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Chile: Gobierno confirmo que enviara este lunes el proyecto de ley de Educación Superior.

www.lanacion.cl/04-07-2016/

En medio de la reunión de emergencia en La Moneda convocada por el ministro del Interior, Mario Fernández, desde el Gobierno confirmaron que enviarán de todos modos el proyecto de reforma de educación superior al Congreso.

A las 21:00 horas y a través de una cadena nacional, la Presidenta anunciará el envío al Parlamento del Proyecto de Ley de Calidad y Gratuidad en la Educación Superior.

«Con este anuncio, la Presidenta cumple con otro de los compromisos programáticos de su Gobierno”, informaron desde el Ejecutivo.

Con esto, el Gobierno pretende impulsar “un sistema de acceso a la educación desde los primeros años formativos, en sala cuna y pre-básica hasta la educación superior y técnica”.

“Mejorar el acceso y la calidad son los pilares que sustentan todas las iniciativas que se enmarcan en la reforma educacional”, agregó el comunicado.

En la reunión participan presidentes de los partidos de la Nueva Mayoría, jefes de bancada y los integrantes oficialistas de las comisiones de Educación de la Cámara y del Senado.

Asimismo, asisten los otros ministros que integran el Comité Político (Segegob, Segpres y Hacienda) y la titular de Educación, Adriana Delpiano.

QUE NO SE CAIGA Y SE MEJORE

La diputada PC e integrante de la comisión de Educación, Camila Vallejo, indicó que de la reunión que se sostiene en La Moneda “tiene que salir que es necesario tramitar la reforma, que no se caiga en el camino, pero que mejore”.

Durante esta semana los rectores y algunos sectores del oficialismo criticaran duramente el proyecto de educación superior, frente a esto, la diputada PC indicó que no entiende los motivos de esto luego de que realizaran una presentación ante el Consejo de Rectores.

“Los rectores de las universidades del Estado salieron a criticar la falta de mirada hacia las instituciones estatales y al desarrollo y fortalecimiento de la educación pública, que es fundamental del programa de Gobierno”, acotó Vallejo.

“Las inquietudes que surgen son en torno a una gratuidad que a medida que no llega, mantiene la lógica de becas y créditos, y como el mecanismo para alcanzar la gratuidad universal es incierto aún, todavía prolongamos los créditos y becas como lógica de financiamiento estudiantil”, agregó.

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Argentina: Nueva marcha por el Boleto Educativo Gratuito en La Plata

Fuente: Alternativa Docente / 4 de julio de 2016

La ley 14.735 de Boleto Educativo Gratuito fue aprobada por unanimidad de ambas cámaras de la Legislatura bonaerense el 1º de julio de 2015. Pero a un año de su aprobación, continúa sin estar vigente. Por eso este viernes 1º de julio se realizó una jornada provincial de lucha. Hubo movilizaciones simultáneas en La Plata, Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Mar del Plata y Junín. En la capital bonaerense, estudiantes universitarios, terciarios y secundarios volvieron a marchar hasta la gobernación, acompañados por ATE y la Federación Nacional Docente, FND-CTA Autónoma para exigir la inmediata implementación del Boleto Educativo Provincial. Entre sus oradores, Francisco Torres, Sec. Gremial de la Federación Docente, reclamó la implementación de esta ley y que el boleto gratuito sea extensivo a docentes y auxiliares. 

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5 de septiembre: Curso gratuito y en línea sobre cambio climático

Fuente: Banco Mundial / 4 de Julio de 2016

Bajemos la temperatura: De la ciencia climática a la acción

About this course: Todas las regiones del mundo se enfrentan a vulnerabilidades concretas ante el cambio climático y tienen diversas oportunidades de mitigar los efectos y aumentar su resiliencia en el siglo XXI. La comunidad internacional ha expresado su intención de actuar al respecto mediante el Acuerdo de París en la 21ª Conferencia de las Partes en la Convención Marco de las Naciones Unidas sobre el Cambio Climático. De hecho, décadas de avances en desarrollo se ven amenazadas si no se adoptan medidas contra el cambio climático, lo que significa que nos encontramos en un momento de «ahora o nunca». Este curso presenta las pruebas científicas más recientes sobre el cambio climático, explica los distintos efectos de alcance regional y difunde estrategias de acción contra el cambio climático, así como oportunidades para que pueda tomar medidas en relación con el cambio climático.

Acerca del curso Este MOOC orientado a la acción le brindará la oportunidad de conocer los efectos del cambio climático a escala regional y las estrategias sectoriales específicas utilizadas para aumentar la resiliencia y avanzar hacia un futuro con bajas emisiones de carbono. Tendrá la oportunidad de estudiar a fondo estas cuestiones y adaptar su experiencia de aprendizaje a una o varias de las siguientes regiones: • América Latina y el Caribe • África Subsahariana • Oriente Medio y Norte de África • Europa Oriental y Asia Central • Asia Oriental y el Pacífico • Asia Meridional

Para ello el MOOC reúne a reconocidos científicos y responsables políticos que ofrecerán un resumen de las últimas pruebas científicas sobre el cambio climático, estrategias de desarrollo con bajas emisiones de carbono y capacidad de adaptación al cambio climático a escala regional entre sectores, así como un análisis del Acuerdo de París y otros de los resultados de la 21ª Conferencia de las Partes.

Programa del curso

Descripción Bajemos la temperatura: La ciencia climática pasa a la acción se divide en cuatro semanas. En las primeras dos semanas se presentará una visión global de las pruebas científicas del cambio climático, que irá seguida de perspectivas específicas de cada región sobre los efectos de un aumento de la temperatura en el mundo en el siglo XXI. Las últimas dos semanas se centrarán en las estrategias de acción emprendidas en distintas regiones y países para abordar el desafío climático, y sobre cómo puede actuar la población de manera individual.

Semana 1: El cambio climático en el siglo XXI • Cambios históricos y previstos observados en el sistema climático en los últimos años del siglo XXI. • El potencial de contribución prevista determinada a nivel nacional (CPDN) presentada en la 21ª Conferencia de las Partes por parte de 187 países para inducir a la acción climática. • Tendencias de los efectos del cambio climático, entre otros la pérdida de la capa de hielo del Ártico, el deshielo de los glaciares, el aumento de las olas de calor y las temperaturas extremas, la sequía y la aridez. • Las posibles respuestas de los sistemas naturales, explicando cómo el calentamiento podría dar lugar al aumento del nivel del mar, a olas de calor y temperaturas extremas, y a la acidificación de los océanos.

Semana 2: Efectos de alcance sectorial y regional • Repercusiones en sectores clave del desarrollo —desde el calentamiento por encima de la temperatura de la época preindustrial y tendencias climáticas previstas— en cada una de las regiones del mundo. • Repercusiones sectoriales centradas en la producción agrícola, los recursos hídricos, los servicios de los ecosistemas y la vulnerabilidad de las zonas costeras para las poblaciones afectadas. • Importancia de los riesgos que pueden invertir los logros de desarrollo obtenidos con tanto esfuerzo y atrapar en la pobreza a millones de personas, ilustrando la necesidad de actuar ya con urgencia.

Semana 3: La ciencia climática pasa a la acción en materia de cambio climático • Debates sobre regiones específicas en torno a las acciones de mitigación necesarias para reducir las emisiones a la vez que se disminuye la vulnerabilidad ante los efectos del cambio climático por medio de la adaptación y el aumento de la resiliencia al clima. • Perspectivas de expertos regionales sobre sus experiencias con estrategias y acciones propuestas en cada región para contribuir a la transición hacia una senda de desarrollo con bajas emisiones y resiliente al clima.

Semana 4: Qué puede hacer • Efecto transformador de los cambios diarios a escala mundial • La razón de actuar ahora, actuar juntos y actuar de un modo diferente • Ejemplos y beneficios esperados de las políticas de mitigación y adaptación, teniendo en cuenta las contribuciones a las reducciones de las emisiones a escala mundial y las oportunidades de desarrollo a escala local

Aparte de los principales recursos y asignaciones, podrá optar por aprovechar aún más el curso participando en ejercicios divertidos opcionales, interconexiones y debates, y sumergiéndose a fondo en nuestra rica selección de recursos complementarios. Tendrá la oportunidad de estudiar a fondo estas cuestiones y adaptar su experiencia de aprendizaje a una o varias de las siguientes regiones: • América Latina y el Caribe • África Subsahariana • Oriente Medio y Norte de África • Europa Oriental y Asia Central • Asia Oriental y el Pacífico • Asia Meridional

Formación recomendada No es necesario ningún conocimiento previo El contenido de este curso está diseñado para ser accesible para estudiantes de cualquier materia.

Conectar Comunique y comparta recursos a través de Twitter utilizando la etiqueta #learnclimate. Registre una cuenta gratuita en http://twitter.com

Formato del curso La estructura de este MOOC es semanal, con recursos, actividades y ejercicios diseñados para que participe en ellos durante cada una de las cuatro semanas del curso. Cada semana encontrará un conjunto de material didáctico, entre otros: • Conversaciones de vídeo interactivas de reconocidos científicos y profesionales estudiosos del clima. • Recursos: actividades interactivas principales, opcionales (inmersión a fondo) y divertidas sobre el tema de la semana. • Cuestionarios para comprobar su conocimiento, reforzar el material de la lección y proporcionar respuestas inmediatas. • Asignaciones que perfeccionarán sus capacidades de análisis, reflexión y comunicación. • Foros de debate y redes sociales que permiten la colaboración con personas de todo el mundo, enriqueciendo la interacción entre los participantes. • Una sesión interactiva de Google Hangouts en directo con expertos internacionales que participarán en una sesión de preguntas y respuestas sobre el cambio climático. • Como proyecto final, creará un artefacto digital.

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EEUU: Rauner is driving faculty, students from Illinois

Fuente: chicagosuntimes.com / 4 de julio de 2016

A recent op-ed in the New York Times  [“Higher Education in Illinois is Dying,” June 3] has brought national attention to the shameful budget stalemate in Illinois, and its resulting devastation of our public universities.

By failing to secure a budget, Gov. Bruce Rauner has created a climate in which faculty and students alike have begun to flee, taking their talents and tuition dollars out of state. Springfield may think that our universities can sustain massive cuts to their operating budgets without lasting impact. As faculty at Illinois’ public universities, we come together here to say that they are wrong.

Education is the engine of economic growth in our state. The rapid decline in revenues that Illinois continues to experience will only worsen with disinvestment in the knowledge and skills of its citizens. All public servants, whether employed at the university or in state government, have a responsibility to fulfill. We cannot fulfill ours unless you fulfill yours. However we arrived at the current economic crisis, it cannot be bettered when compromise is only viewed as failure, and when precious state resources are used to further a political agenda. Inaction is not benign. The Illinois government is making a conscious decision that its public universities, the culmination of 150 years of state, federal, community, and private effort and investment, are expendable. This is unacceptable.

Article X of our state Constitution sets “the educational development of all persons” as a goal, promises “to provide for an efficient system of high quality educational institutions and services,” and assigns the state “the primary responsibility for financing the system of public education.” An engaged citizenry is the bedrock of democracy, and access to excellent and affordable public education is a civil right. Time is running out to ensure it.

Dana Rabin, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Catherine Prendergast, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Christopher Breu, CAS Illinois State University
Joyce Walker, CAS Illinois State University
Matt Felumlee, Department of English, Heartland Community College
Kerry O. Ferris, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
J.M. van der Laan, CAS, Illinois State University
Gary Weilbacher, CLAS, Illinois State University
Peter Ping Liu, School of Technology, Eastern Illinois University
Brian R. Horn, College of Education, Illinois State University
Claudia Janssen Danyi, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Susan Kalter, CAS, Illinois State University
Rebecca Saunders, CAS, Illinois State University
Amy Robillard, CAS, Illinois State University
James J. Pancrazio, CAS Illinois State University
Christopher C. De Santis, CAS, Illinois State University
Michael Day, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
Joe Amato, CAS, Illinois State University
Tania Ionin, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
James Hye Suk Yoon, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Amy Rosenstein, College of Ed and Professional Studies, Eastern Illinois University
Ann Haugo, School of Theatre and Dance, Illinois State University
Deborah Wittman, College of Ed, Illinois State University
Sarah Hochstetler, CAS, Illinois State University
William Thomas McBride, CAS, Illinois State University
Jill Hallett, College of Education, University of Illinois at Chicago
Christina M. Borders, College of Education, Illinois State University
Phillip Eubanks, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
Olaya Landa-Vialard, College of Ed, Illinois State University
Lennard Davis, College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago
Juliet Lynd, LAS, Illinois State University
Caroline Mallory, Mennonite College of Nursing, Illinois State University
E. Paula Crowley, College of Education, Illinois State University
Lea Cline, School of Art, Illinois State University
Jeff Rients, CAS, Illinois State University
Susan A Hildebrandt, CAS, Illinois State University
Rachel Shively, CAS, Illinois State University
Rick Hallett, CAS, Northeastern Illinois University
Russell Zanca, CAS, Northeastern Illinois University
Kathleen Renk, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
Diana Swanson, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
Richard Cameron, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Marjorie Worthington, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Christine McCormick, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Robert Zordani, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Renee King, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Steve Brantley, Library, Eastern Illinois University
Angela Glaros, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Timothy N. Taylor, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Rena Shifflet, School of Teaching and Learning, Illinois State University.
Gabrielle M. Toth, Library Information Services, University of Illinois at Chicago
Diane Burns, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Jeannie Ludlow, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Edmund F. Wehrle, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Jennifer L. Stringfellow, College of Ed and Prof. Studies, Eastern Illinois University
Leila Porter, LAS, Northern Illinois University
Charles R. Foy, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Ann Brownson, Ballenger Teachers Center, Eastern Illinois University
Gary E. Aylesworth, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Marina Terkourafi, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Rosemary Buck, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Sonia Kline, College of Education, Illinois State University
Peter Andrews, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Robin L. Murray, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Ralph Cintron, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Maria T. Pao, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Gary Justis, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Edward O. Stewart, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Issam Nassar, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Fern Kory, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Peter Hesterman, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Marjorie Moretz Stinespring, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Leroy Bryant, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Carol Jean Dudley, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Jamie V. Ryan, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Jason Reblando, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Ann Kuzdale, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Shaila Christofferson, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Fiona Ngo, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mukti Upadhyay, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Michael Leddy, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Lee E. Patterson, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Steven E. Rowe, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Kelly Harris, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Iryce Baron, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Dennis Baron, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Eric Bollinger, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Amalia Pallares, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Bill O’Donnell, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Andreas Fischer, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Scott Balcerzak, LAS, Northern Illinois University
Marcia Buell, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
Christina Bueno, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
Maureen Kelty, Daniel L Goodwin College of Education, Northeastern Illinois University
Brandon P. Bisbey, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
Lisa Wallis, Library, Northeastern Illinois University
Melanie Bujan, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
Lou Bohr, Daniel L Goodwin College of Education, Northeastern Illinois University
Alison Dover, Daniel L Goodwin College of Education, Northeastern Illinois University
Cyndi Moran, Professor, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
James Ball, Daniel L Goodwin, College of Education, Northeastern Illinois University
Kristin Carlson, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Janet Halpin, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
James M. Skibo, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Eric L. Peters, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Katie Lewandowski, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
James Stanlaw, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Xóchitl Bada, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Maria de los Angeles Torres, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Richard Sullivan, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Elizabeth A. Skinner, College of Education, Illinois State University
Eastern Illinois University, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Grant C. Sterling, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Michael D. Gillespie, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Lauren M. Lowell, College of Fine Arts, Illinois State University
Víctor Alejandro Sorell, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Therese Quinn, Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois at Chicago
Cedric Johnson, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Aleeca Bell, Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago
Robert Johnston, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Barbara DiEugenio, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago
John Abbott, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Janet Smith, Urban Planning and Public Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago
Joan Kennelly, College of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago
Aaron Krall, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Laurie Quinn, Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago
James Drown, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Blake Simpson, Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois at Chicago
Anthony Simon Laden, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Laurie Schaffner, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Paul Preissner, Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois at Chicago
John Betancur, Urban Planning and Public Affairs
Jeffrey Sklansky, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
John D’Emilio, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Marina Mogilner, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Nicole Jordan, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Laura Hostetler, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Mark Liechty, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Susan Hughes, Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago
Susan Altfeld, Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago
Joe Persky, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
John A. Jones, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Renato Barahona, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Jennifer Brier, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Richard Levy, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Kevin Schultz, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Joseph Tabbi, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Julie Peters, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Rachel Weber, Urban Planning and Public Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago
Jim Hansen, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Liv Stone, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Frank McCormick, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Robert Zordani, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Joel Palka, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Timothy Bell, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Robert E. Bionaz, College of Arts and Sciences, Chicago State University
Melissa Ames, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Lucinda Berry, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
John H. Bickford III, College of Ed and Prof. Studies, Eastern Illinois University
Deborah Olbert, College of Education, Eastern Illinois University
Valerie Garver, CLAS, Northern Illinois University
Erik Zdansky, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Jennifer Slate, College of Arts and Sciences, Northeastern Illinois University
Thomas P. Crumpler, College of Education, Illinois State University
Maria Schmeeckle, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Debra A. Reid, College of Arts and Humanities, Eastern Illinois University
Nobuko Adachi, College of Arts and Sciences, Illinois State University
Lisa Lee, Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois at Chicago
Yann Robert, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Barbara Ransby, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Hannah Higgins, Architecture, Design, and the Arts, University of Illinois at Chicago
Michael Scott, Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago
Judith Gardiner, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Geraldine Gorman, Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago
Carrol Smith, Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago
Nick Hugget, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Chris Boyer, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
John Polk, LAS, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Lynn Kennell, Mennonite College of Nursing, Illinois State University
Teresa Novy, Mennonite College of Nursing, Illinois State University
Holly Dust, College of Sciences, Eastern Illinois University
Jeff Gore, LAS, University of Illinois at Chicago
Olivia Perlow, CAS, Northeastern Illinois University
Craig Kois, Northeastern Illinois University
James Barrett, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Martin Manalansin, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Hadi Salehi Esfahani, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Zohreh T. Sullivan, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Fred Hoxie, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Lauren Goodlad, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Zsuzsa Gille, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Isabel Molina-Guzmán, College of Media, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Gilberto Rosas, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Kathryn La Barre, Library and Information Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Carol Symes, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bruce Rosenstock, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Craig Koslofsky, LAS, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Behrooz Ghamari-Tabrizi, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jesse Ribot. LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jay Rosenstein, College of Media, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Gabriel Solis, College of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Stephen Jaeger, Emeritus, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Angharad Valdivia, College of Media, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Dennis Dullea, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Anna Westerstahl Stenport, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Lilya Kaganovsky, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Richared Ross, College of Law, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Charles F. Gammie, LAS and Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Kristin Hoganson, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Rebecca Ginsburg, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Sarah Theule Lubienski, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Patrick Smith, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Allyson Purpura, Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Marilyn Parsons, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Kiel Christianson, Beckman Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Elizabeth A L Stine-Morrow, Beckman Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Adrienne D. Dixson, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jennifer Greene, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Walter Feinberg, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Dan Morrow, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Erik S. McDuffie, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Diane Koenker, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
William Sullivan, College of Fine and Applied Art, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Amita Sinha, College of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Harley Johnson, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Carolyn J Anderson, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Michael Rothberg, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Taher Saif, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Michael LeRoy, College of Law, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Jacob Sosnoff, Applied Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Rochelle Gutiérrez, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Gloriana González, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Kirstin Wilcox, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
D. Fairchild Ruggles, College of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Stephen Taylor, College of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mary-alayne Hughes, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Luz A. Murillo, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Megan McLaughlin, Professor Emerita, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Anne Haas Dyson, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Marcelo Bucheli, College of Business, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Susan Fowler, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Celestina Savonius-Wroth, University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Clare Crowston, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Albert J. Valocchi, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Marc Snir, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bruce Reznick, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Richard Laugesen, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Amy L. Powell, Krannert Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
David O’Brien, College of Fine and Applied Arts, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Shawn Gilmore, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Linda Herrera, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Katherine Ryan, College of Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Brett Ashley Kaplan, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Phillip Phillips, College of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Renee Trilling, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Stephanie Foote, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Justine Summerhayes Murison, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Eleanor Courtemanche, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Ricky Rodriguez, LAS, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
John S. Popovics, College of Engineering, University of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign
Kathryn Oberdeck, LAS, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Rosa Milagros Santos, College of Education, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Kate Clancy, LAS, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

 

Enlace original: http://chicago.suntimes.com/opinion/monday-letters-rauner-is-driving-faculty-students-from-illinois/

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Critics say bipartisan bill signed by Obama imposes “colonial” control board on Puerto Rico, puts “hedge funds ahead of people”

Fuente: salon.com / 4 de julio de 2016

A bipartisan bill signed by President Obama will impose a “colonial” control board on Puerto Rico, critics say.

 Sen. Bob Menéndez slammed the legislation as a form of “blatant colonialism” that puts “hedge funds ahead of the people.” Bernie Sanders likewise condemned the bill as a “disaster for the people of Puerto Rico” that makes the U.S. the “colonial master” and takes away the Puerto Rican people’s democratic rights.

President Obama signed the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act, or PROMESA, on Thursday night, hours before Puerto Rico was obligated to pay $1.9 billion of its $70 billion debt on a July 1 deadline.

Minutes after Obama signed the bill into law, Gov. Alejandro García Padilla issued an executive order authorizing suspension of payments on Puerto Rico’s debt.

PROMESA permits a debt restructuring process, similar to bankruptcy, but at a great cost: In return, the U.S. federal government will impose an unelected control board onto the U.S. territory. This board will control Puerto Rico’s finances, yet will consist of people who do not even live on the island.

The control board is likely to impose harsh austerity measures, including big cuts in social services, public institutions and pension funds.

PROMESA already forces the Puerto Rican government to reduce the minimum wage to $4.25 an hour for people under 25, while 45 percent of Puerto Ricans live in poverty and 60 percent of adults are unemployed.

The Senate passed PROMESA on Wednesday, June 29 by a 68-to-30 vote.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has previously expressed support for the colonial-style bill. Her opponent, Bernie Sanders, has vehemently opposed it.

Menéndez, who led the opposition to the bill, and proposed 30 of its 68 amendments, held a four-hour filibuster on the Senate floor on Tuesday. Sanders joined him in the filibuster.

This “is a vote to disenfranchise 3.5 million Americans,” Menéndez said. He stressed that, contrary to what the Obama administration and Congress have claimed, the people of Puerto Rico are overwhelmingly against the bill.

Menéndez cited a poll that found that a staggering 69 percent of Puerto Rican voters oppose PROMESA.

Activists in Puerto Rico aggressively protested the colonial-style legislation. Demonstrators created a long-term protest camp outside of the U.S. federal courthouse in Hato Rey, Puerto Rico.

On the Senate floor,  Menéndez listed off a long series of negative impacts the bill will have on the U.S. territory:

It is a vote to authorize an unelected, unchecked and all-powerful control board to determine Puerto Rico’s destiny for a generation or more.

It is a vote to authorize an unelected and all-powerful control board that could close schools, shutter hospitals, and cut senior citizens’ pensions to the bone.

It is a vote to force Puerto Rico, without their say, to go $370 million further in debt to pay for this omnipotent control board which they don’t even want.

It is a vote to cut the minimum wage down to $4.25 per hour for younger workers in Puerto Rico.

It is a vote to make Puerto Ricans work long overtime hours without fair compensation or protection.

It is a vote to jeopardize collective bargaining agreements.

It is a vote to cut worker benefits and privatize inherent government functions.

It is a vote to place well-heeled hedge funds and creditors ahead of the people.

It is a vote to give the board the power to sell off and commercialize natural  treasures that belong to the people of Puerto Rico.

And at its worst, it is a vote to authorize an unelected, unchecked and all-powerful  control board that determines Puerto Rico’s destiny for a generation or more.”

Sanders also vociferously opposed the legislation, railing against it on the Senate floor.

In another article, Salon featured a video and transcript of Sanders’ powerful Senate speech.

“This is a terrible piece of legislation, setting horrific precedent, and must not be passed,” he said, adding, “the United States of America should not treat Puerto Rico as a colony. We cannot and must not take away the democratic rights of the 3.5 million Americans of Puerto Rico and give virtually all power on that island to a seven-member board.”

Sanders called the legislation “both a political and economic disaster for the people of Puerto Rico” that “takes away their democratic rights and self-governance and will impose harsh austerity measures, which will make the poorest people in Puerto Rico even poorer.”

“The United States must not become a colonial master, which is precisely what this legislation allows,” he warned.

Fotografía: Barack Obama signs into law the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act, June 30, 2016.(Credit: Reuters/Carlos Barria)

Enlace original: http://www.salon.com/2016/07/01/critics_say_bipartisan_bill_signed_by_obama_imposes_colonial_control_board_on_puerto_rico_puts_hedge_funds_ahead_of_people/

 

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Argentina: Gremios estatales ratifican el paro del 12 de julio

Fuente: agenciacta.org / 4 de julio de 2016

Gremios estatales realizaron una conferencia de prensa en la sede ATE nacional ratificando el paro provincial y la jornada de lucha para el próximo 12 de julio en todo el territorio de la provincia de Buenos Aires. Participaron ATE; SUTEBA; AJB; SOEME; CICOP; UDOCBA.

Al respecto, el secretario General de ATE y la CTA Autónoma de la provincia de Buenos Aires, Oscar de Isasi, explicó los motivos de la medida de fuerza y los alcances de la misma.

“En primer lugar, solicitamos un aumento salarial urgente y en el marco de la discusión paritaria, teniendo en cuenta que la fantasía del 25% anual de inflación fue echada por tierra por los mismos economistas del gobierno, ya que Prat Gay habló de una proyección inflacionaria del 42%».

Y agregó: «En segundo lugar, exigimos la derogación de las leyes de Emergencia Administrativa y de Reforma Tecnológica, que lo único que hacen es desguazar el Estado e impactar de manera negativa en la prestación de servicios, sobre todo aquellos dirigidos a los sectores más vulnerables de la sociedad. La derogación de los Decretos Nº 230, que otorga potestad a los ministros para hacer contrataciones directas y el Decreto Nº 618, que congela las vacantes y el pase a planta permanente del personal provincial”.

Asimismo, De Isasi señaló que “El gobierno provincial cada vez que decide una medida tiende a desguazar el estado y precarizar las relaciones laborales. La unidad y la masividad sigue siendo la clave para derrotar estas políticas del gobierno de Vidal”.

Estuvieron presentes en la conferencia de prensa, el secretario Adjunto del SUTEBA, Raúl Calamante; el secretario General de la AJB, Pablo Abramovich; la secretaria Adjunta del SOEME, Susana Laburu; el secretario General de la CICOP, Guillermo Pacagnini y el secretario General de UDOCBA, Miguel Díaz.

La medida de fuerza convocada por ATE, SOEME, UDOCBA y la Federación Nacional Docente (FND-CTA) se enmarca en la Jornada Provincial de Lucha a la que adhieren SUTEBA, AJB y CICOP, con quienes acordaron actividades en las distintas regiones, donde se va a poner en evidencia cómo se está vaciando el Estado, cómo faltan políticas en educación, en salud y en las áreas de niñez, entre otras.

Además, cada organización participante decidirá a través de sus cuerpos orgánicos la forma en que protagonizarán la jornada provincial de lucha.

Fuente: www.atepba.org.ar

* Equipo de Comunicación de la CTA de la provincia de Buenos Aires

 

Enlace original: http://www.agenciacta.org/spip.php?article20311

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