The Walter Rodney Foundation has developed a number of programs, which preserve, promote, and further the legacy of Walter Rodney.

The Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Since 2004, an annual symposium has been held in Atlanta, Georgia or virtually during the week of Walter Rodney’s birthday (23 March).

The goal is to bring together scholars, researchers, activists, students, and the community to discuss contemporary issues from a Rodney perspective.

In addition to what is listed below, many of the symposia posters, programs, and videos can be found in the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library’s Digital Collection.


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The 21st Annual

Walter Rodney Symposium


Day One

Friday, March 22nd, 2024

4pm - 9pm EST

Free and Open to the Public — RSVP Required

Revolutionizing & Decolonizing Health Systems:

Pathways to Reparative Justice

  • Keynote address from Dr. Natalia Kanem

  • A celebration of Dr. Patricia Rodney

  • Panels on:

    • The Intersectionality of Public Health and Social Justice

    • Unraveling Health System Inequities

  • Cultural performances


Day Two

Saturday, March 23rd, 2024

11am - 3pm EST

Free and Open to the Public — RSVP Required

Honoring Women’s Work:

A Women’s History Program

  • Distinguished address from Dr. Nikky Finney

  • CRAFTing Justice: A conversation with trailblazing women

  • **POSTPONED** Live stage performance of Shirley Chisholm: Unbossed & Unbowed, A One-Woman Show by Ingrid Griffith **POSTPONED**

Featuring:

Co-hosted by:

Sponsored by:

Browse Past Symposia

The 20th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Repairing Historical Injustices

An amplified call for reparations for all peoples of African descent & reparative justice for Walter Rodney

 

2023

Friday, March 24th

Rodney & Davis’ lives intersected when they met at the University of Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania; they are both grounded in historical truth, and in their commitment to human dignity, liberation, resistance, and scholar-activism.

The Symposium featured the US film premiere of Walter Rodney: What They Don’t Want You to Know and featured a discussion with the film producers, Arlen Harris and Daniyal Harris-Vajda. For more information on the film, please check out its webpage.

 

Keynote:

 

Angela Y. Davis

Panelists:

Horace Campbell

Verene Shepherd

Performances:

Ras Miguel “Steppa” Williams

Akua Taylor


 

The 19th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

50 Years of How Europe Underdeveloped Africa

 

2022

Saturday, March 26th

 

Keynote:

 

Dr. Joyce Ladner

Distinguished Speaker:

Presenters:

 

Vijay Prashad

Tamnisha John

Cindy Peters

Issa Shivji

Natasha Shivji

Devyn Springer

Fatma Alloo

Walter Bgoya

Horace Campbell

Zophia Edwards

Kamau Franklin


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The 18th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Democracy Under Duress

 

2021

Sunday, March 21st

The Symposium, Democracy Under Duress, explored the fragility of the democratic state and strategies for creating and protecting a true democracy.

Rodney & Davis’ lives intersected when they met at the University of Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania; they are both grounded in historical truth, and in their commitment to human dignity, liberation, resistance, and scholar-activism.

The Keynote Address started at 1:30 p.m. The Symposium also featured two panels:

  • Walter Rodney, Human Rights, and Decolonization

  • Imperialism, State Violence and the Assassination of Walter Rodney

 

Keynote:

 

Angela Y. Davis

Presenters:

 

Adisa Douglas

Ben Mable

Bernice Johnson Reagon

Beverly Guy Sheftall

Budd Hall

Caroline Cooper

Charles Ferrell

Charisse Burden-Stelly

Donald Rodney

Donald Ramotar

Hashim Gibrill

Hon. Mohabir Anil Nandlall

Horace Campbell

Keith C. Scotland

Mawuli Davis

Mireille Fanon Mendès-France

Nevel Greenridge

Nigel Westmaas

Patsy Edwards

Robin D. G. Kelley

Rupert Lewis

Vanda Radzik

Verene Shepherd

Vijay Prashad

Walter Bagoya

Wazir Mohamed


The 17th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Angela Y. Davis

 

2020

Saturday, March 21st

The Keynote Address was to be held at the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College, 830 Westview Dr. SW, Atlanta, GA 30314. Doors opened at 2 p.m., and Angela Davis was scheduled to take the stage at 3:00 p.m. Participants were required to RSVP for the event through Eventbrite. The event was free.

—- 03/14/20 —- Due to developments with the Coronavirus (COVID-19), the 17th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium – scheduled to take place on March 21, 2020 at the Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia – was postponed. The private event scheduled to take place later that evening at the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library was also postponed.

Angela Davis is a revolutionary who has worked tirelessly against oppression, the death penalty, racism, and sexism. She has advocated for prison abolition, prison education, criminal justice reform, human rights, and LGBTQ rights while opposing the Vietnam War, apartheid South Africa, the war on terror, and the occupation of Palestine. Davis is a professor emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Rodney & Davis’ lives intersected when they met at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania; they both are grounded in historical truth, and in their commitment to liberation, resistance, and scholar-activism. Davis wrote the Foreword to How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (Verso Press 2018.)

 

Keynote:

 

Angela Y. Davis


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The 16th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Pan-African Discussions

History - Movements - Resistance - Struggle

 

2019

Friday, March 19th

We convened for two days of Pan-African discussion, including:

  • Special guests from Canada, Cuba, and the UK

  • Historic launching of three new/republished Walter Rodney books

  • Much more.

We enjoyed seeing you all there and grounding with you.

 

Keynote:

 

Mireille Fanon-Mendès-France

Presenters:

 

Abiola Sow

”Able” Mable Thomas

Akinyele Umoja

David Austin

Damani Aaquil

Devyn Springer

Franklin “Jah Frank” Hasfal

Geoffroy de Laforcade

Keith Waithe

Marcelo Brodsky

Ward Churchill


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The 15th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Reflecting on 50 Years of Struggle

 

2018

Friday, March 23rd &
Saturday, March 24th

1968 was a truly momentous year in the history of global social movements, a year of global revolution. It comprised the primary year of the shift from the Civil Rights to Black Power movements and Black Consciousness; the emergence of Black and Ethnic Studies programs; the “Rodney Riots” in Jamaica; innumerable assassinations, uprisings, and student movements globally; open social conflicts as seen in the Democratic National Convention in Chicago that year; the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.; the Poor People's Campaign, and the Olympics Black Power salute which followed thereafter.

It was a critical time in which relations within the global Pan-African world shifted, and out of necessity radicalized. Most historians consider 1968 the apex of the Global 1960s movements when power relations and social movements for justice erupted in intense conflict.

The 15th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium reflected on the 50th anniversary of 1968, including the 50th anniversary of one of Walter Rodney's most important books: The Groundings with My Brothers (GWMB), and 50 years of Black Studies in the US.

 

Keynote:

 

Dr. John Carlos

Presenters:

 

2Kee

”Able” Mable Thomas

Akinyele Umoja

avry jxn

Basil Waine Kong

Devyn Springer

Ewart A. C. Thomas

Franklin “Jah Frank” Hasfal

Kurt Young

Lindy Carter

Matthew Smith

Mawuli Davis

Mengue Moli Jacques Bertrand

Mr. “Bongo Jerry” Small

Pellom McDaniels III

Robert “Bobby” Hill

Samuel T. Livingston

Seneca Vaught

Tanya M. Washington

Tiffany Smith


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The 14th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Justice Denied: People’s Power

The Struggle Continues

 

2017

Friday, March 24th &
Saturday, March 25th

Justice Denied: People’s Power, The Struggle Continues, explored issues of racism, discrimination, injustice, and inequity by examining ongoing fights for human rights and equal justice in Guyana in the 1970s and 1980s, and in the United States and globally today.

The 1st day of the symposium addressed these issues within the context of the 1980 assassination of Walter Rodney. Speakers discussed the societal structure and political environment of Guyana at that time, including the Jonestown Massacre, as well as the overarching international human rights context. A panel reviewed the 2016 Commission of Inquiry (COI) Report into Rodney’s murder, which provides revelations of state terrorism and conspiracy, use of a military assassination, and government cover-up, and outlined the necessary next steps to achieve justice.

The 2nd day addressed social injustices that are faced today, and how to use education, politics, civic engagement, and radical pedagogy as strategies to effect change. There was also a focus on the International Decade for People of African Descent. Following, in the tradition of Walter Rodney’s The Groundings With My Brothers, the symposium featured a groundings community session in which the audience exchanged information and ideas about social justice issues.

 

Keynotes:

 

Professor Sir Hilary Beckles

Dr. Joyce King

Presenters:

 

”Able” Mable Thomas

Bettina Love

Collette Pichon Battle

Damani Aaquil

Donald Rodney

Fielding M. McGehee, III

Hilaire Sobers

John H. Eaves

Keith Jennings

Keith C. Scotland

Mawuli Davis

Max Hilaire

Ras Kofi da Farmah

Sa-Roc

Sol Messiah


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The 13th Annual Walter Rodney Symposium

Youth Matters: Global Groundings

 

2016

Friday, March 18th &
Saturday, March 19th

The theme of the 2016 symposium was “Youth Matters: Global Groundings.” The symposium sought to address matters of significance to youth and did include sessions on movements and activism, intergenerational dialogue, international voices, education, and juvenile justice. In addition to the Atlanta symposium, we had several simultaneous meetings of local youth in other states and in countries across the world, including Canada, the United Kingdom, and within the Caribbean, Latin America, and Africa.

Youth is often described in the Pan-African world as persons under 40 years old. Dr. Walter Rodney was officially within this recognized definition of “youth” as he was 38 years old when he was assassinated, a fact that we often forget as we explore his relatively short life as an academic, scholar, historian, and activist. Both Dr. Rodney’s life and the causes for which he gave it should be an inspiration to all of us, especially youth, who strive for justice, domestically and internationally.

 

Keynotes:

 

Dr. Raphael G. Warnock

Jasiri X

Aurielle Marie

Presenters:

 

”Able” Mable Thomas

Aiden Salgado

Aljosie Aldrich Harding

Amira Rossih Martinez Sinisterra

Avery Jackson

Beverly Guy-Sheftall

Chairman John H. Eaves

Charles Black

Dazon Dixon Diallo

Dr. Rev. C.T. Vivian

DeShawn Dominique Jenkins

Devyn Springer

Emery Wright

Esker Copeland

Jesus Carabali

Jesus “Chucho” Garcia

Mawuli Mel Davis

Melanie R. Medalle

Prince Ifoh

Ralph Cantave

Samuel T. Livingston

Stephanie Guilloud

Teri Platt

Tiffany R. Smith


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