Professor Angela Mae Kupenda presents at University of Dayton, presents
at Tougaloo College, and has article accepted for publication, Faulkner
Law Review, in Nov. 2009.
Professor Angela Mae Kupenda presented at University of Dayton,
presented at Tougaloo College, and had article accepted for publication,
Faulkner Law Review, in November 2009.
Professor Kupenda presented at the University of Dayton's, College of
Arts & Sciences, Philosophy Department 34th Annual Richard R. Baker
Philosophy Colloquium and Concerned Philosophers for Peace, Conference
on Communities of Justice, November 5-7, 2009. Kupenda was on the
panel, Reflections of African American Women, and presented her
recently published article, The State as Batterer: Learning from Family
Law to Address America's Family-Like Racial Dysfunction, 20 U. Fl. J. of
Fam. L. & Pub. Pol'y. 33 (2009).
Later in November, Kupenda was a panelist on a forum sponsored by The
Medgar Evers/Ella Baker Civil Rights Lecture Series, at Woodworth Chapel
at Tougaloo College, November 12, 2009. The forum was entitled, the
Obama Administration: One Year later.
Kupenda also had a paper accepted for publication, in November, for
the Faulkner Law Review, Special Symposium Issue, Fred Gray, Sr., Civil
Rights Symposium. The Law Review Symposium issue will focus on The Obama
Effect on the Legal Profession. Kupenda's article is entitled, The
Obama Election and a Blacker America: Lawfully Creating Tension for
Change. Faulkner University, a Christian University, is located in
Montgomery, Alabama, the location of the extended bus boycotts after
Rosa Parks' historical refusal to give up her seat and move to the back
of the bus. The Symposium honored Attorney Fred Gray, Sr., legal counsel
for Mrs. Parks.