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Thursday March 28

Filmmaker(s): Lise Birk Pedersen
Year: 2011 / 85m

Meet Masha, a 19-year-old who grew up in the Putin era, on her journey through the Kremlin-created Nashi youth movement. This coming-of-age tale focuses on Masha's personal political struggle and paints a grim picture of the Russian political climate.

Discussion to follow with Rachel Denber, Human Rights Watch Deputy Director of Europe and Central Asia Division and Timothy J. McNulty journalist and lecturer at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and co-director of Medill’s National Security Journalism Initiative
5:30 PM

Monday April 8

Filmmaker(s): Dawn Porter
Year: 2013 / 90m

In 1963 the US Supreme Court decided the landmark case of Gideon v. Wainwright. The holding was simple: in felony cases people who cannot afford a lawyer must be provided one. But Gideon's promise has not been fulfilled.

Discussion to follow with Dawn Porter, Filmmaker, Jeanne Bishop, Cook County Public Defender and Alba Morales, Human Rights Watch US Program Researcher
6:30 PM

Monday April 15

Filmmaker(s): Paul Saltzman
Year: 2013 / 78m

Filmmaker Paul Saltzman retraces his steps as a young civil rights worker in Mississippi who was assaulted by a group of young men led by Byron "Delay" De La Beckwith, the son of the man convicted of killing civil rights activist Medgar Evers. Decades later, Saltzman returns to the south to meet with Beckwith and see what, if anything, has changed in the New South.

Discussion to follow with Paul Saltzman, Filmmaker and Prexy Nesbit, educator, activist
6:30 PM

Monday April 22

Filmmaker(s): Joshua Oppenheimer
Year: 2012 / 122m

A true cinematic experiment, The Act of Killing explores a chapter of Indonesia's history in a way bound to stir debate—by enlisting a group of former killers, including Indonesian paramilitary leader Anwar Congo, to re-enact their lives in the style of the films they love.

Discussion to follow with Joe Saunders, Human Rights Watch Deputy Program Director
6:30 PM

Monday April 29

Filmmaker(s): Jehane Noujaim and Mona Eldaief
Year: 2012 / 75m

Rafea is a Bedouin woman who lives with her daughters in one of Jordan's poorest desert villages on the Iraqi border. When she is selected for an intriguing programme called the Barefoot College in India, Rafea doesn't need to think twice, and travels to join 30 illiterate women from different countries to train to become solar engineers.

Discussion to follow with filmmaker Mona Eldaief, Filmmaker and Liesl Gerntholtz, Human Rights Watch Director of the Women’s Rights Division
6:30 PM

Monday May 6

Filmmaker(s): Nagieb Khaja
Year: 2012 / 88m

Alternating between the participants' scenes of daily life and Nagieb's own experiences, My Afghanistan depicts a country where civilians are the greatest victims of the war, and Afghans struggle to live in the constant shadow of violence.

Discussion to follow with Lise Lense- Møller, Filmmaker
6:30 PM