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The risk is greatest among Black women in states with abortion bans, according to a new report.
The risk is greatest among Black women in states with abortion bans, according to a new report.
In the suburbs of Delhi, girls who have survived violence find inspiration in the indomitable spirit of artist-activists like Frida Kahlo and engage with self-portraiture as a means of building self-confidence.
In many parts of Africa, accessing quality health care has long been a daunting challenge, especially for those in remote or hard-to-reach areas. Yet, a technological transformation is underway, reshaping…
In a new report yesterday on Alabama’s prison crisis, AL.com gave voice to the often-ignored perspectives of families who have lost loved ones to Alabama’s violent and dangerous prisons and asked what many Alabamians are wondering—-why has not much changed? Reporter Ivana Hrynkiw obtained letters that family members wrote to Alabama’s Joint Prison Oversight Committee to plead for help and information about what happened to their loved ones. “All share stories of loved ones dying in Alabama’s prison system,” she wrote, “and all come from families demanding help and change.” Through the lens of personal stories from Alabamians whose loved ones have died in our state prisons, the report traces the problems in Alabama’s prisons and the State’s failure to make even the “easy fixes.” “The state prisons are overcrowded and understaffed, while some of the buildings are falling apart. Too many inmates are raped and killed, drugs are readily available, and life expectancy falls at the entrance,” AL.com reported. “And the federal government, under multiple presidents, said all of this makes Alabama prisons unconstitutional in their cruelty.” Following its extensive investigation into Alabama’s prisons for men, the U.S. Justice Department in 2019 and 2020 made recommendations to improve conditions, including a number of doable, affordable solutions that could have been implemented immediately—things like fixing broken locks. But federal prosecutors reported at the end of 2020 that Alabama “has not made this easy fix,” leading the Justice Department to file a lawsuit that is set for trial next spring. “There’s a cancer in the system” Instead of implementing solutions to these problems, Alabama has committed more than $1 billion to build just one new prison, AL.com reported. But federal prosecutors have made clear that “new facilities alone will not resolve the contributing factors to the overall unconstitutional condition of ADOC…
A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order in the case, one of many contesting the Trump administration’s crackdown on international students.
At Yemen Relief and Reconstruction Foundation (YRRF), we are on the front lines of one of the world’s most urgent health crises. In a country where nearly 80 percent of…
To create a world without hunger, we need to invest in holistic solutions that support people to feel empowered to overcome their situation and drive change in their communities. Hunger…
“What started out as a natural disaster became a man-made disaster.” This is how President Obama described Hurricane Katrina, referring to both the disparate and devastating impacts on New Orleans’ Black community, and the historical and structural inequity that created the conditions for…
The move will restore $112 million for 3-K, the city’s free preschool program for 3-year-olds, and $55 million to help address a chronic shortage of seats for preschool children with disabilities.
Policy recommendations to support improved economic outcomes for single mothers and their children across the United States.
Odemwingie & Vranek: Our work in Wisconsin and New York found assessment overload is keeping students and teachers from getting the data they need.
In these perilous times, how can social justice philanthropy show up and be effective? Understandably, the focus tends to be on grantmaking. But philanthropy’s power isn’t limited to grantmaking. Its financial clout,…
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