Max Rameau Papers

Identity elements

Name and location of repository

Beschrijvingsniveau

Collectie

Titel

Max Rameau Papers

Datum(s)

  • 1992-2011 (Vervaardig)

Omvang

20 Boxes

Naam van de archiefvormer

Biografie

Max Rameau is the foremost and most publically known activist with Take Back the Land. He also leads the Center for Pan-African Development, and has worked extensively with Brothers of the Same Mind and Cop Watch in the past. At the cusp of the housing crisis, Rameau invited several other South Florida-based black activists to meetings held at Marleine Bastien's office, a group that later became known as the Black Response to the Crisis Group. The group decided on taking action in the form of taking over public land and asserting black political leadership over that land. The first action taken was the erecting of the Umoja Village Shantytown, and later housing liberations and eviction defenses. As Take Back the Land progressed to the national level and took on the shape of a movement, Rameau remained its most vocal proponent and figurehead. He has since relocated to Washington D.C. to take on the role as an alternative voice on the housing crisis more strongly. Rameau is a Pan-Africanist by worldview and in political theory, although he no longer frames Take Back the Land as a Pan-Africanist or Black nationalist project.

Content and structure elements

Bereik en inhoud

The Max Rameau papers (1992-2010) document his extensive activism for the homeless and the poor within the South Florida communities of the African diaspora. The collection  will be of interest to scholars and students of movements such as the Umoja Village, the Scott-Carver Tenant Council, Miami Dade Election Reform and Take Back the Land. The materials document advocacy work on behalf of people displaced from their homes as a result of  low income housing policies, gentrification, and the U.S. foreclosure crisis at the beginning of the 21st century.  The Max Rameau papers also point to connections between activist groups promoting the economic rights of the diverse constituency  of the African diaspora which reside in Liberty City and Little Haiti. Finally, the collection serves as a record of Mr. Rameau's work with organizations such as Brothers of the Same Mind,  the Haitian American Grassroots Coalition and the Center for Pan African Development.

Ordeningstelsel

I. Activism (various)

II. Brothers of the Same Mind

III. Umoja Village

IV. Take Back the Land

V. Audio-Visual Materials

VI. Posters/Banners

VII. Interviews (oral history)

Conditions of access and use elements

Voorwaarden voor raadpleging

The collection is open for research.

Physical access

Items from this collection are kept on-campus and may be requested from the first floor Kislak Center in the Otto G. Richter Library at University of Miami.

Technical access

Voorwaarden voor reproductie

University of Miami does not own copyright. It is incumbent on the user to obtain copyright from the original creator.

Languages of the material

  • Engels
  • Frans
  • Haïtiaans

Scripts of the material

  • Latijn

Taal en schrift aantekeningen

Toegangen

Generated finding aid

Acquisition and appraisal elements

Geschiedenis beheer

Directe bron van verwerving

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling information

Aanvullingen

Related materials elements

Bestaan en verblifplaats van originelen

Bestaan en verblijfplaats van kopieën

Related archival materials

Archiving the Fringe by UM Libraries

Information about related materials is available at http://vimeo.com/23267802

Notes element

Specialized notes

Alternative identifier(s)

Description control element

Regels of conventies

Sources used

Trefwoorden

Geografische trefwoorden

Naam ontsluitingsterm

Voorwaarden voor raadpleging en gebruik