Democracy Now:
A Panel Discussion

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion

What does active citizenship in a democracy look like? How do we prepare ourselves for the challenges that our democracy will face? How do we reform our democracy so that it serves all of its constituents? 

Join Revolutionary Spaces and The Humanities Workshop for Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion. This special event is an opportunity to hear from humanists whose daily work considers and shapes the state of our local and global democracies. Our panel features leaders and innovators in civic engagement, law, journalism, education, art, and community-building, each dedicated to fostering equity, inclusion, and resilience in their fields. Take part in the discussion as our panelists help us interpret the current political moment and discover new pathways to citizen leadership. 

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion is co-sponsored in part by The Humanities Workshop—a consortium of public, private, and charter secondary school communities that believes in the critical importance of the humanities in addressing urgent social issues. The humanities educate our students to understand historical context, engage in perspective-taking, hone critical thinking, and generate narrative.  The Humanities Workshop believes a humanistic approach to social issues develops empathy in our students, inspiring them to engage deeply in the world around them, now and in the future, with their whole selves.

This program is free and open to the public thanks in part to the generous support of the Lowell Institute. Doors will open at 6:00 PM and the discussion will begin at 6:30 PM. This program will also be live streamed by the GBH Forum Network. Pre-register now to reserve your spot!

Details

Tuesday, February 11, 2025

Doors Open: 6:00 PM
Program Begins: 6:30 PM
Location: Old South Meeting House
Admission: Free

By registering to attend this event, you will be added to Revolutionary Spaces’ email list. You are able to opt out at any time.

Old South Meeting House

About the Speakers

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion
Simon Rios

Born in Boston’s Jamaica Plain neighborhood, Simón Rios is an award-winning bilingual reporter in WBUR's newsroom. He graduated from Emerson College in 2005 with a bachelor's degree in writing, literature, and journalism. At WBUR he covers the ways Greater Boston is changing, with an eye on demographics, immigration, and inequality. He traveled to Puerto Rico several times since Hurricane Maria, bringing back stories about the bridges between the island and the more than 300,000 Boricuas who call Massachusetts home.

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion Dayna Cunningham

Dayna Cunningham is the Pierre and Pamela Omidyar Dean of Tufts University’s Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life. Dean Cunningham has devoted her career to promoting civic participation, building community partnerships, and advocating for underrepresented communities. At Tisch College, she has articulated a bold vision for building robust, inclusive democracy for an increasingly multiracial society. Before leading Tisch College, Dean Cunningham was the founder of Community Innovators Lab (CoLab) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). At CoLab, she built large-scale, multi-sector development collaborations that combined sustainability, wellness, and democratic control of economies in marginalized communities. A civil rights lawyer by training, Dean Cunningham worked with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, litigating cases in Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, and other states in the South. She has also served as associate director at the Rockefeller Foundation and program director of the ELIAS Project at MIT. Dean Cunningham earned an undergraduate degree from Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges, a Juris Doctorate from New York University School of Law, and a Master of Business Administration from MIT Sloan School of Management.

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion Rebeca G. Figueroa

Rebeca G. Figueroa is an Associate Justice of the Boston Municipal Court. She was appointed to the bench by Governor Maura Healey in 2024. As an associate justice, Judge Figueroa presides at the Dorchester Division of the Boston Municipal Court and is the presiding justice of the Dorchester Recovery Court. She began her legal career as a Staff Attorney for the Committee for Public Counsel Services in the Roxbury Defenders Unit in 2003, representing indigent criminal defendants charged with felony offenses at the Roxbury Division of the Boston Municipal Court and Suffolk Superior Court. Later, Judge Figueroa entered private practice as a solo practitioner focused on criminal defense, family law, and real estate. In 2017, she was appointed Assistant Clerk-Magistrate for Criminal Business at Suffolk Superior Court, and shortly thereafter, she was designated as a magistrate. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Boston College and a Juris Doctorate from the New England School of Law. She lives in Boston with her husband and family.

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion Chawky Frenn

Chawky Frenn was born in Zahlé, Lebanon. Before emigrating to the United States in 1981, he witnessed six years of civil war. Its devastating consequences have powerfully influenced his life and artwork. Frenn received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Mass College of Art and Design in Boston, Massachusetts in 1985, and a Master of Fine Arts from Tyler School of Art of Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1988. He is currently an Associate Professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. Frenn has exhibited his work throughout the United States, and around the globe, and has received critical acclaim from publications including The New York Times, NY ARTS, Art New England, The Boston Globe, Connecticut Post, Atlanta Magazine, and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in the United States, as well as An-Nahar, L’Orient - Le Jour, and The Daily Star in Lebanon. He was awarded two Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence Awards, which enabled him to pursue his international academic and creative research in New Delhi in 2017 and Varanasi in 2024, India. Frenn is the author of two books—100 Boston Artists and 100 Boston Painters—published in 2013 and 2012 by Schiffer Publishing. Art for Life’s Sake, a monograph on Frenn’s work, was published by Fine Arts Consulting and Publishing in Beirut, Lebanon, in 2006.

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion Noorya Hayat

Noorya Hayat joined the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) as a researcher in January 2016. She works on projects that help promote civic learning and engagement in the K-12 education system and beyond. She is also interested in the intersection of education, both in formal and informal settings, and civic learning and awareness in youth, particularly from marginalized and diverse ethnic backgrounds. Hayat has experience working in the United States and abroad in teaching and educational research. Before joining CIRCLE, Hayat worked as an international researcher and coordinator in public health and nutrition awareness in the developing world. She has experience teaching and mentoring students from diverse backgrounds and grade levels, and worked as an early childhood educator in Boston. She holds an Ed.M. in international education policy from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Democracy Now: A Panel Discussion Elizabeth Hasen Shapiro

Elizabeth Hansen Shapiro is the CEO and co-founder of the National Trust for Local News, a nonprofit newspaper company dedicated to protecting and sustaining local news by publishing sustainable community newspapers that safeguard the public trust, elevate facts, empower communities with solutions, and foster a strong sense of place. Founded in 2021, the National Trust owns and operates newspapers in Maine, Colorado, and Georgia—critical sources of news that serve a population of some five million people. Prior to founding the National Trust, Dr. Hansen Shapiro was a Senior Research Fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia Journalism School and led news sustainability research at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Free Registration

Program Photo Credit: John Collins Photography