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Subject: for the New Englanders among us
Sponsored by the Technology and Culture Seminar of the MIT
Community Fellows Program
Friday, January 21 and Saturday, January 22
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Building 6, MIT, Cambridge, MA
New England is a world center of the current technological
transformation, in which computers, electronics and genetics are
opening new modes of production and communication. In the midst of
this technological revolution, tens of thousands of people have
been laid off from high tech industries. These newly
unemployed include both highly-trained workers and new entrants
into the workforce. This conference will examine the factors
underlying this disturbing trend, and identify directions needed
to insure that increases in productivity raise the standard of
living of all members of society.
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PLENARY SESSIONS:
THE IMPACT OF THE HIGH TECHNOLOGY REVOLUTION ON PRODUCTIVITY
Friday, 9:00 am
Ken Reeves, Mayor, City of Cambridge
Prof. Jon King, MIT
Prof. Tom Kochan, MIT Sloan School
Prof. Helen Shapiro, Harvard Business School
David Arian, President, International Longshoremen and
Warehouseman's Union
THE IMPACT OF THE HIGH TECHNOLOGY REVOLUTION ON JOBS
Friday, 4:00 pm
Juliet Schor, Director, Women's Studies Program, Harvard
Richard Barnet, Institute of Policy Studies
General Baker, National Organizing Committee of the Unemployed,
Detroit
HOW TO INSURE THAT THE NEW TECHNOLOGY RAISES THE GENERAL STANDARD
OF LIVING
Saturday, 9:00 am
Prof. Sarah Kuhn, Policy and Planning, UMASS-Lowell
Prof. Abdul Alkalimat, African-American Studies, Northeastern
University
Prof. Noam Chomsky, MIT
David Feickert, European Trade Union Conference
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE: JOB CREATION
Saturday, 1:30 pm
Prof. Mel King, Director, Community Fellows Program, MIT
Prof. Elaine Bernard, Director, Trade Union Program, Harvard
John LaRose, Oilfield Workers' Union, Trinidad
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WORKSHOPS
FRIDAY 11:00 AM
Changing Production technologies
The Engineer's Role
The Impact of Information on Industrial Production
Cleaner and Safer Production Technologies
Shop Floor Initiatives
The Internationalization of Production: NAFTA
Moving Plants Abroad
Corporate Strategies
NAFTA and the Trade Unions
The European Situation
The Telecommunications Revolution
The National Information Infrastructure
Insuring Public Access
Employment Impacts
The Biotechnology Industry
Projected Growth
Impact on Pharmaceuticals
Unfulfilled Promises
FRIDAY 2:00 PM
Entering the High Tech Job Market
The High-Tech Job Market
A Students View
High Tech Skills for the Disenfranchised
The Electronic Office
The Automated Office
Undervalued Technical Work
Electronic Surveillance
The Changing Reality of Computer Industry Jobs
Part-time Work
Closing Doors to Minority Youth
Coping with Layoffs
High Tech Peace Corps?
Converting from Military to Civilian Research and Development
Civilian R&D in the Post Cold War Period
Prospects at Lincoln Lab
Physics After the Code War
Campus-Based Efforts
Sociobiological Justifications of Social Inequality
Brain and Behavior
Exploding the Gene Myth
The Myth of the Underclass
Medicalization of Social Problems
SATURDAY 11:00 AM
The Impact of Unemployment on Education
The Struggle for Public Education
The New Technology and New Illiteracy: Black Community's
Survival Crisis
Education for Unemployment
Alternatives to Plant Closings
The National Pattern of Layoffs
The Employee Buy-out of Market Forge
State Intervention
Restructuring Labor/Management Relations?
Converting from Military to Civilian Production
Historical Precedents
The Machinists Role
Federal Financing
Conversion Efforts in Massachusetts
Struggles in the Shadow of the High Tech Industry
Building a Youth Center in the High Tech Shadow
Child Care in the High Tech Shadow
The Carpenter's Union Experience
The Politics of Agriculture and Food Production
The Hybrid Corn Experience
Mechanization of Agriculture
Regulation of Genetically Engineered Foods
Agribusiness and Ecology
To reserve program documents and register, send $5 to Patricia
Weinmann, 312 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139. Make checks
payable to "The Technology and Culture Seminar."
For more information, contact Patricia Weinmann, (617) 253-0108,
or email paradise@mit.edu.
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