Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • The urine revolution: how recycling pee could help to save the world

    Companies and research initiatives around the world are developing and testing new toilets that can collect human urine and turn it into fertilizer. These urine diversion toilets have been implemented in places like South Africa with mixed results. However, researchers in Sweden are using portable toilets to gather the urine, dry it into fertilizer pellets that are then used to grow barley for beer. This work could show how to implement these kinds of toilets on a large scale.

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  • California offers graduation honor to encourage active civic engagement

    The State Seal of Civic Engagement, which is affixed to high school diplomas, recognizes student civic participation. The program is intended to increase civic participation among youth and strengthen civics curriculum by making the learning more active instead of passive. Criteria for what qualifies for the seal varies and is meant to be inclusive and accessible. It ranges from high-level demonstrated knowledge in civics courses to participation in actual civic engagement projects. Several districts have partnered with a nonprofit that supplies “action civics” curriculum and teacher training.

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  • Plus-Size Nigerian Ladies Fight Body-Shaming, Build Self-esteem Using Pageantry

    Miss Bold and Beautiful Nigeria Plus Size is a yearly event that brings together plus-sized women for one week, culminating in a pageant that provides a platform to celebrate larger bodies, build self-esteem, and fight body-shaming. Throughout the week the women participate in sessions on how to build self-esteem and work on their mental health and self-love. Contestants develop deep connections with each other while also competing for cash prizes in the pageant, which is broadcast nationally and on YouTube.

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  • ResQZone

    An e-waste recycling program in Minnesota aims to take old computers that normally end up in a landfill and give them to community members with income-based needs. Since the ResQZone initiative started as a partnership between a nonprofit and the county government, they’ve been able to get 420 computer systems back into public use. They also hire and train people with disabilities to do the refurbishing.

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  • Dämm- und Baumaterial aus dem Moor

    Die Wiedervernässung der Moore ist wichtig für den Schutz des Klimas. Landwirtschaftlich nutzen lassen sie sich auch dann noch: zum Beispiel für nachhaltiges Dämm-Material aus Rohrkolben.

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  • Smart irrigation saves water, improves farming practices in Rwanda's remote drought-stricken region

    New dams in Rwanda have helped residents to update their irrigation systems, which has allowed them to increase their food production and generate more income. Sometimes, there have been disputes between farmers over the management of the water resource. But, according to one farmer, “the profit from the sale of my produce, the extra income enabled me to purchase two cows, pay school fees and medical insurance for my children.”

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  • From a Fact-Finding Visit to Providing Safe Water for Sauka Community

    The international organization Riders for Health provided an electric generator to a community in Nigeria to power their water pump and get them access to clean drinking water.

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  • Off the coast of Italy, a radical approach to battling illegal fishing: a seafloor sculpture museum

    An unlikely sculpture museum is helping to battle illegal fishing off the coast of Italy, but this one museum you'll have to dive to see. Over 39 sculptures make up this underwater exhibit and serve as a physical barrier to seafloor trawling.

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  • The Town That QAnon Nearly Swallowed

    The Sequim Good Governance League (SGGL) formed in response to right-wing agitators taking over positions of power and spreading misinformation. SGGL recruited progressive and moderately conservative candidates who successfully defeated incumbents with the help of dozens of volunteers they trained. Volunteers worked around the clock, sent out emails, put up signs around the town, and used their most effective tool: having one-on-one conversations with other residents. SGGL-backed candidates now hold the majority of government offices.

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  • More youths are becoming home caregivers. Experts say they need more help and support

    Programs like the American Association of Caregiving Youth (AACY) advocate for and provide support to youth caregivers who are responsible for caring for sick, elderly, or adults with disabilities at home. AACY’s Youth Caregiver Project provides support in school and at home by offering customized services based on each student’s needs, including tutoring, counseling and even connections to food resources or school supplies. AACY serves about 600 students in 30 schools each year. Since the Youth Caregiver Project began in the late 1990s, about 2,000 youth have completed the program.

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