their electoral reform agenda. * A featured session on
“Winning – and Losing -- Democracy Reform at the Ballot Box”, sponsored by
the Ballot Initiative Strategies
Center, with
Kristina Wilfore (BISC) and leaders of reform initiatives on election day registration,
campaign finance and instant runoff voting.
11:30 am – 12:45
pm: Session 2 (13 workshops and panels) * Featured debate on “Should Touchscreen Voting Machines Require a Paper Trail?” With Barbara Simons (Co-Chair, US Public Policy Committee of ACM) and Marc Rotenberg to debate defenders of current touchscreens, including Jim Dickson of American Association of People with Disabilities. Moderated by Marc Steiner of Baltimore Public Radio Station WYPR. *A featured session: “Elected Officials on Advancing Reform in Legislatures.” With state legislators Garnet Coleman (TX), Beth Edmonds (ME) and others. 12:45 pm – 1:45 pm: Lunch / Exhibit
Area/ Book-Signings 1:45 pm – 3:00 pm: Session 3
(13 workshops and panels) * Featured debate: “Direct Democracy in California: Democracy at its Best or Worst?” With Paul Jacob (Citizens in Charge) and Dane Waters (Initiative and Referendum Institute) debating Roy Ulrich (California Common Cause) and an oopponent of the California recall and the initiative process. Moderated by Washington Post’s E.J. Dionne (invited) * A featured session on “A right to vote amendment in the U.S. Constitution.” With Jamin Raskin (Washington College of Law) and Alex Keyssar (Harvard University). 3:15 pm – 4:30 pm: Session 4 (13 workshops and panels) 4:45 pm – 5:30 pm:
Closing Plenary
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