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Previous CAS Presentations

Jan 22, 2008
One Laptop Per Child: Technology and the Developing World


May 2, 2007
Serious Games: Video Games in Undergraduate General Education


February 15, 2006
The Pakistan Earthquake: A Wake-up Call for Mid-America?


January 27, 2006
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Immigration


September 26, 2005
Katrina and Other Megacatastrophes: Science, Policy and Human Behavior


February 23, 2005
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Reforming Social Security


February 17, 2005
Origins of a Networked World: From World War II to the Internet


November 16, 2004
Coole Lady


April 28, 2004
Hospital Tax Forum


October 3, 2003
Carlo Rotella


March 12, 2003
Sheldon Jacobson

February 5, 2003
George Gollin

December 5, 2002
Civil Liberty and National Security

October 7, 2002
Ania Loomba

February 28, 2002
Hans Heinrich Hock

January 22, 2002
Dianne Pinderhughes

November 5, 2001
Jean-Pierre Leburton

November 5, 2001
From Chaos to Pilgrimage

October 23, 2001
Donald Crummey

October 16, 2001
Globalization

August 29, 2001
Stem Cells

September 28, 2001
Bill Greenough

May 3, 2001
Dialogue on Toulouse-Lautrec





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Social Security Forum Poster
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Reforming Social Security
February 23, 2005
Wednesday, 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Third Floor, Levis Faculty Center
919 W. Illinois Street, Urbana

The CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Reforming Social Security, held on February 23, has been archived in both video and audio only format.
Access: Audio Only or Streaming Video
(Realplayer required)

In the first State of the Union address of his second term, President Bush announced plans to overhaul Social Security by allowing younger workers to open personal investment accounts with a portion of their payroll taxes. Although many analysts agree that the Social Security system—the social insurance program established in 1935—will face a shortage of funds sometime in the future, they disagree on the extent to which the system is in need of fixing, and whether partial privatization is the best solution.

We invite you to participate in an informal public forum on this timely topic. Convening experts from on and off campus, this panel hopes to provoke a discussion about the future of Social Security as the baby boom generation begins to retire around 2010. We hope to address the broader questions of social rights and intergenerational responsibilities, as well as the arguments for and against partial privatization and how any changes to the social insurance program will impact women and minorities as well as the population as a whole.

After brief remarks from the panelists, we will move directly to audience questions.

Our panelists include:

Jeffrey Brown, Finance
J. Fred Giertz, Economics and IGPA
Richard Kaplan, Law
Mark Leff, History
William Spriggs, Economic Policy Institute (Washington, D.C.)

Suggested readings for this forum:
Some of the above reading may require Adobe Acrobat Reader which you can download free here.

This CAS Forum on Critical Issues is cosponsored by the Center for Democracy in a Multiracial Society, the Initiative on Aging and the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Public Engagement and Institutional Relations.


William Spriggs was on WILL-AM radio's call-in program, FOCUS-580. Listen to the archived interview here.




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