Romano, U. Roberto (Robin), 1958-

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U. Roberto Romano (Robin) is a photographer, filmmaker and human rights educator. The son of the artist and Works Progress Administration (WPA) muralist Umberto Romano, Robin Romano was born in New York where he attended the Lycee Français, Allen Stevenson School and Horace Mann High School. Mr. Romano graduated from Amherst College as an Interdisciplinary Scholar in 1980.

Romano began his career in documentaries as a producer and cameraman for Les Productions de Sagittaire in Montréal, where he worked on several series including 5 Defis and L'Oeil de L'Aigle .

His film projects include Death of a Slave Boy, a two-hour special shot in Pakistan for European broadcast, Globalization and Human Rights hosted by Charlayne Hunter Gault for PBS, and Stolen Childhoods, the first theatrically released feature documentary on global child labor. He was also a contributor to the NPR and BBC specials on slavery in the Ivory Coast and has contributed to films as diverse as I n Debt We Trust and Darfur Now .

As a still photograph, his exhibition "Stolen Childhoods: the Global Plague of Child Labor," was on view at the William Benton Museum of Fine Art at the University of Connecticut in 2006. He has been the photographer for Rugmark, a foundation working to end illegal child labor in the carpet industry and to offer educational opportunities to children in South Asia . Additionally, Romano created the mural and poster for the Council on Foreign Relations announcing their universal education campaign. Other organizations that have used his work include Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Free the Slaves, The International Labor Organization, Stop the Traffik, The Hunger Project, International Labor Rights Forum, The Farm Labor Organizing Committee and Antislavery International . His work has appeared in such publications as The Ford Foundation Quarterly, The Stanford Review, Scholastic, and UConn Magazine, and has been seen on billboards and posters around the world. Romano has appeared as a guest on Nightline with Ted Koppel as well as Newsnight with Aaron Brown .

As an advocate for and an authority on children's and human rights, Romano has appeared at many forums, schools and universities. He gave the Frank Porter Graham Lecture at the Johnson Center for Academic Excellence, University of North Carolina, and the Gene and Georgia Mittelman Distinguished Lecture in the Arts at the University of Connecticut . In 2007 he was invited to give the plenary speech at the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs annual conference in Coeur d'Alene. He has also lectured at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Oak Institute for International Human Rights at Colby College .

As an educator, Romano has taught graduate level courses at both New York University and Columbia University, where he continues his membership in the Columbia University Seminar on Globalization, Labor and Popular Struggles.

Romano is currently working on a feature documentary on child migrant laborers in the United States entitled La Cosecha ( The Harvest ), set for release in 2010, for which he won the Shine Global Award and another feature documentary on trafficking in Western Africa based on his reporting from the Ivory Coast and Mali . The most current information regarding Mr. Romano's activities and career can be found on his website

From the guide to the Robin Romano Papers, 1998-2010, (Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries)

U. Roberto Romano (Robin) is a photographer, filmmaker and human rights educator. The son of the artist and Works Progress Administration (WPA) muralist Umberto Romano, Robin Romano was born in New York where he attended the Lycee Francais, Allen Stevenson School and Horace Mann High School. Mr. Romano graduated from Amherst College as an Interdisciplinary Scholar in 1980.

Romano began his career in documentaries as a producer and cameraman for Les Productions de Sagittaire in Montreal, where he worked on several series including 5 Defis and L'Oeil de L'Aigle .

His film projects include Death of a Slave Boy, a two-hour special shot in Pakistan for European broadcast, Globalization and Human Rights hosted by Charlayne Hunter Gault for PBS, Stolen Childhoods, the first theatrically released feature documentary on global child labor, The Dark Side of Chocolate, a feature documentary on trafficking in Western Africa, and The Harvest/La Cosecha, a feature documentary on child migrant laborers in the United States for which he won the Shine Global Award. He was also a contributor to the NPR and BBC specials on slavery in the Ivory Coast and has contributed to films as diverse as In Debt We Trust and Darfur Now .

As a still photograph, his exhibition "Stolen Childhoods: the Global Plague of Child Labor," was on view at the William Benton Museum of Fine Art at the University of Connecticut in 2006. He has been the photographer for Rugmark, a foundation working to end illegal child labor in the carpet industry and to offer educational opportunities to children in South Asia . Additionally, Romano created the mural and poster for the Council on Foreign Relations announcing their universal education campaign. Other organizations that have used his work include Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Free the Slaves, The International Labor Organization, Stop the Traffik, The Hunger Project, International Labor Rights Forum, The Farm Labor Organizing Committee and Antislavery International . His work has appeared in such publications as The Ford Foundation Quarterly, The Stanford Review, Scholastic, and UConn Magazine, and has been seen on billboards and posters around the world. Romano has appeared as a guest on Nightline with Ted Koppel as well as Newsnight with Aaron Brown .

As an advocate for and an authority on children's and human rights, Romano has appeared at many forums, schools and universities. He gave the Frank Porter Graham Lecture at the Johnson Center for Academic Excellence, University of North Carolina, and the Gene and Georgia Mittelman Distinguished Lecture in the Arts at the University of Connecticut . In 2007 he was invited to give the plenary speech at the Association of Farmworker Opportunity Programs annual conference in Coeur d'Alene. He has also lectured at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Oak Institute for International Human Rights at Colby College .

As an educator, Romano has taught graduate level courses at both New York University and Columbia University, where he continues his membership in the Columbia University Seminar on Globalization, Labor and Popular Struggles.

The most current information regarding Mr. Romano's activities and career can be found on his website

From the guide to the U. Roberto (Robin) Romano Papers, Bulk, 1996-2006, 1972-2011, (Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf U. Roberto (Robin) Romano Papers, Bulk, 1996-2006, 1972-2011 Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.
creatorOf Robin Romano Papers, 1998-2010 Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.
Role Title Holding Repository
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associatedWith International Monetary Fund corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Human rights
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Birth 1958

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