
What can Iowa learn from the struggles of mineworkers in South Africa? This Iowa City Foreign Relations Council panel discussion connects the global story of dust, disease, and dignity to the realities of Iowa’s fields, factories, and immigrant workforce.
Through powerful parallels, this discussion will highlight how protecting vulnerable workers is not only a matter of health, but also of justice and resilience. Understanding the nexus between work and community and the commonalities between people here and in South Africa is one important step in the global effort to finding solutions to ease the too-often invisible burden shouldered by vulnerable working populations.
Panelists include:
Dr. Claudia Corwin, a Clinical Associate Professor on the faculty of the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine. As both a surgeon and occupational medicine physician, she has broad clinical experience that informs her public health practice.
Dr. Vanessa Govender, a South African Specialist in Occupational Medicine with over 30 years of experience across clinical practice, public health, academia, and consulting, and particular expertise in mining health, occupational lung diseases, and health-risk policy, strategy and communication.
Naomi Marroquín, who works at Proteus, Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting agricultural workers and their families through job training, educational assistance, and affordable healthcare services.
Dr. David Bedell, a Professor of Clinical Family Medicine who has been with the UI Carver College of Medicine for 31 years. His clinical practice has been at the University’s Lone Tree and Riverside clinics, both considered rural.
Registration is not required but will help organizers get a count for food and refreshments.