16th Annual Human Rights Awards Banquet
Human Agenda invites you to the 16th Annual Human Rights Awards Banquet
Resist and Build, Featuring keynote speaker Esteban Kelly on “The Path Toward Worker-Owned Cooperatives”
CALL TO ACTION | LLAMADO A LA ACCION | Sunday Feb. 23 @ 2 PM | Domingo, 23 de febrero @ 2 PM | Alum Rock + S. King Road | March & Protest: No Deportations! No ICE in San Jose! | Marcha y Protesta: ¡No a las Deportaciones! | ¡No hay I.C.E. en San José!
Human Agenda invites you to the 16th Annual Human Rights Awards Banquet
Resist and Build, Featuring keynote speaker Esteban Kelly on “The Path Toward Worker-Owned Cooperatives”
Tickets: $50
Need a Break: $25
Students: $15
RSVP is required
(for discounts write STUDENT or BREAK)
Tickets and sponsorships can be purchased at www.HumanAgenda.net or by mailing your tax-deductible donation made payable to Human Agenda to 1376 N. 4th Street, Suite 101, San Jose, CA 95112. Info @ (408) 460-2999
We will have two dynamic leaders speaking on the topic of “Resisting Oppression; Building Alternatives”: Malinda Markowitz, Co-President of California Nurses Association and National Nurses Organizing Committee and Vice President of National Nurses United & Nick Brana, Founder, Movement for a People’s Party; National Political Outreach Coordinator for Bernie 2016.
DECKS Awards: representing the values of Human Agenda
Please sponsor the Banquet as a Visionary, Champion, Supporter, or Friend, or purchase tickets by December 2 online or via landmail. If you cannot attend, please make a donation to Human Agenda so we can sustain our work to improve our community, our democracy, and our economy.
Each year Human Agenda celebrates the coming year with great hopefulness and optimism as to what we can do in the coming year. We also recognize the human rights and community activism of local leaders, in support of the annual Dec. 10 U.N. Human Rights Day.
National Take back your time day. Without reduced work hours and sufficient time, key human needs cannot be met—period.
First world poverty, inequality, and unemployment are unacceptable. Each July we visit a migrant farmworker labor camp in Watsonville to hear the testimonies of some of society’s most vulnerable workers. The tours challenge participants to better understand the conditions of Mexican farmworkers in Northern California by sharing in their lives, food, and living quarters.
With 100,000 workers in 120 cooperatives, no layoffs since 1956 and higher income than Spanish workers, how can we learn from the largest worker-owned cooperatives in the Western world, located in the Basque region of Spain?
Government for the people, can we do it here?
Come learn what Richmond Mayor Gayle Mclaughlin and her city council are doing for the people of Richmond, California: jobs, housing, healthcare, education, environment, people’s participation in local Government.