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  • Incarcerated Women Are Punished for Their Trauma With Solitary Confinement

    Like other prisons, Minnesota's Shakopee Correctional Facility says it uses solitary confinement as punishment for violence or other misbehavior by incarcerated people, to provide safety, or to isolate people with mental illness. But interviews with 51 women who were sent to solitary, in this story by a fellow incarcerated woman, show how common the punishment is for trivial offenses. Innocent touching is deemed inappropriate sexual activity, or women act out over the trauma they have suffered. Then they are confined in conditions that only make their emotional state worse.

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  • They Made a Revolutionary System to Protect People With Developmental Disabilities. Now It's Falling Apart.

    In Arizona, state officials recruited individuals for volunteer committees to have oversight of the state Division of Developmental Disabilities that was responsible for caring for those with developmental disabilities. Although the program was initially successful and "helped Arizona earn its reputation as one of the best states in the country for the care of people with developmental and intellectual disabilities," in recent years, a series of resignations and increased workload have left some of the panels "barely functioning."

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  • The Happy Little Nursing Homes Outsmarting Covid-19

    An alternative model to nursing homes is offering an innovative option that provides a comfortable, warm, and inviting environment to residents while also minimizing the spread of coronavirus. Green House Project (GHP) began as the brainchild of Dr. Bill Thomas, who sought to “humanize” nursing homes by creating home-based care for small groups of senior citizens. GHP has scaled the idea to 32 states by providing training to senior living providers on how to recreate the environment and resources necessary to help elders thrive and feel at home.

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  • Plans Tweaked For Campus Return

    Five New Haven universities and colleges are taking different approaches to re-opening their campuses. Administration at the University of New Haven is ramping up Covid testing to test 20% of in-person students weekly, an increase from as little as 5% before, along with adding a 20-minute break between classes to decrease crowd densities during passing periods. Other campuses, like Yale, are skipping the spring break period and only allow around 75% of its student population to live on-campus.

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  • How a refugee-run factory is helping the Netherlands meet its need for face masks

    Rather than import masks from elsewhere, an organization in the Netherlands set up a face-mask factory, and then hired "people with a refugee background to make surgical face masks." According to the project spokesperson, "The project not only responded to the deficit of masks in Dutch healthcare, but also provides people with a refugee background with work experience and knowledge about the labour market in the Netherlands."

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  • Fighting COVID-19 with Ancestral Wisdom in the Amazon

    The Siekopai people have used plants and herbal remedies to treat diseases for years. As the COVID-19 pandemic entered their community, they turned to the ancient medicine of their ancestors to help combat symptoms of the virus and boost the immune system.

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  • Agroecologia é aposta para reverter cenários de degradação ambiental na Amazônia

    A reportagem é sobre atividades agroecológicas que promovem segurança alimentar, renda financeira e proteção à floresta amazônica, no Acre. Desde 1989, 1 milhão de árvores frutíferas de mais de 150 espécies e de madeira de lei foram plantadas na aldeia Apiwtxa.

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  • Lutte contre le réchauffement climatique : comment "décarboner" les usines ?

    Le secteur de l'industrie représente 20% des émissions de gaz à effet de serre de la France. Mais comment décarboner un outil industriel ? Une usine agroalimentaire de l'Aisne a déjà réussi à réduire sa consommation d'énergie fossile (du gaz) de 10 % et une économie d'énergie chiffrée à 250.000 euros par an, grâce au recyclage de la chaleur fatale des fumées. Une transition en partie soutenue par des aides publiques.

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  • The Cleveland Hostel opens its doors to help homeless

    Pandemic shutdowns have led to empty beds at the Cleveland Hostel which it has offered to local homeless shelters to help lighten their load. Although the hostel only offers several dozen beds, it’s filling a critical need in the community at a time when the coronavirus is expected to lead to higher rates of homelessness.

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  • Des hôtels vides accueillent des migrantes

    L’association Basiliade a eu l’idée de reconvertir des hôtels vides en centres d’hébergement social. Elle a nommé l'un d'entre eux la "Maison des Fées". 36 femmes exilées sont hébergées avec leurs bébés. Elles bénéficient d'une solution de garde pour leurs enfants, d'un soutien du personnel de l'hôtel et de travailleurs sociaux.

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