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

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  • Vyama vya pesa mashinani wakati wa Corona

    Ili kujiepusha na kubebewa vitu kwa kushindwa kulipa mkopo na riba za juu za benki na mifumo zingine rasmi za mkopo, wanawake wajasiria mali, wamejiunga na vyama vya nyanjani ambazo zinawasaidia kupata pesa za kuendeleza biashara zao wakati wa corona. Kupitia vikundi hivyo vya kuwekeza na kukopesha, wanachama wanatoa pesa kiasi flani kwa mwezi au kwa siku ambazo zinawasaidia kuimarisha biashara zao kupitia pesa za akiba na mikopo zisizokuwa na riba.

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  • Areas hard hit by B.C. drought now the target of bottled water corporations

    The Merville Water Guardians, the Canadian Freshwater Alliance, and K’ómoks First Nation successfully prevented rezoning that would allow water to be drawn from shared aquifers, bottled, and sold for private profits. Protests at District board meetings, letter writing campaigns, petitions, and door-to-door campaigning led the District board to vote against the rezoning and sign an historic agreement to collaboratively manage and conserve water with the K’ómoks First Nation.

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  • These Americans Are Just Going Around in Circles. It Helps the Climate.

    America's capital of the traffic roundabout is Carmel, Indiana, a city of 102,000 people and 140 roundabouts. The city boasts exceptionally low rates of traffic deaths and injury crashes. Studies of roundabout use elsewhere show benefits as well in pedestrian and bicycle safety, and in cutting environmentally harmful emissions because traditional intersections cause much longer idling times. Not all drivers like them, but Carmel long ago overcame initial qualms when the longtime mayor put into practice the traffic idea he admired when he was a university student in England.

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  • Slow But Steady Progress: Inside Nigeria's Effort To End Open Defecation

    In 2012, the federal government and the United Nations created the Rural Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion in Nigeria (RUSHPIN). Through this partnership, they were able to engage community leaders, get them to mobilize, and organize community meetings. Six years later hundreds of communities gained an "Open Defecation Free" status, going from 47 million to 38.4 million people who engage in open defecation.

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  • Denver's program to house people who were homeless was so successful, the federal government is offering millions more to expand it

    A housing first approach is keeping people housed and off the streets of Denver. The success of the program has brought in an offer of $6 million in federal grants if a similar decrease in Medicare and Medicaid billings can be achieved. Providing stable housing minimizes the cost incurred by the government for multiple services: medical, emergency, criminal justice system, and detox centers.

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  • Argentinien: Ein Radiosender von Verrückten

    Die Patienten einer Psychiatrie in Buenos Aires betreiben einen einzigartigen Radiosender. Mit ihren Berichten und Erzählungen aus ihrem Alltag erreichen sie bis zu sieben Millionen Menschen – und tragen so dazu bei, dass psychische Erkrankungen weniger dämonisiert werden.

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  • New York City Is Building a Wall of Oysters to Fend Off Floods

    From New York City to Texas, localities are using oysters to protect themselves from flooding. They are dropping oysters along the coast for baby oysters to grown on, ultimately leading to the creation of wall-like reefs. The oyster reefs mitigate the blow of big waves during hurricanes. A study showed that reef-protected areas dissipated waves and had 54% less erosion. Building oyster reefs form part of a larger movement known as "green infrastructure" to manage the effects of climate change, as opposed to building concrete infrastructure like sea walls and dikes.

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  • Violences conjugales : faire changer les hommes, mode d'emploi

    Accompagnement psychologique et social, éducation... Le suivi des hommes auteurs de violences conjugales s'organise en France et permet de limiter la récidive.

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  • Queering Climate Activism

    Queer activists and organizers are centering their identity in the environmental justice movement. They form part of a growing movement that doesn't exclude their queer identity in the fight against climate change. Some examples of this work include "Queer Nature," a community where queer people can reconnect with nature. Another example is the "Queer Ecojustice Project," which addresses how queer perspectives were ignored by the environmental movement. This article presents several other examples of the intersection of queer identity with the environmental movement.

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  • Green Jobs Offer Ex-Offenders a Career Path after Prison

    At Florida's Everglades Correctional Institution, incarcerated men teach a course offered through a college correspondence school that can lead to certification to work as a wastewater treatment plant operator, a well-paying green-industry job in high demand. An incarcerated journalist tells the story of how demanding lessons in chemistry, microbiology, and algebra prepare students for the state certification exam. Hundreds have taken the course and many have found jobs in the industry after prison, although many employers remain reluctant to hire people with felony records.

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