If you're in Chicago on Tuesday, May 4, join us for the the first 2010 Fellows for Life "Leadership by Example" Lecture with guest speaker, Dr. Greg Scott, a sociology professor at DePaul University who has conducted extensive ethnographic fieldwork on drug-dealing street gangs.
Since 2005, Scott's nonprofit multi-media company, Sawbuck Productions, has produced educational and political materials concerning the well-being of illicit drug users. The documentaries have been shown at film festivals around the world and have appeared on the National Geographic Network, BET Network and MSNBC. His film “Begging for Grace,” which documents the daily life of a panhandling homeless heroin addict named Freeway, was an official selection of the International Documentary Challenge at the 2007 HotDocs Film Festival in Toronto, Canada, and was recently acquired for commercial distribution.
In 2008 Dr. Scott began working as a freelance audio documentarian for Chicago Public Radio’s WBEZ where he produces and directs 8-12-minute stories about street life within Chicago’s “undergrounds.” Topics have included prostitution, heroin overdose and drug selling. His radio series “The Brickyard” relates stories about outlaw communities of heroin addicts, crack smokers, prostitutes, thieves, drug dealers and others living on Chicago’s west side.
The event is open to the public and will be held Tuesday, May 4, 2010 beginning at 6:00pm at Northwestern University’s Chicago medical campus in Baldwin Auditorium, 303 E. Superior Street, 1st Floor, Chicago.
It is free of charge, and open to the public, but reservations are strongly recommended. RSVP by email or call 312 372-4292 extension 24
Download the flyer to share with colleagues and friendsNow in its third year, the lecture
series is organized by Fellows for Life (alumni of the Chicago Area
Schweitzer Fellows Program). Speakers in the series have been selected
to talk about their exemplary lives of public service, with a special
emphasis on individuals who focus on the well being of underserved
populations.