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Angela Y. Davis will be awarded an honorary doctorate by UPF on March 9

Through a virtual event that will be streamed live from 7 pm, UPF will recognize the North American political activist and emeritus professor of University of California Santa Cruz for her extensive academic work in analyzing the relationship between gender, race and social class, and for her activism in defence of civil rights, justice, equality and the freedom of individuals.
02.03.2021

Imatge inicial

Angela Y. Davis, North American political activist and emeritus professor of the University of California Santa Cruz, will be awarded an honorary doctorate by UPF, the highest honour of the University.

UPF wishes to recognize her extensive academic and intellectual career including valuable analysis of the relationship between gender, race and social class, and her activism in defence of civil rights, justice, equality and freedom of individuals.

The academic ceremony, which will take place on Tuesday 9 March 2021, at 7 pm, will take place in a virtual format, chaired by Jaume Casals, the rector of the UPF. It will be streamed on the University's website and on social media, with the hashtag #DavisHonorisUPF.

The laudatio for the doctorand will be given by Tània Verge and Linda G. Jones, professors of the Political and Social Sciences and Humanities departments, respectively.

She is the seventeenth person to be made honoris causa by UPF, since the first recognition of Desmond Tutu (1999-2000) until the last, received by Gonzalo Pontón (2019-2020 academic year), and the fourth woman, after Maria João Pires (2018-2019). 

The event is part of UPF's Equality Week, with a series of activities organized on the occasion of International Women's Day, in order to raise awareness among the university community about gender inequality and the demand for a feminist university.

A trajectory marked by the fight for human rights and against racial discrimination

Angela Y. Davis (Birmingham, Alabama, 1944), a graduate of French Studies from Brandeis University (Massachusetts) and of Philosophy from the Johann Wolfgang Goethe (Frankfurt), she has devoted much of her life to defending human rights, feminism, and to combating racial discrimination. Currently, at the age of 76, she is an emeritus professor at the University of California Santa Cruz and continues to fight strongly for her principles, spreading them around the world.

Her childhood was marked by the Jim Crow laws, that deprived African Americans of civil rights and imposed racial segregation in public places such as schools and public transport, in the southern United States. From a young age, she witnessed discrimination in the neighbourhood where she lived, called Dynamite Hill (Birmingham, Alabama), due to the large number of African-American families that were dynamited by the Ku Klux Klan.

The daughter of an activist family, she became rapidly involved in movements against social segregation, class oppression and the patriarchy. At university, she immersed herself in the principles of the philosopher Herbert Marcuse, and especially the idea that the individual has the right to rebel against the system.

Davis was a lecturer of Philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles, until 1970, when she was dismissed for belonging to the Communist Party.

Davis was a lecturer of Philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles, until 1970, when she was dismissed for belonging to the Communist Party. Among other organizations, she has been a member of the Black Panthers, a party that fought for the civil rights of the black population.

In 2006, she received the Thomas Merton Award in recognition of her fight for justice in the United States and around the world.  Other awards he has received have been the Blue Planet Award 2011, given by the Ethics and Economics Foundation, and the American Book Award (1996), given by the Before Columbus Foundation. In 2014 she received an honorary doctorate by the University of Nanterre (France).

Some of his main books are If They Come in the Morning: Voices of Resistance (1971), Women, Race and Class (1981), Women, Culture and Politics (1989), Blues Legacies and Black Feminism (1999), Are prisons obsolete? (2003), Abolition Democracy: Beyond Empire, Prisons, and Torture (2005) and Freedom is a constant struggle (2015).

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