Save the date: ABOLISH RENT
A public talk with the cofounders of the largest tenants' union in the United States
Please join us for a Public Seminar in-person event featuring activists Tracy Rosenthal and Leonardo Vilchis on their new book, Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis (Haymarket, 2024).
Monday, November 18, 2024, 6:30PM to 8:00PM (EST)
65 West 11th Street
Lang Cafe (first floor)
New York, NY 10011
In a conversation convened by Parsons Housing Justice Lab director Gabriela Rendón, Tracy Rosenthal and Leonardo Vilchis will explore the revolutionary movement we need to make our housing, our cities, and the world our home.
Rent drives millions into debt, despair, and onto the streets. The social cost of rent is too damn high. Written for anyone fed up with the permanent housing crisis, complicit politicians, and real estate greed, Abolish Rent dissects our housing system from the perspective of the poor and working-class people who are fighting back, staying put, and remaking the city in the process.
Authors Tracy Rosenthal and Leonardo Vilchis take us to trilingual strategy meetings, raucous marches against gentrification, and daring eviction defenses where immigrants put their lives on the line.
This Public Seminar event is open to the public. Please click here to RSVP. We look forward to seeing you there!
Gabriela Rendón is an associate professor of Urban Planning and Community Development, the co-coordinator of the Graduate Minor in Design and Urban Justice, and the Founding Director of the Parsons Housing Justice Lab at The New School. At the lab, she leads the Housing Justice Oral History Project, combining oral history, critical cartography, community organizing, and advocacy.
Tracy Rosenthal is a writer and co-founder of the LA Tenants Union. Their work has been published in the New Republic, the Nation and the Los Angeles Times. They serve on the advisory board of Housing the Third Reconstruction with UCLA’s Institute on Inequality and Democracy. They are now on rent strike in New York City.
Leonardo Vilchis has been organizing tenants in Boyle Heights for more than 30 years. Trained in liberation theology, he co-founded Union de Vecinos in 1996 to stop the demolition of the Pico Aliso public housing projects, winning the right of return for 250. In 2015, he co-founded the LA Tenants Union to organize tenant power at a citywide scale. Vilchis was activist-in-residence at the UCLA Luskin Institute on Inequality and Democracy in 2020 and now serves on the advisory board of its Housing the Third Reconstruction research endeavor. He lives in Los Angeles.
I will not be part of an organization that platforms extremists who weaponize vulnerable and economically-illiterate populations for counterproductive, populist movements.
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