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

Search Results

You searched for: -

There are 17083 results  for your search.  View and Refine Your Search Terms

  • A Job for Elves

    The coronavirus pandemic has invigorated organizations working in the Baltics to counter disinformation, particularly from Russia, by flagging suspicious accounts, fake news, and hate speech. For example, Covid-19 led hundreds of Lithuanian medics to a group called the Elves to flag disinformation about the virus and related government responses. The groups partner with and receive funding from local and international sources, including Facebook and the Google News Innovation Fund. Some question whether highlighting stories, websites, and user accounts as fake might actually help to disseminate them further.

    Read More

  • How Indie Theaters Are Reimagining The Moviegoing Experience

    Art house independent movie theaters across the U.S. have joined with distributors to create virtual cinemas. After shutting their doors due to the Covid-19 pandemic, patrons can rent first-run indie films on local theaters’ websites and the proceeds are split evenly between the theater and the distributor. Combined with grants and donations, these purchases are helping indie theaters stay afloat during the shutdown. However, independent theaters that don’t primarily show art-house movies are not receiving the same benefits and are struggling to stay in business.

    Read More

  • This city disbanded its police department 7 years ago. Here's what happened next

    Camden, New Jersey, is far smaller and more racially diverse than Minneapolis, but its decision to dissolve and reconstitute its police department may be the most apt case study if the larger city follows through on plans to reboot its policing. Camden decided in 2012 its department was beyond fixing, and its crime too severe to accept the status quo. A new countywide force has embraced community-oriented policing, de-escalation tactics, and limits on the use of force. Violence has dropped by nearly half and public support is up, although Camden's continuing problems also serve as a warning for Minneapolis.

    Read More

  • Europe offers creative ways to fight domestic violence during Covid-19. Why not bring them to Philadelphia?

    Philadelphia’s domestic violence shelters filled during the pandemic, emergency funding ran dry, and officials offered victims little recourse if they were trapped at home with their abusers. These gaps in protection could be remedied by copying what has been done in Spain and France, where pharmacists were enlisted to turn coded language – a request for a particular kind of mask – into a call for help, and pop-up counseling centers at supermarkets and funding for emergency shelter and counseling organizations expanded to keep pace with a spike in incidents.

    Read More

  • Fans Without Football

    Europe’s hardcore football fans, deprived of the communal experience of watching their sport in raucous stadium crowds during the pandemic, redirected their energies toward public service projects to help communities cope with the virus. The oft-maligned “ultra” movement, blamed for the COVID-19 outbreak that became the epicenter of Europe’s virus crisis, has made hospital donations, collected food bank donations and delivered food to shut-ins, and made personal protective equipment. The philanthropy has spread across the continent to demonstrate the movement's ability to act responsibly.

    Read More

  • Plan B : Comment rendre une ville (vraiment) cyclable

    En temps de pandémie, le vélo permet une circulation présentant moins de risque pour la transmission du virus. De nombreuses villes se mettent à développer des infrastructures cyclables. Celles-ci ne sont pas toujours idéales pour les cyclistes et autres acteurs de la mobilité urbaine, mais certaines pratiques apportent des bénéfices.

    Read More

  • Teto e renda: ela criou projeto para regularizar moradias em favelas do Rio e ajudou a garantir os R$ 600 em meio à pandemia

    A reportagem é a história de uma mulher que ajuda moradores das favelas do Rio de Janeiro a ter o documento das próprias casas. Durante a pandemia, ela também ajudou as pessoas em vulnerabilidade a regularizarem os documentos para receberem o auxílio concedido pelo governo.

    Read More

  • El Consorcio Latino de Madison da un paso al frente para ofrecer una red de apoyo y ayuda económica a familias indocumentadas

    Al inicio de la pandemia causada por el COVID-19, muchos migrantes indocumentados en Wisconsin no podía acceder a fondos públicos de alivio. Una red emergente de organizaciones que brindan efectivo a familias migrantes está encontrando una vía nueva, aunque los altos niveles de contagio en esta población siguen siendo un gran reto.

    Read More

  • The pandemic forced a Milwaukee theater company to go virtual. Now its students with disabilities are thriving.

    Virtual classes have become an unexpected advantage for children with autism and other sensory processing disorders. In-person acting classes can make some children with these disabilities uncomfortable and unable to reap the full benefits but students of virtual acting classes have been willing and able to take on new experiences in the comfort of their homes, allowing them to flourish in a way that is new to them and their families. Additionally, students with physical disabilities are also able to take part without the extra hurdles of transportation.

    Read More

  • Abuelos que ya no están solos

    Este reportaje trata de Plan Buen Vecino, una iniciativa civil que reparte 1.000 comidas a 200 adultos mayores cada semana, en medio de la pandemia del COVID-19. El plan reúne esfuerzos de 12 voluntarios, empresas y ayudas varias para dar apoyo vital a una población cuyos familiares se exiliaron de Venezuela. Este esfuerzo es replicable en otros países, pero necesita la voluntad y el trabajo de personas solidarias.

    Read More