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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The founder of a national organization that
advocates grassroots efforts to solve societal problems will discuss
the group’s campaign to encourage self-help and community
empowerment in Lowndes County, Ala., in a 4 p.m. Feb. 6 talk at
The University of Alabama.
Robert L. Woodson Sr., president of the National Center for Neighborhood
Enterprise, will give a talk entitled “Applying Old Values
to New Vision: Moving Beyond the Edmund Pettus Bridge,” in
UA’s ten Hoor Hall, room 125.
A recipient of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship,
Woodson is a proponent of strategies of self-help and empowerment.
He is frequently featured as a social commentator in both print
and electronic media. He has authored numerous books on such subjects
as family dissolution, community revitalization, youth violence,
and substance abuse.
Lowndes County is located in the south-central Alabama region
known as the Black Belt, an impoverished area named for its rich,
dark soil. In an adjoining county in 1965, law enforcement officers
attacked hundreds of marchers on Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge.
The marchers were protesting racist voting laws.
Sponsors of Woodson's talk include UA’s College of Arts and
Sciences diversity committee, the department of history, the department
of philosophy, the department of American studies, New College,
the School of Social Work, and the Alabama Scholars Association.
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