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  • How Southern organizers are leading the movement to end money bail

    The organization Southerners on New Ground is helping reform the criminal justice system in the south. Activists won a small victory in Atlanta, where the mayor and city council approved a resolution that replaced cash bonds with signature bonds for misdemeanor offenses. They also raised money to help people pay their cash bails as part of a larger event called the National Bail Out collective, which bailed out 147 Black women in 26 cities this year.

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  • An Unusual Way to Rescue a City From Blight—Bees

    Detroit Hives has a twofold mission of reducing urban blight and protecting bees. The nonprofit organization purchases low-cost vacant lots and transforms them into farms for bee hives. Its creative partnerships with local businesses have provided honey for restaurants and flowerbeds to the farm, all while making Detroit more beautiful.

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  • The All-Woman Team Building and Selling Toilets in Cambodia

    To combat potentially fatal hygiene practices, women in Cambodia have learned how to build and sell toilets, breaking into a historically male-dominated field. The small businesses have resulted in hundreds of sales with improves the livelihoods for both the buyer and seller.

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  • Everyone is welcome: the only gay hangout in the Arab world

    From giving refuge to offering makeup sessions, Helem is an umbrella for some of Lebanon’s most marginalised people

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  • A phoenix rising from the asbestos

    A town once plagued by a reputation of being an asbestos Superfund site as well as having been hit by the timber wars, Libby, Montana is back on the map. Lincoln County commissioner, Mark Peck of Libby, the county seat, decided to make it a priority to fix the negative connotation surrounding the town and partnered with a public relations firm to rebrand the city through the use of the community's unique story of rising from asbestos.

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  • Salvar al Riachuelo: las lecciones que dejó el saneamiento del Rin y de otros ríos contaminados

    El río Matanza-Riachuelo, en la provincia argentina de Buenos Aires, es de los más contaminados del país. A pesar de un plan aprobado en 2008 para sanearlo, la cuenca se ve contaminada indiscriminadamente por basura, aguas sucias domiciliares y desechos industriales. Este reportaje se asoma a cómo España limpió el río de Bilbao y cómo seis países de Europa limpiaron el río Rin, para quitarle las excusas a una suerte de negligencia y división política que ha impedido que el río argentino esté limpio.

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  • Estonia To Become The World's First Free Public Transport Nation

    Free public transport is so popular and cost-effective in Estonia’s capital of Tallinn that the country wants to scale the idea nationwide. Public official Allan Alaküla shares insights for cities looking to experiment with similar programs.

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  • As US cities re-examine bail, Muslims launch a fund at Ramadan to pay it

    Islamic organizations focused on prison reform are asking the observant to make their zakat—a charitable donation made during Ramadan—go towards helping to pay the bail of an incarcerated Muslims. Through this push, these organizations are also raising awareness about the impact of cash bail and inequities in the prison system.

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  • The only scheme proven to end poverty – but too bespoke to scale?

    An intensive, long-term approach to solving poverty, piloted by an NGO in Bangladesh, has shown serious promise since its start in 2002. However, as the program is piloted in countries across the world, questions about how to emulate results while keeping costs down have kept the program from being effectively scaled.

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  • Adaptation to Global Water Shortages

    Two very different part of the world – California’s Central Valley and Western Morocco – are learning to adapt to water shortages. In the Central Valley, finding and treating water in a notoriously drought-ridden state has been challenging, but a series of connected water districts experimenting with processes like reverse osmosis has showed promise. Halfway across the world, they’ve been using fog collection as a non-traditional method of capturing water so that the rural villages in Morocco can have access to water after decades of water shortages.

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