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Welcome to the draft programme of work for the fourth session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent

This page provides detailed information about the main sessions and side events, including times, locations, and speakers

For any questions or further information, please feel free to contact the Permanent Forum Secretariat at pfpad@un.org


Venue: Online clear filter
Monday, March 31
 

7:00pm EDT

Side event - Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights Monday
Monday March 31, 2025 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Proposed Side Event: Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights Monday, March 31, 2025, 7-8:30 pm, Eastern

Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, Ph.D., President and Founder, Black Doctorates Matter Co-Lead, Programs, The United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent International Civil Society Working Group

Time/Date: March 31, 2025, 7-8:30 pm Eastern Program Contact: Via Zoom Registration Link Zoom Link BLACK DOCTORATES MATTER AND ICSWG PFPAD4 is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Sponsoring Organization: ICSWG, Black Doctorates Matter

Location: Zoom Link: Topic: Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights Time: Mar 31, 2025 7:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada) Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81151602620 Meeting ID: 811 5160 2620 --- One tap mobile +16468769923,,81151602620# US (New York) +16469313860,,81151602620# US --- Dial by your location • +1 646 876 9923 US (New York) • +1 646 931 3860 US • +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC) • +1 305 224 1968 US • +1 309 205 3325 US • +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago) • +1 386 347 5053 US • +1 408 638 0968 US (San Jose) • +1 507 473 4847 US • +1 564 217 2000 US • +1 669 444 9171 US • +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose) • +1 689 278 1000 US • +1 719 359 4580 US • +1 253 205 0468 US • +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma) • +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston) • +1 360 209 5623 US Meeting ID: 811 5160 2620 Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kduIAU8Jr8

Register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/aP6JqB9PQ5KqAyazfwVtog

Program Contact: Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, Professor, School of Education, Acacia University President and Founder of Black Doctorates Matter

Email: BlackDoctoratesMatter@Gmail.Com

Program Title: Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights

Program Overview: This session aims to present Best Practices and a Call to Action focused on research about Black Scholars and Doctoral Students and the ways the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Principles are relevant to our Research and Practice. Scholars have called for the “‘establishment of a joint value system rooted in the universal principles of the United Nations Human Rights Charter, which should be based on respect for the individual and aim for an equilibrium of knowledges from South, North, East and West including indigenous knowledge systems in an ‘ecology of knowledge.’”
This presentation will discuss this knowledge using doctoral student socialization as a framework. There will be an overview of Black Doctorates Matter activities with an emphasis on Human Rights. Panelists will respond to a series of prompts about their doctoral experiences and reflections on Human Rights and there will be a Q&A.

Panelist Information Moderator:

Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, President and Founder of Black Doctorates Matter, Co-Lead for Programs, The United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, is author of Sankofa: African American Perspectives on Race and Culture in US Doctoral Education and The Philosophical Approach of Sankofa: Perspectives on Historically Marginalized Doctoral Students in the United States and South Africa. Her research and practice focuses on the racial and cultural experiences associated with doctoral degree attainment. She is committed to enhancing models of doctoral student socialization with an emphasis on race and culture. The foremost concern in her research is the discussion of inequity in access in postsecondary education. Thus, her work not only examines the statistical trends of the doctoral degree attainment; it also explores Proposed Side Event: Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights Monday, March 31, 2025, 7-8:30 pm, Eastern Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, Ph.D., President and Founder, Black Doctorates Matter Co-Lead, Programs, The United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent International Civil Society Working Group pre-doctoral and post-doctoral degree experiences to shed light on the socialization aspects of students who enter doctoral study and the disciplinary identities of doctoral degree completers as they engage their professions.

Doctoral Degree Completer:

Dr. Sydney Freeman, Jr., University of Idaho Dr. Sydney Freeman, Jr. is a full professor at the University of Idaho in the USA where he teaches Leadership Studies. He is also Founder and Executive Director of the Liberation Movement, Inc., a non-profit that seeks to liberate and empower Black people through educational initiatives. He is nationally and internationally recognized for his scholarship in multiple areas including Education, History, Black studies, and Religion and has received many national and international honors including receiving letters of commendation from the US Senate and the Governor of the State of Idaho. He also was a 2024 United Nations Human Rights Fellow and is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (FRHISTS) in the United Kingdom. Proposed Side Event: Sankofa: Reflections on Ten Years of Black Doctorates Matter and Work Towards Human Rights Monday, March 31, 2025, 7-8:30 pm, Eastern Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, Ph.D., President and Founder, Black Doctorates Matter Co-Lead, Programs, The United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent International Civil Society Working Group

Doctoral Degree Completer:
Dr. Walter Parrish, UMBC, **Photo Forthcoming Walter is currently the Assistant Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. He brings more than 17 years of experience in higher education as a scholar-practitioner. He previously served as the director of diversity and inclusion at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine, where he focused on advancing the recruitment, retention, and career development of underrepresented students, resident physicians, and faculty, as well as promoting health equity education. He holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Millersville University of Pennsylvania, a master’s degree in higher education from Old Dominion University, and a Ph.D. in educational leadership and policy analysis from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is a Founding Member of Black Doctorates Matter.

Doctoral Student:

Mr. Nathaniel Smith, University of Colorado Denver Nathaniel Smith is an ordained minister and serves as Director of NYC Men Teach at CUNY Queens College. He is a first-generation doctoral student at the University of Colorado Denver where his dissertation focuses on the lived experiences of Black males in doctoral education. He is a 2024 Asa G. Hilliard III and Barbara A. Sizemore Research Course on African Americans in Education Fellow. Nathaniel is the Creator of “Dissertating While Black,” a nationwide initiative and supportive community for Black male doctoral students. Nathaniel is a New York City native, and he is married with four children.

Doctoral Student
 
Ms. Shlinda Smith, Walden University, Shlinda is an educator from the South Side of Chicago, she currently teaches English and Math to Junior High School students at Fernwood Academy. She has over 15 years of experience teaching, mentoring, entrepreneurship, and coaching volleyball and basketball. Her classroom Motto is “ Do what you have to do Now so that you can do what you want to do Later.” Her classroom is considered a home away from home environment. She believes in creating a space in the classroom that is welcoming and inclusive for all voices to be heard. She currently sits on the following
Monday March 31, 2025 7:00pm - 8:30pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, April 7
 

3:00pm EDT

Side event - Rooted in Justice: Addressing Natural Hair Discrimination & Health Impacts on Women and Girls of African Descent
Monday April 7, 2025 3:00pm - 4:30pm EDT
Title of the Side Event:
Rooted in Justice: Addressing Natural Hair Discrimination & Health Impacts on Women and Girls of African Descent

Date, Time, and Time Zone: Monday, April 7th 3pm EST, UK 7pm, France 8pm

Sponsoring Organization(s) or Entity/ies: #Free The Hair, Vital Signs (Drexel University Kline School of Law), Center for Law, Policy, and Social Action (Drexel Kline School of Law), Mane Moves Media, Grow With Intent, Just Afro Inc.

Language(s) in Which the Side Event Will Be Held: English (multi language close caption will be available)

Description of the Side Event: This interactive online side event will explore the intersection of natural hair discrimination and the health-related harms of hair products and innovations targeting women and girls of African descent. Panelists will discuss groundbreaking research linking chemical relaxer use to increased cancer risks, carcinogenic materials in braiding hair, and the epidemic of hair loss. We will examine the emotional, economic, physical, and psychological effects of these issues, while highlighting strategies for legal, policy, and collective action. By centering the lived experiences and health of Black women and girls, this discussion aims to foster advocacy, awareness, and concrete recommendations for systemic change. We will also be exploring solutions to these topics, such as passing the Afro hair law in the U.S., UK, and in France.

Location of the side event - Registration Link https://drexel.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_FHxq6jxZSCiJJSjqwOEX7w

Name and email address of the lead organizer: Professor Wendy Greene deg69@drexel.edu She gives permission to publish contact details

Theme & Mission: Human rights of women and girls of African descent. This event will not only raise awareness but also equip participants with knowledge and tools to drive meaningful change in their communities and beyond.
Confirmed Guests:
Prof Wendy Greene, Professor of Law, Director of the Center for Law, Policy and Social Action at Drexel University Kline School of Law
Natasha Gaspard, Founder Mane Moves Media, Emmy award winning TV Producer
Dr. Afiya Mbilishaka, Ph.D. Founder, Psychohairapy, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Dr. Achiamah Osei-Tutu- board-certified dermatologist specializing in hair loss/treating people with alopecia.
Dr. Patti O’Brien Richardson—Assoc Professor of Teaching at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, Rutgers University
Guylaine Conquet, Visual artist/Just-Afro, journalist, public speaker and inspirational advocate for anti-hair discrimination legislation in France
Dr. Charlene Makita, Founder and CRO of Natural Aura hair products, Grown with Intent Podcast, and Afro-hair advocate
Michelle DeLeon, Founder & CEO of World Afro Day
Monday April 7, 2025 3:00pm - 4:30pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, April 9
 

11:00am EDT

Side event - Healing Strategies for Black Women and Girls in a Violent World
Wednesday April 9, 2025 11:00am - 2:00pm EDT
Title of the side event: HEALTH AND WELLBEING- SIDE EVENT
Healing Strategies for Black Women and Girls in a Violent World

Date, time and time zone of side event:
Wednesday, April 9, 2025, | 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM (ET- New York)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG

Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words)
This ICSWG side event at the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent envisions a world where Black women and girls live free from violence. Survivors and witnesses will share their stories and access healing strategies. Featuring global leaders like ABPSI, CHN, and the Global Women Development Network (offering TOT models for activism against gender-based violence), this convening highlights culturally grounded approaches for reparatory healing and resilience. Actionable steps: advocate for reparations, mobilize healing networks, support survivor-centered programs, and amplify violence prevention efforts globally, ensuring empowerment and well-being for Black women and girls.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online). For
online events, kindly ensure to send the connection link to facilitate participants’
access. Virtually on Zoom
Zoom Registration Link https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/quTpOwVMTjifz5ITvzpLNg

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details)
Submitted by: ICSWG Programs Co-lead Prophet N. Anyanwu Cox, R.N (MO)., M.Ed.,
Email: anyanwu1950@gmail.com | Permission to publish given

Any visual you may have to enhance your event promotion, i.e., flyers,
posters, or related materials. PANELIST: Dr. Niamo A-Raheem- Founder of The HealMobile: Journey to Your True Self, Dr. Sharon Bethea – President, Association of Black Psychology, Shean Mukocheya Simango –  Founder of Ziva kwawakabva Trust. (Zimbabwe), Princess Eulogia Gordon, Life Coach, Spiritually Gifted Healer and Intuitive, Garifuna Descent (Belize)., LilyX – The National Youth Co-Chair of the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (N’COBRA).Eva Gerald Mganga- Founder of Tanzania Women and Youth Advisory Organization (Tanzania), Awo Yeye Ifafunke' Osunye' – Founder of Ifa Ministries Mystery School, Ifa Practitioner, Reiki Master-Teacher, Certified Hatha Yoga Instructor, Dr. Mariam Khan, Co-founder of the Global Women Development Network, Moderator Enola G. Aird, Esq., Founder, President Emerita, and Elder Griot of Community Healing Network,
 
Weblink for any further information: https://iwgpfpad.mn.co/spaces/9306480/feed
Wednesday April 9, 2025 11:00am - 2:00pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, April 10
 

10:00am EDT

Side event - Voices United, Healing The Global Heart
Thursday April 10, 2025 10:00am - 11:30am EDT
Title of the Event:
Voices United, Healing The Global Heart


Date & Time:
April 10, 2025, 9:00 AM Central (10:00 AM EST, 7:00 AM PST, 3:00 PM GMT)

Organized by:
Garifuna International Indigenous Film Festival

Hosted by:
Princess Eulogia

Event Overview:
This side event, Voices United, Healing The Global Heart, aims to bridge the gap between the Garifuna diaspora and global communities, addressing reparatory justice, human rights, and economic inclusion for people of African descent. Through panel discussions and interactive Q&A, we will explore barriers preventing marginalized communities from monetizing social media platforms, highlighting how digital opportunities can empower women and girls to navigate motherhood and economic challenges. The conversation will further examine systemic racism in policy-making, the role of artificial intelligence in digital justice, and the intersection of culture, media, and economic sustainability.

Additionally, this event will highlight the Government of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines’ acquisition of Balliceaux Island and its significance to the Garifuna people. The Garifuna delegations traveling to reconnect with their ancestral roots will also take part in these vital discussions. This gathering will serve as a platform to engage in transformative conversations that can shape the future of Garifuna descendants and the broader diaspora.
A crucial aspect of this discussion will be the connection between mental health and intergenerational historical trauma. The psychological impact of displacement, marginalization, and cultural erasure continues to affect the well-being of Garifuna descendants and other people of African descent. This event will explore how these historical traumas manifest in modern struggles, particularly for mothers raising children in challenging socio-economic environments. Addressing these issues through reparatory justice frameworks will provide a pathway toward healing, resilience, and empowerment.

The Second Decade: Development, Justice, and Recognition for Africans and People of African Descent
Topics to be Addressed:
Reparatory Justice for Africa and People of African Descent
Human Rights of Women and Girls of African Descent
Media, Journalism, and the importance and struggles of "relaying the message"  
Artificial Intelligence and Digital Justice for People of African Descent
Mental Health, Well-Being, and Intergenerational Trauma
Educational Aspects of Ancestral Knowledge and Preserving Cultural Heritage

Key Features:
Twin Islands St. Maarten/St. Martin reparations-themed conference
Participation from the Chairperson of the Africa Caribbean Heritage Alliance
Participation from Africa: Secretary General of African Unity 6th Region Global & Economic Community African Six Region
CSO Regional Director for Americas and the Caribbean
Acquisition of Balliceaux by the Saint Vincent & the Grenadines Government

Special Presentations:
  1. The Africa Caribbean Heritage Alliance will present its plan for building bridges between the Garifuna communities and Africa: The Journey of Return Opportunities
  2. The AU6RG/ECASR will share information about the framework for engagement
Speakers:
Macaulay Kalu, Secretary General of African Unity 6th Region Global & Economic Community African Six Region
Amb. Okama Ekpe Brook, CSO Regional Director for Americas and the Caribbean
Chief Queen Mother Freda, CEO of Garifuna International Indigenous Film Festival
Jacqueline Roberts FRSA, SV2G (St. Vincent and the Grenadines 2nd Generation) UK
Odenke Ibiang, Singer and Influencer from Ekori, Nigeria
& More

Format & Speakers:
The event will feature keynote speakers, panelists, and audience participation. A live Q&A session will encourage engagement from diverse stakeholders, including cultural organizations, policymakers, and technology advocates.

Contributing Entities:
SV2G
Mannequins N Motion
The Garifuna Museum of Los Angeles
El Museo Garifuna SAWAINA
Freedom Hair by Melony
Other supporting organizations providing public speakers, video clips, free giveaways, and advertising support.

Target Audience:
Global African and Caribbean Diaspora
The Garifuna International Indigenous Film Festival
Museum and cultural organizations
Human rights advocates
Digital justice and AI experts
Women and girls of African descent seeking economic empowerment
Social media and content creators facing monetization barriers
Government representatives and policymakers invested in the Garifuna diaspora and reparatory justice
Mental health professionals and advocates focusing on intergenerational trauma

Accredited Media: Media representatives for the Fourth Session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent

Language:
English (Some Spanish and Garifuna might be used).

Venue:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/87942982480?pwd=bCTk9Ht6qpnEvzG0EB7Uwpmzo9AnEI.1
Meeting ID: 879 4298 2480
Passcode: 570935

Lead Organizer Contact:
Princess Eulogia
pr@mannequinsnmotion.com

Thursday April 10, 2025 10:00am - 11:30am EDT
Online

10:00am EDT

Side event - Diversity, Equity and Inclusion and Human Rights for People of African Descent: a time to refocus
Thursday April 10, 2025 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
● Title of the side event: Diversity, Equity and Inclusion and Human Rights for People of African Descent: a time to refocus.

● Date, time and time zone of side event: April 10 at 12pm ET

● Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies: Diversity Institute

● Language(s) in which the side event will be held: Mainly in English (some questions will be answered in French.)

Description of the side event
The side event will delve into the need to evaluate the impact of the crusade against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policies. The murder of George Floyd added impetus to DEI and inclusion efforts worldwide and a more specific focus on anti Black racism. However, the adaptability of capital and the changing tides of public opinion are revealing the potential fragility of the DEI approach. Is the DEI approach still the right way to recognize the lasting and structural harms of systemic and intersectional racism? Does a human rights framework could effectively replace the DEI infrastructure in organizations that embrace it?

Speakers:
● Dr. Wendy Cukier, Founder and Academic Director, Diversity Institute, TMU
● Tamara Thermitus, Visiting Scholar, McGill Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism
● Dr. Rhonda N. McEwen, President and Vice-Chancellor of Victoria University in the University of Toronto.
● Moderated by: Dr. Susan Swayze, Associate Professor, Educational Research, The George Washington University

Link to connect: https://torontomu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_nwUe5nv5SlqTxGnEZenxng#/registration


Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details): Nancy Mitchell, Diversity Institute, n.mitchell@torontomu.ca

Thursday April 10, 2025 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online

12:30pm EDT

Side event - Black AI: The Ascension to Excellence - Dream Tanks: Afrofuturism as a Transformative Strategy for Systemic Change and Reparatory Justice
Thursday April 10, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Title of the side event: AI SIDE EVENT
Black AI: The Ascension to Excellence - Dream Tanks: Afrofuturism as a Transformative Strategy for Systemic Change and Reparatory Justice

Date, time and time zone of side event:
Thursday, April 10, 2025, | 9:30 AM – 11:30 AM (Pacific Time)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG

Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words):                                                                         This presentation explores the concept of "Dream Tanks," a visionary approach to strategic planning rooted in Afrofuturism. By leveraging collaborative design, Ubuntu theory, artificial intelligence, and appreciative inquiry, Dream Tanks serve as incubators for imagining transformative futures that address systemic challenges. The session will highlight how Afrofuturism’s lens of empowerment, resilience, and creativity can be applied to organizational, community, and global strategic initiatives. Attendees will learn how to harness this framework to inspire visionary thinking and actionable solutions that honor diverse identities and collective progress.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online). For
online events, kindly ensure to send the connection link to facilitate participants’
access. Virtually on Zoom
Zoom Registration Link
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/Gwz5kId6QHi-AAyeZeXwxQ

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details)
Submitted by: ICSWG Programs Co-lead Prophet N. Anyanwu Cox, R.N (MO)., M.Ed.,
Email: anyanwu1950@gmail.com | Permission to publish given

Discussants- Primary Presenter: Dr. Lawana Richmond, Discussant 1: Kelsey Daniels, Co-Host Perspective, Discussant: 2: Jasmine Leflore, Participant Viewpoint, Moderator- Lena Young

Weblink for any further information: https://iwgpfpad.mn.co/spaces/9306480/feed
Thursday April 10, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Online
 
Friday, April 11
 

10:00am EDT

Side event - Researching Black Maternal Care – Embedding our Reproductive Human Rights
Friday April 11, 2025 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Title of the side event –
“Researching Black Maternal Care – Embedding our Reproductive Human Rights”

Date, time and time zone of side event –
Friday April 11th,  3pm -5pm BST  /  11:00 am – 1:pm EDT

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies –
‘Mothers and Midwives Across the Diaspora’ – ‘International Civil Society Working Group PFPAD’ -  ‘Mimosa Midwives’ 

Language(s) in which the side event will be held –
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words) –
 
Childbirth has a lasting effect on all lives, but is surrounded by much mystery and complexities. African descendant mothers and their babies worldwide suffer some of the worst outcomes. This networking event invites delegates to hear from midwives and mothers in different regions who are at the forefront of ‘culturally safe’ initiatives to achieve profound improvements.
Be prepared to listen, to think deeply, to be curious in a safe and respectful conversational space of learning and sharing.
Thus we deepen our understanding of how we move towards protecting the human rights of women and girls both now and intergenerationally.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online). 
Zoom Webinar online link below
Register in advance for this webinar:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_iem7gIxsT4ScXxOAxH5TIQ

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details) – 
Lead Organiser - Elsie Gayle - Lead Midwife, ‘Mimosa Midwives’, Member of the International Civil Society Working Group for the PFPAD.
Email address - elsie_gayle@hotmail.com
 
Weblink for any further information –
https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/hrbodies/hrcouncil/forums/forum-african-descent/sessions/session2/statements/PFPAD-session2-health-pnl-Elsie-Gayle.pdf

Friday April 11, 2025 10:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online
 
Saturday, April 12
 

11:00am EDT

Side event - Reparatory Justice for Afrodescendants (descendants of enslaved Africans
Saturday April 12, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Title of the side event
Reparatory Justice for Afrodescendants (descendants of enslaved Africans) 

Date, time and time zone of side event
Saturday April 12, 2025, at 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies
All for Reparations and Emancipation (AFRE); Afrodescendant Nation (ADN)

Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English

Description of the side event
This event explores the lasting impact of slavery on identity and the need for its restoration among the descendants of enslaved Africans. Enslavers stripped Africans of their names, languages, and cultural ties to enforce control and suppress resistance. This erasure disrupted unity, self-worth, heritage, and generational connections.
Reclaiming our global identity as Afrodescendants is essential for rebuilding a shared sense of belonging, pride, and purpose. By embracing this identity, we can foster unity and work toward self-determination. Join us in this critical conversation on reclaiming identity and collective action towards reparatory justice.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online).
Zoom Webinar registration link below

For online events, kindly ensure to send the connection link to facilitate participants’ access.
 https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_L5XcNG0hTAmCw9QOvVXE0g

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details)
Ishmael Abdul-Salaam, Lead Organizer
CEO, All for Reparations and Emancipation (AFRE)
Email: ishmael.abdulsalaam@gmail.com

Weblink for any further information
https://www.allforreparations.com/
Saturday April 12, 2025 11:00am - 12:00pm EDT
Online

11:00am EDT

Side event - From Crisis to Action: Tackling Sexual Violence in War-Torn Regions
Saturday April 12, 2025 11:00am - 1:00pm EDT
Topic: From Crisis to Action: Tackling Sexual Violence in War-Torn Regions

Time/Date: Saturday April 12, 2025 @11:00 Am-1:00PM EST (US and Canada}

Sponsoring Organization: Let’s be Whole Inc., Women’s All Points Bulletin WAPB

Language: English

Description: This webinar addresses sexual violence in conflict zones, including Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, and Cameroon. It highlights survivor-centered justice and long-term solutions, such as stronger legal frameworks, protection for women and girls, psychosocial support, and international accountability. The discussion will explore local community roles and economic empowerment in rebuilding lives. By uniting experts, legal advocates, frontline organizations, and survivors, the webinar aims to foster collaboration and drive impactful changes for justice, support, and healing for survivors.

Location: WEBINAR

Contact: Marie E. Lemy, PhD, MPH, email: Dr.mlemy@gmail.com

Register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/aP6JqB9PQ5KqAyazfwVtog
Saturday April 12, 2025 11:00am - 1:00pm EDT
Online
 
Sunday, April 13
 

11:00am EDT

Side event - The Intersection of Racism, Health, and Healing: A Trauma-Informed Perspective on Systems Transformation for People of African Descent
Sunday April 13, 2025 11:00am - 12:45pm EDT
PFPAD EVENT SUBMISSION:
The Intersection of Racism, Health, and Healing: A Trauma-Informed Perspective on Systems Transformation for People of African Descent ” (Spanish, English)
-Event organized by UbuntuEs — Co-organized by UbuntuEs, Kissing Lions Public Relations  and ONECA
 
EVENT TITLE: “The Intersection of Racism, Health, and Healing: A Trauma-Informed Perspective on Systems Transformation for People of African Descent” (Spanish, English)

DATE/TIME: April 13, 2025 11:00 am - 12:45 pm (ET)
 
Event organized by the ONG UbuntuEs
SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS: UbuntuEs, Kissing Lions Public Relations

LANGUAGE(S): English, Spanish

DESCRIPTION: This two-session discussion addresses the central themes of racial justice, human rights, trauma-informed leadership, and systems change specific to African, Afro-descendant, and Afro-Latin diaspora.
Session I—”Community Building Through Communications: Systems Transformation for Leaders of African Descent Through a Trauma Informed Lens” (45 mins)

Presented by Kissing Lions Public Relations

11:00 - 11:45 a.m. (US EST)

In this session, Kahshanna Evans, a member of the New York State Trauma Informed Network and Resource Center (NYS TINRC) Advisory Council member will introduce scalable approaches to trauma-informed transformation, leadership, and action by highlighting what we can learn about impact on a state level from the NYS TINRC—a grant-funded initiative funded by the New York State Office of Mental Health (NYS OHM)—and will also introduce “Community Building Through Communications,” a unique framework and strategy to support corporate citizenship through a trauma-informed and resilience-building lens.

Subtitled in Spanish
 
Session II—“Science and Racism: The Impact of Health and Human Rights on Afro-Descendants” Roundtable

Presented by UbuntuEs(45 min)

12:00 - 12:45 p.m. (US EST)

Within the African diaspora, as well as among Afro-descendant and Afro-Latin communities, those who experience racism, xenophobia, and all related forms of intolerance face significant impacts on their physical, mental, and emotional health. These challenges manifest as stress, anxiety, trauma, illness, and barriers to accessing adequate care. In this context, healing and care spaces centered on the Black community have been—and continue to be—essential for collective resilience and resistance. They provide validation of shared experiences and offer tools for healing and strengthening the community.

This session aims to highlight systemic issues, raise awareness among the audience, and promote collective efforts to seek political, community-based, and legislative actions to address them.
Subtitled in English

Featured Panel:
Dr. Pastor Murillo: Lawyer and Doctor Honoris Causa, currently the Itinerant Ambassador of the Peoples at the Embassy of Colombia in Costa Rica and a member of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent. With over 17 years of experience in international policy, he has led key initiatives such as the International Year and Decade for People of African Descent. He served as Vice-Chair of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and is a strong advocate for a treaty on the transatlantic slave trade and enslavement.
Topic: “Human Rights, Mental Health, and Racism: The Role of Public Policy in Reparation”
 
Mirtha Colón: Renowned Garifuna activist and social worker, currently pursuing a master’s degree at Fordham University. She defends the rights of Caribbean immigrants, promotes cultural preservation and sexual education. In 2012, the New York State Legislature recognized her service to the African diaspora. She is also the president of the Central American Black Organization (ONECA) and is actively involved in international forums on migration and social justice.
Topic: “Intersections between Racism, Health, Migration, and the Climate Crisis: Challenges for the Human Rights of Afrodescendant Women and Girls”

Dr. Gregorio Mijares:Professor of Mathematics at California State University, Los Angeles. Holds a PhD from the Central University of Venezuela with academic and research experience in Canada, the U.S., and Venezuela. Recognized by Mathematically Gifted and Black (2023) and the American Mathematical Society (2016), he has lectured at universities and research centers across the Americas and Europe.
Topic: “Artificial Intelligence, Digital Justice, and the Effects of Racism on Afrodescendant Mental Health”
 
Dr. Angelica Machado: Psychiatrist and psychotherapist specialized in the mental health of racialized individuals, speaker on community mental health, and consultant in clinical cultural competence.
Topic: “Effects of Racism on the Mental Health of Afrodescendants”
 
 Moderator: Christele Fanfanristele
Bachelor in Pedagogy from the Federal University of the Southern Frontier (Brazil), regional president of IPPDR in Brazil. She works in human rights and the empowerment of women and youth, supporting the Haitian community in Brazil and promoting education as a tool for liberation. She has presented at the UN and will deliver a keynote on world peace and women's empowerment in Mexico in July 2025.

 
 Registration Form Link:
 https://ubuntues.com/2025/03/25/elementor-2954/

 LOCATION: Virtual, canal de youtube: ubuntues5468

  UbuntuEs Email: ubuntuesime@gmail.com
  Website: https://ubuntues.com
 —------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 LEAD ORGANIZER(S):
 Eidy Mosquera & Agatha Miranda Mba| ONG UbuntuEs | ubuntuesime@gmail.com | ubuntues.com
 Mirtha Cologne | ONG ONECA | mircolon@aol.com |
 Kahshanna Evans| pr@kissinglions.com| https://mailchi.mp/2de1a43de6ca/klpr-community-building-co

Sunday April 13, 2025 11:00am - 12:45pm EDT
Online
 
Monday, April 14
 

1:00pm EDT

Side event - State of Black Economics Report - Leveraging Data to Understand Barriers, Take Action, and Mitigate Pushback
Monday April 14, 2025 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
● Title of the side event: State of Black Economics Report - Leveraging Data to Understand Barriers, Take Action, and Mitigate Pushback

● Date, time and time zone: April 14 at 1pm ET

● Sponsoring organization/entity: The Diversity Institute

● Language in which the side event will be held: English

● Description of the side event
Leveraging the Diversity Institute’s State of Black Economics Report, we will explore up to date data on the experiences of diverse Black communities, and particularly Black women, across Canada. This side event will leverage the findings and advocate for continued and expanded data collection, data-driven actions that support diverse Black communities in the workforce and workplace, and ways that organizations can leverage this data to break down barriers. Additionally, in the era of pushback on EDIA and addressing anti-Black racism initiatives in the U.S. and Canada, we will offer strategies for addressing pushback and leveraging data to stay the course.

● Speakers:
○ Nancy Mitchell, Director of Research Special Projects - Diversity Institute
○ Cassandra Dorrington, President & CEO, Canadian Aboriginal and Minority Supplier Council – CAMSC
○ Jemal Demeke, Researcher, Wellesley Institute
○ Nadine Spencer, CEO, BrandEQ Group

● Location of the side event: Virtual: https://torontomu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1khBCPn-SYy2VCXGJgskkw#/registration

● Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details): Nancy Mitchell, Diversity Institute, n.mitchell@torontomu.ca

Monday April 14, 2025 1:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Online

4:00pm EDT

Side event - Figli di Haiti
Monday April 14, 2025 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT
Online side event organized by Avvenire (italian newspaper) and Fraternità Haitiana onlus
Title of the side event 
Figli di Haiti

Date, time and time zone of side event 
April 14th / 22:00 GMT+1 (4 pm GMT-4 / NY)

Language(s) in which the side event will be held 
English

Description of the side event 
Lucia Capuzzi, journalist for Avvenire, presents "Figli di Haiti" (children of Haiti), a multiplatform narrative by the italian newspaper Avvenire that sheds light on the Island and its stories of hope, struggle, and resilience. Aimed at challenging the idea of Haiti as a "lost cause," doomed to an endless and invisible war, the narrative is accompanied by concrete actions: through the Avvenire Foundation, the newspaper Avvenire will support the "Maison des Anges" orphanage, offering children the opportunity to attend school. In some way, we are all children of this fragment of an island fighting for freedom and equality: an idea brought to life in Alessandro Galassi's docufilm "Figli di Haiti," which will be screened during the event, taking us inside the stories of those who, with courage and determination, are striving to shape a fairer future.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online)
Online, Microsoft Teams (connection link: https://tinyurl.com/bydypmud)

Name and email address of the lead organizer 
Lucia Capuzzi, Journalist for Avvenire
l.capuzzi@avvenire.it
Ilaria Santoro
i.santoro@avvenire.it
Avvenire give consent to publish the contact details of organizers.
Monday April 14, 2025 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Online

7:00pm EDT

Side event - Reparations Panel of Experts– Guided Discussion based on three scenarios
Monday April 14, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Title of the side event: REPARATIONS STRATEGY SESSION 
Reparations Panel of Experts– Guided Discussion based on past, present, & future reparation scenarios

Date, time and time zone of side event: Monday, April 14, 2025, | 7:00 pm -9:00 pm (ET- New York)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG
 
Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words): This Guided Discussion panel utilizes an innovative format to maximize participation, engaging panelists and the audience through immersive, thought-provoking scenarios on reparations: the future achieved, the historical struggle, and the present opportunity. Panelists will respond based on their expertise, providing practical insights and visionary guidance, fostering dynamic cross-dialogue, and inspiring strategic and visionary thinking. The objective is to draw direct correlations between past, present, and future efforts, catalyze transformative strategies, and connect diverse perspectives to advance reparatory justice. Actionable step: Implement this model to deepen collaboration and inform reparations-focused frameworks and decision-making.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online). For
online events, kindly ensure to send the connection link to facilitate participants’
access. VIRTUAL ONLY via Zoom Webinar - Zoom Registration Link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_oL3uxnJIRaiNICP_Vwf2Dg#/registration
 
Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details)
Submitted by: ICSWG Programs Co-lead Prophet N. Anyanwu Cox, R.N (MO)., M.Ed.,
Email: anyanwu1950@gmail.com | Permission to publish given

PANELISTS - Rev. Robert Turner – activist faith leader
Robin Rue Simmons – former city alderman implementing reparations in city
Dr. Cheryl Grills – former member of state-wide reparations Task Force
Nicole Carty – student and youth organizer for reparations
Kamm Howard – activist in global reparations movement
JAM Aiwuyor – communications and narrative change specialist
Kennis Henry – leader of long-standing national reparations coalition
Daniel Stein – diasporic perspective on reparations
Eric Philips – Guyana CARICOM representative
Moderator – Nkechi Taifa, Esq.

Monday April 14, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Tuesday, April 15
 

1:30pm EDT

Side event - From the Cradle to the Grave: The Lifelong Criminalization of Survivors
Tuesday April 15, 2025 1:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Concept Note
Side Event at the Fourth Session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent

Title: "From the Cradle to the Grave: The Lifelong Criminalization of Survivors"

Date: April 15, 2025

Time: 1:30 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. EST

Location: Online Virtual Event
Registration link: https://miami.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ZdGGhJPqSK2mH8aI96AMsg

Language: English (possible French and Spanish translation)

Sponsoring entities: University of Miami School of Law, Human Rights Clinic.

Description
Survivors of violence across the African Diaspora—particularly Black women and women of African descent—are often punished rather than protected when seeking safety, defending themselves, or coerced into illegal acts.
A powerful primer to the “Thematic Discussion: Human Rights of Women and Girls of African Descent,” this event will gather global experts, legal practitioners, activists, and policymakers to examine the structural forces behind survivor criminalization. Drawing from the ​report on the criminalization of gender-based violence survivors in the United States, submitted to the Human Rights Council in April 2025, in advance of the 4th Universal Periodic Review of the United States, the discussion will expose systemic barriers to justice and the lasting impact on marginalized communities.


Lead Organizer: Shantanice Vaxter, Clinic Intern, University of Miami, Human Rights Clinic, s.vaxter-clinic@law.miami.edu

Tuesday April 15, 2025 1:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Online

1:30pm EDT

Side event - The role and power of the collective cross-regional struggle for reparations
Tuesday April 15, 2025 1:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
The role and power of the collective cross-regional struggle for reparations
Join the Global Reparations Hub

The event will take place in the context of the fourth session of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (UNPF) on April 14-17, 2025 at the United Nations Headquarters, New York, United States.

Relevant to UNPF agenda, panel 1: Reparatory Justice for Africa and people of African descent

Date/time: Tuesday, April 15 at 1.30-2.30pm EST 

Language: English; with one speaker speaking in both English and Spanish
 
Sponsoring organizations/entities
Black Academy, Decolonize Berlin, Justin Hansford, member of Permanent Forum on People of African Descent; executive director of the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Centre, Human Rights Watch, International Coalition of People of African Descent (ICPAD), International Women* Space, Nama Traditional Leaders Association, Reform Initiatives, The Advocacy Team, The Armah Institute of Emotional Justice

Description of the event: Global reparations movements aim to address the lasting harm of legacies of colonialism, enslavement and the transatlantic slave trade.
Calls for reparations seek redress for historical wrongs and contemporary structural racism, inequalities and rights abuses linked to those crimes against humanity. To articulate a shared global agenda for a political, collective and decolonial approach to reparations, these movements need to come together. The Reparations Hub, a platform led by grassroots and African descent organisations with HRW’s support, is a tool designed to unite social movements. The organisers will discuss the power of the collective cross-regional struggle to achieve a united reparations movement.

Location:
The side event will be hybrid. Interested participants need to register to the event under the following link and will receive additional information upon registration:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/bq7tlIxYSaW4T_S9X6UFQA

Contact lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details):
Justin Hansford justin.hansford@law.howard.edu
Esther Mamadou esther@africandescent.org 
Tuesday April 15, 2025 1:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
Online

5:00pm EDT

Side event - Justicia Reparadora versus Apartheid Tecnológico
Tuesday April 15, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
 
Título del evento paralelo: “JUSTICIA REPARADORA VERSUS APARTHEID  TECNOLOGICO”

Fecha y: 15 de abril

Fecha/Hora:
15 de April, 2025 05:00PM - 7:00PM (NY); 3:00PM - 5:00PM (Honduras/Guatemala); 4:00PM - 6:00PM (Argentina/Brasil)

Organización:
MOVIMIENTO FEDERALISTA PAN AFRICANO AMÉRICA LATINA, CENTROAMÉRICA Y EL CARIBE HISPANO (MFPA-AL-CA-CH)

Descripción del evento:
Al abordar  la justicia reparadora en esta Cuarta sesión, no solo reconoce injusticias del pasado para corregirlas y promover la equidad, también busca garantizar la dignidad y los derechos de las personas de ascendencia africana. En el caso particular de las mujeres, crucial para sanar gradualmente el patriarcado y el sexismo, erradicar el machismo y la discriminación. En el ámbito de la inteligencia artificial configura múltiples oportunidades de desarrollo para abordar las implicaciones éticas y sociales de esta tecnología, principalmente para adoptar medidas para corregir algoritmos sesgados y mitigar impactos negativos en tiempo real.

Ubicación del evento: PLATAFORMA ZOOM*

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86919550348?pwd=EcCEPbvMWj4nI0jJ8H6l9a8pdUabIF.1
Meeting ID: 869 1955 0348
Passcode: 537970
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdSm08Gw2e
Tuesday April 15, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Online

6:00pm EDT

Side event - Education Essentials for Youth of African Descent
Tuesday April 15, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Education Essentials for Youth of African Descent

As systemic inequities and policy rollbacks—like the elimination of the U.S. Department of Education—threaten access to quality learning, this panel centers real, actionable solutions created by Black educators.
Deliberate efforts to erase the histories of people of African descent from curricula, increases the urgency to reclaim and redesign education.

Grounded in human rights and community-driven innovation, panelists will share models already in practice.
This is more than discussion—it’s a call to take education into our own hands while demanding just policy from governments.

We warmly welcome contributions and practices from global educators of African descent for future collaboration on volunteer-driven, grassroots, or not-for-profit initiatives. We do not charge for participation in our events, and we have no intention of contacting you to sell any service. Our sole purpose in reaching out is to collaborate on meaningful, community-centered volunteer efforts.

Dr. Kristen Guillory, PhD
Educator, Author, Speaker and Coach
Seen in Forbes and on NBC, Fox and CBS

T.J. Whitiker
Educator, Founder MapSo Freedom School
Honored by NJ Education Association

Iman Cassells Alleyne
Educator, Founder The Kind Academy
Seen in Forbes and the New York Times

Leah E. Jackson, NCC, LAC - Moderator
Educator, Author, Counselor Elysium Outreach
Honored Advisor, Newark Fellow

When: Tuesday, April 15th, 2025 6:00pm EST hosted by Athletes United for Peace, Ngaage - Impact Technology and Elysium Outreach and Connections

The event will be recorded and shared with all attendees as a resource for approaches, tools, and techniques to help educate our students.

A writeup will also be shared with the Permanent Forum for People of African Descent

For more information contact Barbara Horne - athletesunitedforpeace@gmail.com
Athletes United for Peace is an NGO in Consultative Status with the United Nations ECOSOC
Details Can Be Found at
www.theoryinaction.tools



Tuesday April 15, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online

6:00pm EDT

Side event - Protecting Environmental Rights Defenders in Racial Sacrifice Zones in the Caribbean: Towards a Rights-based Framework for Reparatory Environmental Democracy (RRED Framework)
Tuesday April 15, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Title:   Protecting Environmental Rights Defenders in Racial Sacrifice Zones in the Caribbean: Towards a Rights-based Framework for Reparatory Environmental Democracy (RRED Framework)

Date: April 15, 2025

Time: 6:00pm – 7:30pm Eastern Time

Sponsoring Organization. Freedom Imaginaries

Languages: English

Location: Virtual Zoom Event
Registration Link: https://tinyurl.com/EnvironmentalRightsDefenders

Contact for organizer: Malene Alleyne
malene@freedomimaginaries.org


Summary Event:
Environmental rights defenders in the Caribbean face serious challenges. They often inhabit racial sacrifice zones - places where racially marginalized nations and persons are disproportionately burdened by environmental and climate crises. They stand on the frontlines of catastrophic harm, yet they are routinely excluded from access to environmental information, access to participation in environmental decision-making processes, and access to effective remedies for historical and contemporary injustices. In this context, this session continues the discussion on the situation of environmental rights defenders in the Caribbean. This iteration focuses on a proposed framework for rights-based reparatory environmental democracy (RRED Framework) as a tool for protecting environmental rights defenders and building pathways to reparations for structural environmental and climate injustice. The session will also take a critical look at the reparatory possibilities and limitations of the Escazú Agreement - the first environmental treaty for the Caribbean and Latin America.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/EnvironmentalRightsDefenders
Tuesday April 15, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online

7:00pm EDT

Side event - Apartheid Tecnológico : acciones sindicales sobre los Derechos sociales y laborales de las mujeres y adolescentes afrodescendientes y el impacto del racismo en Inteligencia Artificial.
Tuesday April 15, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Título del evento paralelo : 
Apartheid Tecnológico : acciones sindicales sobre los Derechos sociales y laborales de las mujeres y adolescentes afrodescendientes y el impacto del racismo en Inteligencia Artificial.

Fecha: 15/04/25

Hora y zona horaria del evento paralelo : 16hs. de Panamá / 18hs. de Buenos Aires
Organización(es) o entidad(es) patrocinadora(s) : ISP - Comite contra el Racismo, la Discriminacion y la Xenofobia - Afrodescendientes de la Red internacional de Sindicatos de Servicios Públicos

Idioma(s) en el cual se llevará a cabo el evento paralelo 
: Español

Descripción del evento paralelo
En este encuentro, analizaremos el cumplimiento de los acuerdos internacionales en materia de derechos hacia las mujeres y adolescentes afrodescendientes, nos enfocaremos como desde los sindicatos trabajamos para concientizar sobre la equidad, igualdad y paridad de género en el ámbito laboral, las nuevas tecnologías, impactan en el acceso libre a esos derechos?
¿Son las nuevas tecnologías un espacio de inclusión y equidad?

Panelistas:
  1.  Andrea Betegon - Secretaria de la Mujer - Federación Nacional de Asociaciones y Sindicatos de Entidades Públicas de Panamá (FENASEP)
  2. Olga Fernandez - Unión Personal Civil de la Nación Argentina (UPCN)
  3. Maritza Chavez - Secretaria General de la Unión de Trabajadores y Trabajadoras Legislativos de Costa Rica (ULTRALEG)
Modera: Tamara Barbará - Comisión Afrodescendientes del Sindicato del Personal Legislativo - Argentina

Evento en línea, se realizará por la plataforma zoom, info en @ispracismo - Inscripcion:  https://forms.gle/QZboeLYUCc8qC97SA

Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal : Tamara Barbará ispracismo@gmail.com (autorizo la publicación de mis datos)

Enlace web para obtener más información. @ispracismo / Inscripcion: https://forms.gle/QZboeLYUCc8qC97SA

Tuesday April 15, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online

7:00pm EDT

Side event - Topic: A Global Fight For Inclusion and Services
Tuesday April 15, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Topic: A Global Fight For Inclusion and Services

Time: Tuesday April 15, 2025 @7:00 PM to 9:00 PM EST (US and Canada}
Sponsor: Autism509

Language: English
Description: Cultural stigma and misconceptions about neurodiversity, especially autism, delay diagnosis and treatment in many global South countries. Afro-descendent children globally face misdiagnosis due to bias and lack of culturally competent care. A shortage of trained professionals and diagnostic tools worsens the issue. Solutions include culturally sensitive screening, grassroots collaboration, community leader engagement, and advocacy for better education, telehealth, and funding. Integrating special needs services into broader health and education initiatives is crucial. A global effort with policy changes, funding, and partnerships is needed to prioritize neurodiversity and special needs, regardless of location or socioeconomic status.

Location: WEBIMAR

Contact: Marie E. Lemy, PhD, MPH, email: Dr.mlemy@gmail.com

Register: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/7itNiy9TQYGuANSpAj-WKw
Tuesday April 15, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Wednesday, April 16
 

12:30pm EDT

Side event - Engaging Youth in Higher Academia: Launch of the Pan-African Student Course Congress
Wednesday April 16, 2025 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
“Africa and People of African Descent: United for Reparatory Justice in the Age of 
Artificial Intelligence
 
SIDE EVENT AT THE 4th PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT


“Engaging Youth in Higher Academia: 
Launch of the Pan-African Student Course Congress”
 
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
12:30 pm - 1:30 pm Eastern Standard Time (EST)
The side event will be held in English but open to all languages


LOCATION: Online Webinar
ZOOM

The Pan-African Student Congress welcomes student organizations centered around people of African descent to join us as we launch the Pan-African Student Course Congress. This is a chance to better learn about P.A.S.C, its mission, and a better way to connect different Black University Organizations and students. This side event is tailored for individuals aged 35 and under in Black university organizations.

This event is sponsored by the Pan-African Student Congress and International Civil Society Working Group Youth SubCommittee. 
RSVP at the following link: https://forms.gle/k39udskWeLrQMMEZ7

Contact:
Miles Henderson, amiles.henderson@gmail.com
Cameron Clarke, diaspora2caribbean@gmail.com
Wednesday April 16, 2025 12:30pm - 1:30pm EDT
Online

1:00pm EDT

Side event - Developing Saturday Schools for Africa and Youth of African Descent, Globally
Wednesday April 16, 2025 1:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Title of the side event:  EDUCATION STRATEGY SESSION                                                                                            Developing Saturday Schools for Africa and Youth of African Descent, Globally

Date, time and time zone of side event:                                                                                                                      Wednesday, April 16, 2025, | 1:00 pm -3:00 pm (ET- New York)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG
 
Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words):                                                                                      
This session explores International Saturday Schools, empowering youth of African descent globally with African-centered education. Highlighting SEA Saturday School in Benin as a model, it emphasizes curricula teaching history, heritage, and community engagement. Key focuses include language preservation through indigenous language education and materials, and creating an academic pipeline inspired by Harriet Tubman’s principle—supporting students' advancement to uplift communities. Actionable steps: Implement the SEA model to expand Saturday Schools globally, develop mother-tongue resources, and establish academic pipelines for lifelong student support, fostering leadership and community connection among African-descended youth.                                                                            
Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online). For
online events, kindly ensure to send the connection link to facilitate participants’
access. Hybrid – In-person and on Zoom
Zoom Registration Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/K7Dsl4yeStWZnacgv_4TgA

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details)
Submitted by: ICSWG Programs Co-lead Prophet N. Anyanwu Cox, R.N (MO)., M.Ed.,
Email: anyanwu1950@gmail.com | Permission to publish given

Any visual you may have to enhance your event promotion, i.e., flyers, posters, or related materials. PANELIST: Dr. Sheila Walke, anthropologist, educator. Dr. Valerie F. Hunt (Implements a SEA model Saturday School in Benin, Africa), Dr. Julianne Malveaux economist, educator, and public policy analyst., Dr. Reynaldo Anderson, Afrofuturist

Weblink for any further information: https://iwgpfpad.mn.co/spaces/9306480/feed
Wednesday April 16, 2025 1:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Online

6:00pm EDT

Side event - #WithHaitian Refugees: Towards a Rights-based Framework for the Protection of Haitians in Human Mobility in the Caribbean
Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Title: #WithHaitian Refugees: Towards a Rights-based Framework for the Protection of
Haitians in Human Mobility in the Caribbean

Date: April 16, 2025

Time: 6:00pm – 7:30pm Eastern Time

Sponsoring Organization. Freedom Imaginaries

Languages: English

Location:  Virtual Zoom Event

Registration Link: https://tinyurl.com/WithHaitianRefugeesSideEvent

Contact for organizer: Malene Alleyne
malene@freedomimaginaries.org


Summary of Event:
This session will address the human rights situation of Haitians in human mobility in the Caribbean region, with a focus on asylum seeking women and girls. The event will also propose a rights-based regional framework and mechanism for the protection of Haitians in human mobility in the Caribbean in line with principles of humanitarian assistance, protection, cooperation, and international solidarity.

Register here: https://tinyurl.com/WithHaitianRefugeesSideEvent  
Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online

6:00pm EDT

Side event - Discussion on the US Department of Justice January 2025 Report on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre
Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Title: Discussion on the US Department of Justice January 2025 Report on the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre

Date, time and time zone: 16 April 2025 at 6:00 p.m., ET

Sponsoring entities: Black Public Media, Trinity University Press, The Mary Jones Parrish Reading Room for History Literacy

Language: English

Description: This January, the US Department of Justice released its report on the Federal investigation into the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, a murderous military-style campaign that targeted Greenwood, Tulsa’s African American enclave. Although the moral case for reparations is clear, the legal basis is not: Relevant civil rights statutes did not exist at the time, and the perpetrators are long dead. The DOJ review relied on sources represented on the panel: Victor Luckerson, author of Built From the Fire; Lisa Fanning, genetic genealogist on the Tulsa Graves Investigation; and Anneliese Bruner, descendant of Tulsa massacre survivor and author Mary Jones Parrish.

Location: Online (Eventbrite); Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1spa0ME9RSm19f8simbbmg

Name and email address of the lead organizer: Anneliese Bruner, anneliese.bruner@gmail.com

Link: Descended From the Promised Land, a Black Public Media-supported documentary featuring massacre descendants’ reflections on what was lost to the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Viewing this 20-minute film in advance will give attendees a grounding in the history of the catastrophe.
Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:00pm - 7:30pm EDT
Online

6:30pm EDT

Side event - Reparations Café: Embodied Integration for Reparatory Justice
Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:30pm - 8:00pm EDT
Title of the side event:
Reparations Café: Embodied Integration for Reparatory Justice

Date, time and time zone of side event:
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
6:30-8:00 PM Eastern Time (EDT)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
Black Exhale

Language(s) in which the side event will be held:
English

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words):
Presented by Black Exhale, the Reparations Café offers a trauma-informed, embodied approach to processing and integrating the forum's intensive reparatory justice discussions. This 90-minute virtual session creates sanctuary to collectively process the intellectual content through guided somatic practices, facilitated dialogue, and witnessing exercises. Led by trained facilitators Antoinette Cooper and Jaden Ramsey, the session provides essential integration before the forum's final day. This model of reparations-in-practice offers practical tools that can be implemented in your communities and policy work beyond the forum.

“Without inner change there can be no outer change. Without collective change, no change matters.”
—angel Kyodo williams

Location of the side event:
Online via Zoom (Registration link: cafe.blackexhale.org)

Name and email address of the lead organizer:
Antoinette Cooper
antoinette@blackexhale.org
(Permission granted to publish contact details)

Optional: Weblink for further information
www.blackexhale.org

Wednesday April 16, 2025 6:30pm - 8:00pm EDT
Online

7:00pm EDT

Side event - Addressing the Haitian Community’s Challenges in the Dominican Republic: History, Impact, and Global Response
Wednesday April 16, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Topic: Addressing the Haitian Community’s Challenges in the Dominican Republic: History, Impact, and Global Response

Date/Time: Wednesday April 16,2025 @ 7pm-9pm) EST (US and Canada}

Sponsor/Agency: Let’s be Whole Inc.,

Language: English

Description: The panel on "The Haitian Community Situation in the Dominican Republic" will feature knowledgeable, culturally sensitive, and experienced presenters who will explore key topics, including the island’s history, the underlying causes of current challenges, and the role of impunity. The discussion will address civil society and government responses, accountability, and the impact on society, focusing on ways to help the Haitian community transition from a marginalized group to active, involved residents. Presenters will share relevant statistics, best practices for intervention, and strategies for the global community to effectively respond.

Location: WEBINAR

Contact: Marie E. Lemy, PhD, MPH, email: Dr.mlemy@gmail.com
Register: Meeting Registration - Zoom 
Wednesday April 16, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
Online
 
Thursday, April 17
 

8:00am EDT

Side event - Policies to Promote Ethnic-Racial Equality: building an ethnic-racial justice agenda in Brazilian drug policy
Thursday April 17, 2025 8:00am - 9:00am EDT
United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent   
Policymaking and Systemic Racism: a human rights-based approach 
 
Title: Policies to Promote Ethnic-Racial Equality: building an ethnic-racial justice agenda in Brazilian drug policy
 
  • Date: April 17, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. Brasília time (GMT-3)
  • Sponsoring Organizations or Entities: Ministry of Justice and Public Security of Brazil
  • Languages: Portuguese and English
  • Event Description: Exhibition of the actions developed by the Brazilian federal government, within the scope of the National Secretariat for Drug Policy and Asset Management (SENAD) of the Ministry of Justice and Public Security, regarding the ethnic-racial justice agenda in drug policy. The parallel event is based on the assumption made by the current administration that Brazilian drug policy is permeated by mechanisms for the production and reproduction of racism, whether through selective criminalization processes, patterns of intervention by police forces, application of the law by the Judiciary and other dynamics of restriction of rights based on racial hierarchies.
  • Invited guests: Civil society organizations, Ministry of Racial Equality and Government of Colombia
  • Event location: online - Link CGJR
  • Main Organizer: National Secretariat for Drug Policy and Asset Management of the Ministry of Justice and Public Security (senad.internacional@mj.gov.br | + 55 61 2025 - 7329)
  • Other: related materials (optional)
Thursday April 17, 2025 8:00am - 9:00am EDT
Online

1:00pm EDT

Side event - ICSWG PFPAD4 Strategy Session: Advancing Migration Policies for the African Diaspora
Thursday April 17, 2025 1:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Topic: ICSWG PFPAD4 Strategy Session: Advancing Migration Policies for the African Diaspora

Date/ Time: Time: Thursday, April 17, 2025 @ 1Pm to 3pm EST (US & Canada)

Sponsoring Agency: ICSWG

Language: English

Description: The International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG) for the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD) has developed a strategy session on global migration within the African Diaspora. It aims to examine how migration policies impact concepts of "being" and "belonging" among African-descended people, addressing issues like exclusion, statelessness, and reparatory justice. The session proposes strategies on economic and climate refugees, the right of return, and bidirectional migration, emphasizing mutual benefits and cross-cultural connections. The ICSWG has previously co-hosted events like "Militarism on People of African Descent when Authoritarianism is Ascending."

Location:Zoom https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/dmBSUxjySHinn7tpvexkAA

Contact: Marie E. Lemy, PhD, MPH, email: Dr.mlemy@gmail.com
Thursday April 17, 2025 1:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Online
 

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