The “Global Peace, Security, and Human Rights” Lecture Series Presents 

Life and Debt



Tuesday, February 19 /
7:30 & 9:30 pm / Campbell Hall 
General public $6 · UCSB students $5
Tickets available at the UCSB Arts & Lectures Box Office: 893-3535

"Both eloquent and down to earth" Chicago Tribune

 An unapologetic look at the "new world order" from the point of view of Jamaican workers and government officials who see the reality of globalization from the ground up. Jamaica Kincaid provides narration; music by Bob Marley, Peter Tosh and others. (Stephanie Black, 2000, 86 minutes)

SYNOPSIS

Jamaica, land of sea, sand and sun. And a prime example of the complexities of economic globalization on the world's developing countries. Using conventional and non-conventional documentary techniques, this searing film dissects the "mechanism of debt" that is destroying local agriculture and industry in Third World countries while substituting them with sweat-shops and cheap imports. With a voice-over narration written by Jamaica Kincaid, adapted from her non-fiction book "A Small Place," "Life and Debt" is an unapologetic look at the "new world order" from the point of view of Jamaican workers, farmers, government and policy officials, who see the reality of globalization from the ground up.

The documentary film includes interviews with Former Prime Minister Michael Manley, Deputy Director of the International Monetary Fund Stanley Fischer, and short commentary by President of Haiti-Jean-Bertrand Aristide and Former President of Ghana-Jerry Rawlings. But the articulate voices of those impacted by the policies of globalization are foremost.

The "Global Peace, Security, and Human Rights" lecture series is sponsored by the UC Institute for Global Conflict and Cooperation, UCSB Arts & Lectures, Global and International Studies Program, Global Peace and Security Program and Interdisciplinary Humanities Center. It is being put on in partnership with the Santa Barbara Committee on Foreign Relations, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, PAX 2100, International Studies Association at Santa Barbara City College, and the International Studies Program at Ventura College.





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