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6 Kids Speak Out Against Hair Discrimination [nytimes.com]

By Charley Locke, Photo: Djeneba Aduayom/The New York Times, The New York Times, April 22, 2022 One day last spring, Jett Hawkins, 5, asked his mom to braid his hair for him. He loved the way it looked: “I was so proud and happy,” says Jett, who lives in Chicago. But when he got to school, his mother says, an administrator called her and told her that his hairstyle had broken a school policy that banned students from wearing braids, locs and twists. Jett is not the only kid who has been...

Global Resiliency Accelerator to Meet

The Global Resiliency Accelerator co-founded in 2020 by Dr. Warren Larkin of the UK and Becky Haas of the US will be meeting on May 17. Information on this upcoming event and how to register are provided below. Becoming a Trauma Informed organization or system: Reflections on the successes and challenges of implementation About this event Please join us for the fourth Global Resiliency Accelerator event on Tuesday 17th May (5pm - 7pm GMT/ 12pm - 2pm EST) Format: Presentation by Dr Warren...

Cherokee Nation Can Gather Sacred Plants on National Park Land [nytimes.com]

By Alyssa Lukpat, Photo: Andre Seale/VW PICS/Universal Images Group/Getty Images, The New York Times, April 27, 2022 For generations, the Cherokee had gathered plants along the Buffalo River in Arkansas. The flora could be used to make a wide variety of things: blow guns, baskets, medicine and even ganatsi, a hickory nut soup. Then, in 1972, the National Park Service took over the river and made it illegal to remove plants there without permission from the authorities. The move cut off a...

Companies Can't Self-Regulate Their Way To Inclusive Capitalism (with Katie Bach) [pitchforkeconomics.com]

By Nick Hanauer, Pitchfork Economics, April 26, 2022 In 2019, a group of business leaders signed a high-profile pledge promising that they would voluntarily move toward a more inclusive stakeholder-focused version of capitalism. But throughout the pandemic, those same companies reported record profits while workers were left behind. Brookings Institute Senior Fellow Katie Bach walks us through her new report examining the pandemic labor practices of 22 companies, spanning nearly every...

Why Being Anti-Science Is Now Part Of Many Rural Americans’ Identity [fivethirtyeight.com]

By Monica Potts, Photo: Eric Lee/Bloomberg/Getty Images, FiveThirtyEight, April 25, 2022 By September 2021, the scientists and staffers at the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission had gathered enough data to know that the trees in its green-tree reservoirs — a type of hardwood wetland ecosystem — were dying. At Hurricane Lake, a wildlife management area of 17,000 acres , the level of severe illness and death in the timber population was up to 42 percent, especially for certain species of oak,...

California's massive new experiment will change how vulnerable patients get care. Will it work? [centerforhealthjournalism.org]

By Giles Bruce, Photo: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images, Center for Health Journalism, April 25, 2022 California is embarking on a potentially transformative shift in the way it delivers health care, using its Medicaid program to help meet the social needs of many of its most vulnerable residents. Under the CalAIM initiative, $6 billion will be spent over the next five years to address the social forces shaping health, in such unique ways as paying for housing, cleaning up asthma triggers in the...

A Strategy for Coping with the Hard Parts of Life

The hard parts of life happen every day. Sometimes everything feels like a hard part — especially for trauma survivors. Being in traffic Arguing with partner Running late A dog growling Rising gas prices A certain smell Someone’s tone of voice An interaction that feels uncomfortable The news / war / lack of safety / COVID The list goes on… Hard parts could be anything, really. And finding a healthy coping strategy can be challenging. For people without trauma in their history, they know that...

Register now for Building the Movement through Policy and Advocacy — Friday, April 29, 2022 - 1pm-5 pm ET

Please register now at this link to reserve your spot. You’re invited to join fellow PACEs science activists for Building the Movement through Policy and Advocacy , the last of nine remarkable workshops featured in the series, “ Building a National Movement to Prevent Trauma and Foster Resilience ”. Policy and advocacy best practices are among the topics to be covered on Friday, April 28 from 1pm. - 5 p.m. ET; 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. PT. Here is an agenda and our list of subject matter experts who...

How stress can damage your brain and body [washingtonpost.com]

By Stacey Colino, Photo: iStock, The Washington Post, April 26, 2022 We all know what stress feels like physically — though the symptoms vary by person. Some people experience shakiness or a racing heart, while others develop muscle tension, headaches or stomach aches. But what we might not realize is that our physiological responses to life’s stresses and strains can have deeper, less obvious, repercussions for just about every organ and system in the body. “I think people really...

Harvard Creates Fund to Redress Its Ties to Slavery [nytimes.com]

By Anemona Hartocollis, Photo: Kayana Szymczak/The New York Times, The New York Times, April 26, 2022 Harvard University is committing $100 million to study and redress its ties to slavery, the university’s president announced Tuesday, and with that money will create an endowed “Legacy of Slavery Fund,” which will continue researching and memorializing that history, working with descendants of Black and Native American people enslaved at Harvard, as well as their broader communities. With...

$100 Million to Cut the Time Tax [theatlantic.com]

By Annie Lowry, Illustration: Getty/The Atlantic, The Atlantic, April 25, 2022 A mother in Louisiana is struggling to pay her bills and decides to apply for Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, better known as food stamps. She starts to fill out the state’s 26-page, 8,350-word application . Page one instructs her to distinguish between SNAP and two other programs, the Family Independence Temporary Assistance Program and the Kinship Care Subsidy Program, providing a...

A barrage of assault, racism and rape jokes: my nightmare trip into the metaverse [theguardian.com]

By Yinka Bokinni, Photo: Channel 4, The Guardian, April 25, 2022 B efore I went into the metaverse, I’d read a few articles on it and people didn’t have the nicest things to say. But I wanted to see if that was true, or whether people were just trying to find negativity. I’m a heavy user of social media, so a 3D virtual space where you can interact with other people – where artists are doing concerts and fashion houses are doing shows? That’s exciting to me! But within the first 10 minutes...

Biden will commute or pardon sentences of 78 non-violent people. Here are a few to know [cnn.com]

By Donald Judd, Photo: Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images, CNN Politics, April 26, 2022 President Joe Biden will mark "Second Chance Month" at the White House on Tuesday, commuting the sentences of 75 people serving time for nonviolent drug offenses, issuing full pardons for three individuals who the administration says have worked toward rehabilitation and unveiling new actions aimed at easing the transition back to normal life for the formerly incarcerated. "America is a nation of...

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