Mandela’s legacy and why it resonates today more than ever – Media Update

Great people come and go out of this world, but only a few leave behind legacies that resonate for decades.

In the wake of George Floyd's murder, the subsequent protests for racial justice across the world and the call for diversity and inclusion of Black people and people of colour, Mandela's values and personal ideals are as relevant today as they were over five decades ago.

Mandela was at the forefront of boldly pushing for the economic and societal empowerment of the marginalised, while embodying the living example of co-existence working with people of different races, religions and social classes. He worked towards a common goal.

This message of building bridges resonates with us at the Africa Channel. We seek to build bridges between Africa and the world by reinforcing the continent's positive narratives and highlighting the diverse scope of contemporary Africa from across the continent.

Through diverse content and programming, Africans and Africans in the diaspora are seen and heard in ways that counteract monolithic and negative narratives, leading to greater understanding, more positive awareness and greater collaborations.

Our contribution to economic empowerment within our sector is to provide opportunities for Black content creators to amplify and monetise their work. In addition, by investing in developing the capabilities of the many talented African creatives on the continent and in the diaspora, we will enable them to share more diverse stories that facilitate understanding and create deeper dialogue and connections.

Beyond the symbolism of the fight against inequality as seen in the recent protests, solidarity marches and hashtag campaigns we believe that direct action needs to be taken by brands, organisations and institutions to continue Madiba's march towards impactful and lasting change.

Organisations and global influencers need to move from advocating for social justice and equality to direct investment and commitment to enforce diversity. This is by ensuring bold action and creating opportunities at all levels across all sectors.

Today more than ever, as the world reflects on Madiba's lasting legacy, we should all be inspired to make a renewed commitment to change and stand in solidarity with those demanding justice, equal opportunities and economic empowerment for all around the world.

Finally, as we celebrate the birthday of one of Africa's greatest leaders, we also mourn the loss of Zindzi Mandela, another icon of positive change.

For more information, visit http://www.theafricachannel.com. You can also follow the Africa Channel on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.

Nelson Mandela Day 2020 The Africa Channel 2020 Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela Madiba's legacy Message of equality Media statements about Mandela Day 2020

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Security and Stability: The kenya-UK partnership – Capital FM Kenya

In 1934, American psychologist Abraham Maslow published his hierarchy of needs. During his lifetime he lived through the Great War, the Spanish Influenza, which killed roughly 50 million people globally, the crash of stock markets in 1929, the Great Depression and a tide of global populism. Five years after his publication, the Second World War began.

The base of Maslows pyramid of needs set out the basic requirements that we all need as a minimum before you think about psychological needs. In 1934 those basic needs were not met, for many they are not being met now: food, water, warmth as essentials, followed closely by security and safety.

COVID-19 is, initially, a health issue. But the economic and security effects directly impacting on the ability to meet those basic needs may be even more dangerous and wide-reaching than the horrific toll of the virus itself. During crises, existing inequalities are exacerbated. We see people doing amazing things, but a minority also do horrific things to each other.

This outbreak layered with concerns about repeated flooding and the return of locusts has been no different. Globally, criminals are changing tactics, capitalising on vulnerabilities exacerbated by this virus from money scams and corrupt practices, to drug smuggling and human trafficking, to the increase in domestic abuse, including to children.

Our partnership with Kenya has five pillars: Sustainable Development; Security and Stability; Mutual Prosperity; Climate Change and People-People links. Three of these cover the basic needs under Maslows Hierarchy, and Security and Stability is tackling poor behaviours.

As we mark Armed Forces Week, our defence partnership is at the heart of this pillar. Despite the challenges posed by COVID-19, there has been no let-up in working with Kenya, our defence partner of choice in East Africa. Our British Army Training Unit Kenya (BATUK) continues to support local communities in Isiolo, Laikipia and Samburu, distributing food supplies, repairing roads, and providing vital resources such as 5,000 litre water tanks . It is all part of KES 5.5 billion contribution to the local economy since 2016.

We are also delivering virtual mentoring , both for Kenyas anti-corruption Multi-Agency Taskforce, and for the Counter IED Wing at the Humanitarian Peace Support School in Nairobi continuing to build capability whilst also social distancing.

On Serious and Organised Crime, British experts, in tandemwith the Directorate of Criminal Investigations in Kenya, are advisingthe public to be more aware as criminals adapt their tactics in the face of COVID-19. We are sharing intelligence to counter these threats. Together with Interpol and the Government weve translated guidelines into Swahili on good practice for law enforcement officials during COVID-19.

Our joint focus on womens empowerment remains more vital to a secure future than ever. One in three women will experience gender-based violence in their lifetime as someone who has experienced this, I know the toll first hand. Domestic violence has reportedly tripled in countries practicing social distancing. The UK is acting now, puttingwomen and girls rights at the heart of our response. Our partners, Womens Empowerment Link, have worked with the police to develop and rollout guidelines for officers to better support domestic violence victims and bring perpetrators to justice.

In Kenya, the national toll-free line 1195 for reporting incidences of domestic violence has seen a threefold increase in cases. We cannot allow the virus to break down our society, so were working alongside the Kenyan government, to support the national toll-free line and mobile app to provide a lifeline to vulnerable women and girls by connecting them to vital services.

While children spend more time at home, Kenyas Child Protection Unit has seen an increase in digital threats. So we continue to prioritise protecting them from predators and traffickers who operate online. With oursupport, the National Police Services Anti-Human Trafficking and Child Protection Units in Nairobi and Mombasa are safeguarding vulnerable children including through use of the toll free reporting number116.

I need not go through the horrors violent extremists have wreaked on Kenya and over the last decade; Kenyans know this all too well.While we are unitingagainst the virus, we cannot forget our shared aims of tackling insecurity and extremism. We will continue to work in partnership with Kenya on regional security countering Al Shabaab is a priority. Extremists will be looking to sow seeds of discontent, including amongst those who have lost their jobs because of pandemic restrictions. We have committed 2.6 billion KESover five years to work alongside government and civil society partners, supporting communities most vulnerable to violent extremism and extreme poverty, particularlyin Kenyas northern and coastal counties.

False information and conspiracy theories about COVID-19 are alsohampering the fight against the disease, increasing the likelihood of vulnerable people falling into the trap of violent extremism or falling victim to con-men and women. We have dedicated 25 million KES to challenging misinformation working through existing community-led organisations to support vulnerable communities.

Only together can we protect our neighbours, our communities and ourselves. Only together can we tackle those who exploit a terrible virus like COVID and make the situation worse for personal gain. And only together can we build a better world where basic needs, as set out by Maslow, are met for all.

British High Commissioner Jane Marriott (@JaneMarriottFCO)

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Security and Stability: The kenya-UK partnership - Capital FM Kenya

Book Review: Interrogating Womens Leadership And Empowerment By Omita Goyal – Feminism in India

6 mins read

Posted by Dr G. Uma

Book:Interrogating Womens Leadership and Empowerment

Author: Omita Goyal

Publisher: Sage Publications, 2015

The edited book titled Interrogating Womens Leadership and Empowerment has been published with the objective of tracing the process of womens empowerment and development in India. There are notable contributions at the international and national level by certain organizations, institutions, individuals and governments for womens development and empowerment. It is pertinent to trace everyones efforts and to improve historic understanding to progress as a society.

The term empowerment is a contested one. The interpretation of the term varies according to the contexts and issues. It is mostly used to define and measure womens progress in various fields. Leadership plays a crucial role in the process of empowerment in every field whether political, social and economical.

The term empowerment is a contested one. The interpretation of the term varies according to the contexts and issues. It is mostly used to define and measure womens progress in various fields. Leadership plays a crucial role in the process of empowerment in every field whether political, social and economical. Identifying, building and nurturing leadership potential among women is a noteworthy step in empowering women. This will encourage them to move from panchayats to the parliament. Once we form a critical and equitable representation of women in policy-making institutions, it will subsequently reflect in every field. Feminists researchers like Naila Kabeer, Srilatha Batliwala and Deepa Narayan have defined empowerment and have developed certain methodologies to measure the same. The issues of gender are interdisciplinary in nature. Women face hardships and difficulties irrespective of their social and economic locations. The sufferings and burdens may vary according to caste, class, education and location (rural/urban). Hence different perspectives and methodologies have to be applied and analysed in every field to understand gender issues and to know womens present condition in a particular field. In this context, the author has identified suitable research articles and brought out an edited volume by including articles from various disciplines. She has chosen articles that have strongly applied feminist research methodology.

Also read: Womens EmpowermentThe Missing Piece Of Environmental Policies

Womens movement in India has played a noteworthy role in bringing womens issues to the mainstream. It also facilitated in bringing appropriate laws to improve womens position in the society. Till Chapter 7, the significance of womens leadership in different fields/areas has been dealt with. Chapter 1, by Devaki Jain, deals with womens movement, which encouraged womens leadership and empowerment. In chapter 2, Padmini Swaminathan has brought out the significance of womens leadership in empowering grassroots people through two case studies. According to the author, the policies of the government and other institutions are instrumental in leading to womens empowerment or disempowerment. She has documented two case studies from two southern states. One study draws the conclusion that the mere distribution of welfare measures might not alter social and gender relations. According to the study, engendering development is meant to address range of issues like redistribution of resources, restructuring gender and social relations, restructuring socio-political and bureaucratic institutions. Restructuring gender and socio-political relations is a slow process unless we implement social polices with the aim of restructuring of gender and social relations.

In chapter 2, Padmini Swaminathan has brought out the significance of womens leadership in empowering grassroots people through two case studies. According to the author, the policies of the government and other institutions are instrumental in leading to womens empowerment or disempowerment.

Chapter 3 titled Women Leaders in Every Mohalla Every Village traces the history of SEWA movement and women leaders contribution, the crux of the chapter being Movements grow through their leaders and leaders are shaped by the movements. J. Devika in Chapter 4 analyses womens leadership in the context of 33.3 percent reservation of seats for women in local bodies after the enactment of 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendment Acts. The act opened up opportunities for women to exercise power in the area of development femininity in Kerala. Or else, politics is considered as masculine and patriarchal. The elected representatives in local bodies use gentle power associated with femininity. According to her study, which applies the Gentle Power theory, Dalit and upper-caste women use Gentle Power differently. The study further states that empowerment is not a linear process. There are complexities involved in the process of empowerment. This needs to be considered while applying the theoretical framework of empowerment to do research on womens issues.

Chapter 5 Labouring Intellectuals by Gopal Guru explores the impact of globalization and the introduction of new media services in the lives of dalit women. Oral tradition, that is, sharing pain and pleasure through songs, played a vital role in Dalit intellectualism and personal stamina. After television found its way into Dalit households, they started watching and discussing TV serials rather than expressing their feelings.Pushpa Sundar, in chapter 6 has discussed women in the corporate sector. The article insists the benefits of gender diversity for women empowerment in corporate sector. It has also suggested policies to increase womens percentage in the corporate sector. Karuna Chanana examined an important programme implemented by the UGC for teachers in higher education. The impact of the programme among teachers sense of empowerment was huge. There were two levels of capacity building workshops for women managers in higher education. These were analysed using case studies of the participants.

Karuna Chanana examined an important programme implemented by the UGC for teachers in higher education. The impact of the programme among teachers sense of empowerment was huge. There were two levels of capacity building workshops for women managers in higher education.

Chapter 8 titled Anatomy of Change explores the lives of two extraordinary women from the eastern and western parts of India, who had to struggle to become doctors. The existing scenario in the 19th century, entrenched patriarchy and the realisation of the need for female doctors inspired them to become doctors. In 19th century, women, except those from a few educated families, hesitated to consult male doctors. Hence, they realised the significance of female doctors to address maternal and child health. Chapter 9 by Sudha Pai analyses the life history of women leaders in India. From this chapter, we can conclude that a change in the attitude of people concerning patriarchal norms might bring a large percentage of women in decision-making levels.

Women, arts and literature are significant themes for the chapters 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16. It is important for every person specialising in gender to trace the history of women contributors and their sense of empowerment. These chapters trace the works of author Mahasweta Devi, explored Dalit narratives, trace the history of rebuilding handicrafts in India and examined the contribution of Rukmini Devi Arundale to establish Kalakshetra and institutionalising Bharathanatyam. Mahasweta Devis works brought back the narratives of tribals, which were silenced, neglected and erased from history for centuries. Hence, here Dalits themselves narrated their history.The so-called mainstream literature failed to imbibe Dalit womens experiences. The struggles of the Dalit community, especially women, their experiences, their perceptions, enables the reader to ponder over the issues of Dalit women and how much at all, were they woven into the vision of women empowerment. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyays hard work took handicrafts industry to the next level by recognising and institutionalising it. This chapter described the establishment of institutions like NIFT, INTACH, SEWA and the involvement of women in cinema to recognise Indian handicrafts. Chapter 15, Ascribing Feminist Intent by Deeptha Achar attempts to locate Sheikhs paintings in the political realm. Sheiks paintings required to be understood by linking them with feminism and womens movement in India. Chapter 16 is about independent Hindustani singers and their emergence and struggles.

The struggles of the Dalit community, especially women, their experiences, their perceptions, enables the reader to ponder over the issues of Dalit women and how much at all, were they woven into the vision of women empowerment.

The final four chapters are about womens contribution to institution building. Chapter 17 traces the history of establishing Indraprastha School. Chapter 18 is about governance indicators. Based on the mentioned indicators in the chapter, we could analyse the status of women in society. Chapter 19 traces the history of law-making related to women and gender. Chapter 20 is about women and their struggles in conflict zones, particularly the north-east Indian states. The data to write this chapter has been collected directly from the field. Every person in the conflict zone had their own experiences and they might get affected psychologically for various reasons. The study has prescribed certain policies that would help women overcome their psychological problems.

Also read: On Feminism And Writing: A Path To Self-Realisation And Empowerment?

The book reflects our general understanding of feminism, women empowerment and asserts that the issues of women are intersectional in nature. It had strong theoretical and feminist methodological components. The author has carefully picked articles from contemporary and historical issues. The edited volume could be useful for research scholars, academicians and journalists dealing with gender components. However, the author could have also added a few more articles related to the issues of the LGBTQ+ community. The discipline of Womens Studies became more inclusive in 21st century and it broadened its scope by including development studies, gender studies and sexuality studies. The author must consider bringing one more volume by selecting research articles from the fields of gender and science, sexuality studies, gender and agriculture and the impact of globalization on women. Secondly, the emergence of feminist research methodologies tries to explore gender issues employing standpoints. The author could also consider using the word Gender in the book title itself, if she wishes to bring one more volume.

Dr G.Uma is Assistant Professor in the School of Gender and Development Studies, Indira Gandhi National Open University. Her primary focus areas are Grassroots Governance, Gender and Development with a focus on agriculture, Public Policy and Social Capital. She is a PhD degree holder in Gender and Governance from the Department of Political Science and Development Administration, Gandhigram Rural Institute (Deemed University). Her PhD research outcome focuses on redefining the policy at the micro-level, ensuring the stakeholders to recognize the significance of federating women leaders at the grassroots level to realize the affirmative action given through reservation at the Panchayat level in India. Central European University and University of Cologne awarded scholarship. She has 10 years of work experience in the field of governance and development with a gender perspective.She can be found on Facebook and Twitter.

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Book Review: Interrogating Womens Leadership And Empowerment By Omita Goyal - Feminism in India

Heroes: Sister Susan Gardella and the LIFE Center – The Hudson Independent

By Annabelle Allen

The RSHM Life Center (Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary), a community center focused on education and social services located in Sleepy Hollow, celebrated its 25th anniversary in June. With the belief that Learning Is For Everyone (LIFE), the center offers programs and services to the lower income immigrant population of Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow. The goal of the center is to focus on the needs of each family and help them improve their lives through empowerment.

The celebration was in proper LIFE Center stylenot with cake, not with balloons but by launching a massive service effort. Since March, the center has distributed over 12,000 meals and 14,000 pounds of groceries/produce to vulnerable families, as well as opening one of the only in person day camps in the region so that parents could return to work. Its not exactly how we expected to spend our anniversary summer, said Sister Susan Gardella, executive director and co-founder of the Life Center

Sister Susan is the driving force behind the centers dedication to the community. Gardella is a part of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary, an international congregation of religious women who have served in the Sleepy Hollow/Tarrytown area for over 100 years. From working with the homeless in Long Island, to family courts in the Bronx, and opening the center in 1995, Gardella has dedicated her life to serving those in need.

She brings unwavering commitment to a world where everyone can have enough, where everyone can get an education, regardless of who they are and their economic status. I think she has been an incredible gift to Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown, said Fiona Matthew, a grant consultant for the LIFE Center and friend of Sister Susans. She is not good at promoting herself. Thats not who she is. She just quietly gets on with things.

Characteristically, Sister Susan credits her staff for the successes of the center. We have people that have been here for 15, 17 years. Theyre certainly not doing it because theyre making a lot of money. They get it. They see it as more than just a job. Its important for me as director to surround myself with people that get it. I think thats what makes the life center special. The staff care as much about the families as I do.

The program started by asking the question: What can we do for you. Gardella, and her co-founder Sister Betty Kolb, invited the mothers in to talk amongst themselves about the issues affecting them. This eventually became the Parents and Tots Program a preschool for toddlers, with a support component for the parent or guardian who accompanies the child. In the program, the children are immersed in English language lessons and begin to separate from their mothers for periods of time, which prepares them for school. While the children are in their group, their parents have an opportunity to study English and participate in discussion groups that allow them to develop as individuals and provides them with a peer network. Twenty-five years later, Parents and Tots remains one of RHSMs more popular programs.

They set up programs that their families need and theyre always talking to the families and finding out what the need is, said Matthew, Then they adjust their programs, and add more programs on. No big fan fair, no patting on the back. I never see them toot their own horn at all.

Now, Sister Susan and the center are working to pull together an in-person summer camp to help parents find relief after months of online schooling and amidst surging unemployment rates. Most camps in the area have gone remote, as COVID-19 remains a risk, but Sister Susan heard a call from families that parents needed to go back to work and restore their finances.

The Hudson Valley has lost 165,400 jobs for the period ending May 2020, according to The Department of Labor. Still, this number does not account for undocumented workers who dont meet the governments official definition of unemployed. Their families have received zero unemployment benefits during this time. Parents are in a bind, said Gardella, and they have to start getting back into the workforce especially for those who might be undocumented.

Opening camp hasnt been easy. The center must adhere by strict state guidelines for in-person camp during the COVID-19 pandemic: no field trips, no swimming pool, and temperatures must be checked every morning. Instead, the center has converted the parking lot into a space for socially distanced games like jenga and connect four. The camp is now entering its third week, allowing many of the parents to return to work.

Cumulatively, Life Center programs are making a profound difference in the community. Of the 27 most recent alumni of its programs (elementary aged children who remained in the Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow school district), 100% graduated from high school in the Class of 2019. The state-wide graduation rate that year was 39% for English Language Learners and 75% for Latinx students. Twenty-three of those 27 students went on to college. One entered the Culinary Institute of America and three students entered the Marines.

The children that enter the program not being able to speak English, within three or four years are in the accelerated programs at school and achieving off the charts, said Matthew. Its crazy the results [Sister Susan] gets.

Matthew has observed that as kids arrive at the Center, Sister Susan will stand outside the building and greet each one personally, ruffling their hair or telling a joke. Shes a lot of fun, a lot of love, but is very parental and very guiding, says Matthew. I think that they count on her. Shes a beacon to them.

Gardella has been a Catholic Sister for 35 years, committing her life to serving those in need. The decision to become a Catholic Sister is one that is difficult to explain, she says, but similar to making any other big decision in ones life. How do you ever really know? It just feels right. It feels like the thing that makes life worth it, said Gardella. People have these stereotypes from years ago of the sister with the ruler or something like that. Were just regular people.

I think that we are put on this earth and given gifts and talents by whomever we feel in our personal beliefs is our creator, she says. And if we dont use them for good, whats the purpose of them? We have an obligation to do whatever good we can. Each of us can do something.

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Remember when the internet was supposed to be transparent and democratic? There’s still hope – Salon

Once upon a time, the internet was seen a wondrous fount of knowledge and information, empowering users and spreading democracy. This utopian view resonated widely with early adopters in the 1990s, after the end of the Cold War, but it resonated much more broadly around the world in 2011, during the Arab Spring. There were always dark shadows noted by observers, as in Gene Rochlin's 1997 book, "Trapped in the Net," but collectively we've been blindsided and bewildered by how different the online experience has become how much of a marketplace for rumor, fear, conspiracy theoriesand polarized worldviews, all watched over by purportedly neutral platform manipulations bringing us exactly what we're told we want.

Could it be possible to recover that original promise? In a way, that promise was always nave, as illuminated by Paulina Borsook's 2000 book, "Cyberselfish: A Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High-Tech." As Borsook notes, it took more than half a century of government investment to make the internet's commercial incarnation possible, contrary to Silicon Valley's self-serving mythos. But democratic theory, history, philosophy and psychology is far richer than libertarians suppose, and there is a much more sober, realistic version of that promise one that, for example, scientists collaborating worldwide have experienced for more than a generation now.

Socouldsomething like that become possible for all of us? A new paper in the journal Nature Human Behaviour strongly suggests that it could, and lays out an initial framework for what it might belike, reshaping things from the bottom up: "How behavioural sciences can promote truth, autonomy and democratic discourse online." As the abstractexplains, the problem can be simply put:

The current online ecosystem has been designed predominantly to capture user attention rather than to promote deliberate cognition and autonomous choice; information overload, finely tuned personalization and distorted social cues, in turn, pave the way for manipulation and the spread of false information. How can transparency and autonomy be promoted instead, thus fostering the positive potential of the web?

Framed like that, thisis a scientific problem, susceptible to scientific solutions. Of course, knowing that solutions exist and implementingare two different things: Consider the climate crisis. For a better understanding of how such a future could come to be, and what some specific steps would look like, Salon reached out to lead author Philipp Lorenz-Spreen, a postdoctoral fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin. Thisinterview has been edited, as is customary, for clarity and length.

What struck me first on seeing your article was that it's not reactive, but ratheraffirms a positive, arguing that behavioral science"can promote truth, autonomy and democratic discourse online." Sobefore talking about the paper itself, I'd like to ask about what informs your positive approach.

I think a bit of forward-looking is probably necessary. We need to be careful we don't get into a whack-a-mole game. So, I was searching for more sustainable solutions, and you get end up getting less reactive and trying to find solutions that come from the bottom up, to think about how to change the system itself.

Were there any previous examples in internet history that were resonant for you?

One of the rare examples of online environments that promote truth one of the shining examples is Wikipedia. This was an inspiration, to think about how different this website looks, compared to Amazon, how it's designed and how things are arranged.

Your paper draws attention to the asymmetry between what platforms know about users and viceversa. How do you characterize that asymmetry, and what negative consequences result that you propose to address?

The asymmetry probably comes out of dependencies we live with in this information-rich world. It gives the human brain too much to process, so we must rely on some kind of curation. That's what the platforms do for us. That's probably why they are successful. Google and Facebook are skyrocketing, successful, because we really, really depend on them to navigate through this information world.

Additionally, "intransparency" contributes to it. We get recommendations that we cannot really follow where they actually come from, what factors contribute to them. Sowe are getting increasingly dependent on intransparent platforms, wherewe have to rely on trust. And the remedy we propose is increased transparency, and givingback a bit of autonomy to the user.

To improve the online environment, you identify available but untapped cues and two kinds of behavioral interventions "nudging" and "boosting" that employ these cues. The cues differ in different contexts, so let's start with the interventions. Folks may have heard of them, but just to be clear, what do each of them do?

They are both classic behavioral interventions, so they're more umbrella terms. They both interact with the decision process. "Nudges" do that mainly or exclusively through the choice architecture. So whenever parts of the choice architecture are emphasized to steer behavior or influence behavior, that's nudging. In our case, we just try to draw the attention of the reader to some pieceof information that might be good for them that will be the broad class of nudging.

Boosting goes a bit further into the educative direction. Soit's not education, but it's pieces of the environment or external tools that help the decision-maker, within the process of making the decision, to acquire some competencies. Often in this context, we refer to digital media literacy as a competencethat a boost would help the user to acquire or develop. That can be done through the environment, by giving useful hints that you can remember, and then you use them even if the hints are missing. Soyou can actually incorporate that boost and take it along with you.Second can be external tools, like rules of thumb that you can actually use to evaluate sources of information.

One aspect of boosting you mention is "self-nudging." Could you explain what that is?

Self-nudging is when you yourself change your environment in a way that nudges you to a certain behavior that you want for yourself.An alarm clock is a self-nudge, a very elementary one. If you want not tobrowse certain apps so often, you might delete them from your phone. Or if we want to eat less sweets, we might not buy them. Sowe ourselves change our choice architectureso we make decisions that we want to make.That's a boost, in a sense, because self-nudging itself is a competence. If you're good at designing your own choice architecture, your own environment, to the choice you want to achieve, that's what we call a competence. That's why we would classify it as a boost.

You discuss what you call"endogenous" or "exogenous" cues as being important in interacting with the internet. Give me some examples.

Endogenous cues are cues that describe the content itself. Sowhen we talk about an online article, that would be the characters thatappearin the article, the relationships that may be the part of the story,stuff like that we would call endogenous cues. Andof course, it can be helpful to evaluate the truthfulness of the story. If the characters do not exist, or the story doesn't have a logic it's evidence it might not be true.

Exogenous cues, on the other side, are context-dependent. So they do not regard the content of the article itself, but for example, the source of the article, who has written the article, which other outlets or sources the article cites. Where did it come from?How did it reach you?Who else has recommended it for you? Thingslike that. So the context around the story itself is an exogenous cue.

In the paper, you focus your attention on exogenous cues. Why is that?

We just experience how difficult judgments are about the content itself. There are extreme cases where you should make a judgment maybe when it's about violence but youalways runinto the danger of either censorship or the accusation of censorship when you're making judgments about content itself. Sowhen you make a judgment about context, I think this is more robust against accusations or dangers of censorship. If you only provide more context, that could allow people to make the judgment themselves, without you or a third-party fact-checker or a platform or anyone else to make that judgment for you. That's going inthe empowerment direction we want to let people make these choice decisions themselves. That's why we focus on exogenous cues.

You examine three different contexts: online articles, algorithmic curation and social media. I'd like to go through each of them with you, to understand the challenges you identify and how to propose to meet them. Let's start with online articles. What are the challenges they present? And what cues are available?

The main challenge we think we are facing here is the overabundance of articles, of content being produced. There's a multitude of sources, a high number of articles reaching us and also the consumption patterns have changed.People do not consume a whole newspaper as one piece, and they do not subscribe to one newspaper for a long time. Some do, but we much more consume them on an article basis. So, we are moving from long-term decisions to rather short-term decisions, and we have this huge information overload at the same time. So that makes it very difficult to make decisions about the trustworthiness or reputation of the source. So that's the challenge with news articles online.

And what kinds of cues are available?

We can check if the publisher has an "About"section on the website, or if it's a known publisher one can check for an external validation by making a Google search and finding reports of the same story. But one can also check if the article cites external evidence, if there are other articles of this article's type, if they are clearly marked and if they come from other publishers and not just themselves. These would be some exogenous cues that one can check on which,by the way, are not always readily accessible,which adds to the challenge of information overload.

So how can nudging and boosting be used to makethings more transparent?

Nudging can be used to draw attention to the external cues, so the sources that an article is citing could be listed on top of the article with a very clear color, or something.Or there can be a warning message if there areno external sources cited. There one can actually be inspired by Wikipedia, whichoften has warning messages with articlesif there are not enough sourcesor if quality is lacking in the sources. That would be a very simple nudge. You can go a bit further when you think about sharing an online article, and then a warning message could require you to click a second time to confirm that youwant to share the article even though it doesn't cite any external sources. Sothe main process of the nudges in this context would be to draw your attention to the external cues.

A boost would be more like a tool:In the article show a decision tree that's a tool that has been used to improvemedical decision-making by having, like, three or four questions that one can go through systematically to evaluate the trustworthiness of an article, for example. It can become like a cognitive tool kit. A person can remember this cognitive process and it will help them anytime they encounter an article, for example.

The second context you discuss is"algorithmic curation," the often opaque process by which things are delivered to us on the internet. What are the challenges that presents and what cues are available?

We talked about transparency here. Usually the problem is that a lot of things end up on my newsfeed and it's often very unclear for what reason, and these algorithms that source the news feed, for example, are hidden. They are not known to the user. It becomes extremely difficult to understand why a specific article is ending up in the newsfeed. We do not know this gets back to asymmetry what they know about many other people who are consuming similar content, for example.That makes it extremely difficult for us to understand this curation.

The biggest challenge in the whole paper is that it's very unclear what cues could be available. But if you think about a less sophisticated algorithm not a machine-learning AI algorithm, but rather a simple, rule-based algorithm that could help provide cues. Because if it's just a linear combination of a few factors that source my content which, for example, could be recency, and how many of my friends have engaged with this article, and apreference that I have, for sportsor something that could be displayed. Sothere would be cues that in principle a platform with a rule-based algorithm could show and help people understand much better why some things came up and others not.

So how can nudging be usedhere?

When we talk about nudging in this situation, we're very close to just information providing. Sothe factors that led to the decision could be displayed more clearly, or displayed at all that would already help. Another nudge that would help would be a clear separation, even a visual separation, between different types of content. Currently in the newsfeed, everything is very blurred so a post frommy friends looks very similar to a commercial, or something from a politicianor political partyor a company. Sothese different entities and players could be much more clearlydifferentiated. That would change the choice architecture, to help us understand, for example, which is a paid ad and which is not. This is not in the best interest of the platform, because making an ad seemingly appear within the posts of my friends makes it much more personal than if I realize that's an ad. But I think we should make that newsfeed more "overviewable."

And how can boosting be used?

If the newsfeed is more transparent,it could also be customizable. Of course, you can customize the feed in a way by following certain people and outlets, but you cannot determine the order or frequency. So that would be possible, to actually change your preferences and say, "I want to see more sports and less politics,"or "More from my friends and less from news."That could allow the user to do self-nudging, so if I want to be more informed I can increase the amount of news I want to get. That gives the user back a bit of agency, at least.

Somoving on, the third category is social media. What are the challenges they present? And what cues are available?

The challenge here is that we certainly have access to a huge number of other people, and we can communicate with them in different forms, but this kind of communication is like nothing we are used to. It's difficult to have a feeling for what the numbers mean, social metrics likes for example, or uploads, downloadsor shares. We only see one number, the number of likes, for example. But there could be much more information available that could help us access the real consensus. We have access to such a large group of people, we can feel that even a very weird conspiracy theory, for example, is actually believed by many others. Two hundred seems like a very big number of other people believing it. So, you might actually think you are right in the middle of the conversation when actually you are on the outskirts of the discussion. That would be the challenge.

So how can nudges and boosts be used here?

A nudge in this context would be quite simple. It would be having just additional social information these are sometimes called social nudges. If we know what others are doing, this is influencing our behavior quite heavily. One example would be to show what the average reading time of other people were on this article, on a newsfeed in social media. That information would give us a hint that something is clickbait, or that most people just stayed on this article for a few seconds or just a minute, and that would help us make a decision to maybe not click on those things. So that's one thing. But also we can provide more information what other people on this network are doing not only aroundmy direct neighborhood, but rather on another side of the network so I can see other opinions, so we can have a feeling what the discussion is actually looks like.

Boosting has a more educated character, it would be more like a tool. One thing that would really help us is adding to social media posts a hint of trustworthiness. Soif sharing is very narrow, often it's a niche topic, not so trustworthy, and if it's broadly distributed, and many people at each point share it, it might be more true. So that's something one could teach people to learn, basically to understand the social spreading pattern. Currently we don't have much accessto this information, but if it were provided we could actually learn such patterns, and see if someone was, for example, replicating posts several times, artificially amplifying the message, or if someone was picking up an old story from someone very far away in the network and trying to push that. So that would be a skill that people could acquire with such a tool. They could see the social spreading pattern whenever they encounter something on social media, so they can actually learn what the patterns mean and get a feeling for social media and social dynamics.

In your conclusion, you write:"In our view, the future task for scientists is to design interventions that meet at least three selection criteria." What are they and why?

First, of course, is the need to be transparent, because we said the core of the problem is he intransparency of the platform. Soif scientists or regulators make new regulations, they have to be fully transparent for people to become trustworthy, I think that's a second point. I was talking about the danger of censorship early on, and so that's what we try to avoid here with transparency and trustworthiness, with cues providing context that cannot be confused with censorship. Because you never know who is in the endimplementing such tools and if they are by definition not able to do censorship, there might not be a danger of that. And the last criteria, specifically, is that it can't be gamed. What we mean here is that social media metrics that we have now are often gamed. Sothe "likes" are a very simple metric that can be gamed by increasing social engagement, by either paying for itor getting other people to click the "like"button, so it appears to be popular, but actually it isn't.

If we come up now with new cuesthat should help people to assess the quality, there need to be protections. So, for example, if you have a very simple metric like the numbers of references that an article cites, that's something that's quite easy to game by just typing them into the article or something like that. Soit has to goa bit deeper. It also has toshow which articles are actually cited, for example, which would make it a bit more difficult to game. But that's something you really have to think about and maybe even run experiments and check if it works and if anyone in the internet comes up with a solution to get around it that's something that happens a lot. That's also in the conclusion: all these things need to be independently tested.

Yes, you say it's important to examine a wide spectrum of interventions. Thisseems like an invitation to furthering empirical process, correct?

Definitely. The whole paper is a call for more research in this direction, more solution-oriented research, how to improve that environment. There's a lot of empirical work to be done. These are just ideas and suggestions. So yes, it's definitely a call for much more empirical work, and also independent from the platforms themselves.

Your focus is on what might be called normal users, notmalicious ones. In fact, you argue that "it is not necessary that all or even the majority of users engage with nudging or boosting interventions." Why are you confident in taking this approach?

We can never assume that everyone would engage with all the tools or interventions we are proposing. It will always be just a fraction. These external interventions are not making any judgments, they are getting people to make decisions for themselves. They of course cannot catchmalicious actors who have an agenda, so they can only help people who by accident fall prey to their tactics. So that's one reason. Another one is of course that we believe that we are very social beings. So, I was talking about Wikipedia as one of the examples of collective intelligence that actually has worked out. So that's what we try to use as a parallel once our online environments are more promotions of quality, in a collective-intelligence way, it will be pushed upward and reach people that would not have engaged with it before.

Finally, what's most important question I didn't ask and what's the answer?

Well, one important question is "Who should do that?' 'Who would be interested?"I think the answer is that maybe the platforms have someinterest in implementing such measures to improve quality,but it's always important to keep in mind that they are commercial entities and that they have a certain goal, which isto maximize user engagement so they can make their ad revenue.

Soit's probably also the responsibility of a democratic society to participate in this process of designing our online world. We have now let the platformsdo that for us for a very long time, for the 10 years or so that they been around. Now we think it's about time that, as a democratic society, we should come up with our own solutions. The option space for doing this is huge. There are a lot of options that we have not even touched or thought about yet.

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Remember when the internet was supposed to be transparent and democratic? There's still hope - Salon

Why making small, green changes to your lifestyle is more beneficial to the environment than you think – The Independent

How can something as simple and homely as making raspberry juice in Peckham have anything to do with saving the planet? Many writers and environmental campaigners argue that greening our own lifestyles is a waste of time as we should be devoting all efforts on pressing for government action.

If changing our own lifestyles is all we do, then, of course, it wont make a vast difference but I am still doing it as best as I practically can, and so should you. Why? Because it builds the moral foundation from which we can insist that our governments, businesses and communities protect the climate and what is left of nature.

Gandhi understood the sense of personal empowerment that arises from being the change we wish to see in the world. If we all do the best we can in our own lives, it will make a collective difference, showing others that it is possible to live green, happy, healthy lives.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Making my life greener gives me little victories that bring me strength during the ups and downs that campaigning and protesting entail. It also helps to prevent burnout.

Over 34 years, I have gradually made my life greener. I am now veggie, car-free and enjoy flight-free holidays. My home was the first London house to sell metered solar electricity to the national grid in 1998 and became its first net carbon-negative home six years later. My gas bills average about 12 per year and I have produced on average only half of a wheelie bin of non-recycled household waste per annum for over a decade.

But often it is the very small changes that bring me joy the latest being homemade raspberry juice.

For years, I bought organic apple juice to moisten and sweeten my muesli, which reduced my high-carbon milk consumption.

Using 200ml of milk for my daily cereal consumed 73 litres per year, which emits a quarter of a ton of CO2. If a family of four uses a litre of milk a day, it would emit the same amount of carbon from driving 4,700km, while the land used by the cow would span 10 tennis courts. Imagine all the fruit and vegetables we could produce with an allotment of that size.

Five years ago, I realised I could make my own apple juice from the apples from some neglected local apple trees. I have been using this on my muesli ever since, from late July until February, when the stored apples run out.

I have also been building up the range of perennial soft fruit in my small south London garden. I now have apples, pears, raspberries, strawberries, plums, damsons, purple and golden gooseberries and black and red currants growing with varied success. As the weather impacts different fruits each year, having a variety helps ensure you have some fruit every summer. Together with foraged blackberries and apples, I supply over half my annual fruit locally; my ambition is to get to 100 per cent.

Two portions of fruit a day equates to 728 a year per person. This is more than my little garden could produce. Hence the dependency on additional foraging, especially for apples and blackberries.

This year I had too many raspberries for my daily two portions but not enough to make jam, so I hit on the idea of experimenting with juicing the excess and using that to moisten the muesli instead of shop-bought apple juice. It took just 30 seconds in the liquidiser with some organic sugar and water to make it. As the raspberries were home-grown and the second-hand liquidiser was powered by my solar panels, juice production was almost zero-carbon, other than a couple of spoons of added sugar.

The UK imports a staggering 83 per cent of our fruit and most of it is industrially produced.

This involves a plethora of environmental damage including carbon emissions, water-consumption, packaging, fossil-fuelled electric refrigeration, pesticides, artificial fertilisers, flights, HGV road pollution, wildlife destruction, insect deaths and soil loss. Foraging or growing our own organic fruit using rain-water storage avoids almost all of these issues.

In this decade, humans have become ever more aware of climate change. Calls for leaders to act echo around the globe as the signs of a changing climate become ever more difficult to ignore

Getty

Fierce wildfires have flared up in numerous countries. The damage being caused is unprecedented: 103 people were killed in wildfires last year in California, one of the places best prepared, best equipped to fight such blazes in the world

AFP/Getty

Entire towns have been razed. The towns of Redding and Paradise in California were all but eliminated in the 2018 season

AP

While wildfires in Greece (pictured), Australia, Indonesia and many other countries have wrought chaos to infrastructure, economies and cost lives

AFP/Getty

In Britain, flooding has become commonplace. Extreme downpours in Carlisle in the winter of 2015 saw the previous record flood level being eclipsed by two feet

AFP/Getty

Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire has flooded repeatedly in the past decade, with the worst coming on Christmas Day 2015. Toby Smith of Climate Visuals, an organisation focused on improving how climate change is depicted in the media, says: "Extreme weather and flooding, has and will become more frequent due to climate change. An increase in the severity and distribution of press images, reports and media coverage across the nation has localised the issue. It has raised our emotions, perception and personalised the effects and hazards of climate change."

Getty

Out west in Somerset, floods in 2013 led to entire villages being cut off and isolated for weeks

Getty

"In summer 2012, intense rain flooded over 8000 properties. In 2013, storms and coastal surges combined catastrophically with elevated sea levels whilst December 2015, was the wettest month ever recorded. Major flooding events continued through the decade with the UK government declaring flooding as one of the nation's major threats in 2017," says Mr Smith of Climate Visuals

Getty

Weather has been more extreme in Britain in recent years. The 'Beast from the East' which arrived in February 2018 brought extraordinarily cold temperatures and high snowfall. Central London (pictured), where the city bustle tends to mean that snow doesn't even settle, was covered in inches of snow for day

PA

Months after the cold snap, a heatwave struck Britain, rendering the normally plush green of England's parks in Summer a parched brown for weeks

AFP/Getty

Worsening droughts in many countries have been disastrous for crop yields and have threatened livestock. In Australia, where a brutal drought persisted for months last year, farmers have suffered from mental health problems because of the threat to their livelihood

Reuters

Even dedicated climate skeptic Jeremy Clarkson has come to recognise the threat of climate change after visiting the Tonle Sap lake system in Cambodia. Over a million people rely on the water of Tonle Sap for work and sustinence but, as Mr Clarkson witnessed, a drought has severley depleted the water level

Carlo Frem/Amazon

In reaction to these harbingers of climate obliteration, some humans have taken measures to counter the impending disaster. Ethiopia recently planted a reported 350 million trees in a single day

AFP/Getty

Morocco has undertaken the most ambitious solar power scheme in the world, recently completing a solar plant the size of San Francisco

AFP/Getty

Electric cars are taking off as a viable alternative to fossil fuel burning vehicles and major cities across the world are adding charging points to accomodate

AFP/Getty

Cities around the world are embracing cycling too, as a clean (and healthy) mode of transport. The Netherlands continues to lead the way with bikes far outnumbering people

Jeroen Much/Andras Schuh

Cycling infrastructure is taking over cities the world over, in the hope of reducing society's dependency on polluting vehicles

Ma Weiwei

Despite positive steps being taken, humans continue to have a wildly adverse effect on the climate. There have been numerous major oil spills this decade, the most notable being the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010

AFP/Getty

More recently, large swathes of the Amazon rainforest were set alight by people to clear land for agriculture

AFP/Getty

This decade may have seen horrors but it has led to an understanding that the next decade must see change if human life is to continue

Getty

In this decade, humans have become ever more aware of climate change. Calls for leaders to act echo around the globe as the signs of a changing climate become ever more difficult to ignore

Getty

Fierce wildfires have flared up in numerous countries. The damage being caused is unprecedented: 103 people were killed in wildfires last year in California, one of the places best prepared, best equipped to fight such blazes in the world

AFP/Getty

Entire towns have been razed. The towns of Redding and Paradise in California were all but eliminated in the 2018 season

AP

While wildfires in Greece (pictured), Australia, Indonesia and many other countries have wrought chaos to infrastructure, economies and cost lives

AFP/Getty

In Britain, flooding has become commonplace. Extreme downpours in Carlisle in the winter of 2015 saw the previous record flood level being eclipsed by two feet

AFP/Getty

Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire has flooded repeatedly in the past decade, with the worst coming on Christmas Day 2015. Toby Smith of Climate Visuals, an organisation focused on improving how climate change is depicted in the media, says: "Extreme weather and flooding, has and will become more frequent due to climate change. An increase in the severity and distribution of press images, reports and media coverage across the nation has localised the issue. It has raised our emotions, perception and personalised the effects and hazards of climate change."

Getty

Out west in Somerset, floods in 2013 led to entire villages being cut off and isolated for weeks

Getty

"In summer 2012, intense rain flooded over 8000 properties. In 2013, storms and coastal surges combined catastrophically with elevated sea levels whilst December 2015, was the wettest month ever recorded. Major flooding events continued through the decade with the UK government declaring flooding as one of the nation's major threats in 2017," says Mr Smith of Climate Visuals

Getty

Weather has been more extreme in Britain in recent years. The 'Beast from the East' which arrived in February 2018 brought extraordinarily cold temperatures and high snowfall. Central London (pictured), where the city bustle tends to mean that snow doesn't even settle, was covered in inches of snow for day

PA

Months after the cold snap, a heatwave struck Britain, rendering the normally plush green of England's parks in Summer a parched brown for weeks

AFP/Getty

Worsening droughts in many countries have been disastrous for crop yields and have threatened livestock. In Australia, where a brutal drought persisted for months last year, farmers have suffered from mental health problems because of the threat to their livelihood

Reuters

Even dedicated climate skeptic Jeremy Clarkson has come to recognise the threat of climate change after visiting the Tonle Sap lake system in Cambodia. Over a million people rely on the water of Tonle Sap for work and sustinence but, as Mr Clarkson witnessed, a drought has severley depleted the water level

Carlo Frem/Amazon

In reaction to these harbingers of climate obliteration, some humans have taken measures to counter the impending disaster. Ethiopia recently planted a reported 350 million trees in a single day

AFP/Getty

Morocco has undertaken the most ambitious solar power scheme in the world, recently completing a solar plant the size of San Francisco

AFP/Getty

Electric cars are taking off as a viable alternative to fossil fuel burning vehicles and major cities across the world are adding charging points to accomodate

AFP/Getty

Cities around the world are embracing cycling too, as a clean (and healthy) mode of transport. The Netherlands continues to lead the way with bikes far outnumbering people

Jeroen Much/Andras Schuh

Cycling infrastructure is taking over cities the world over, in the hope of reducing society's dependency on polluting vehicles

Ma Weiwei

Despite positive steps being taken, humans continue to have a wildly adverse effect on the climate. There have been numerous major oil spills this decade, the most notable being the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010

AFP/Getty

More recently, large swathes of the Amazon rainforest were set alight by people to clear land for agriculture

AFP/Getty

This decade may have seen horrors but it has led to an understanding that the next decade must see change if human life is to continue

Getty

Providing my own two portions of organic fruit per day for over half the year saves me about 400 and providing my own fresh fruit-juice daily saves about another 200. My apples and raspberries have zero food-miles, while the 45,000 tonnes of apples the UK imports annually from New Zealand travel over 18,000km.

I cannot describe the simple joy of making little discoveries like these. They help maintain the inner strength needed to face the challenges of being an ecological campaigner, while recognising that green perfection is a process, not a destination.

Taking these steps and telling others what we are doing and why inspires others to do the same. This is how bottom-up social change often happens. It is slow at the beginning and then accelerates once over 10 per cent of the population has transformed. It is also a way that politicians can be assured that changes are practical and safe to implement.

Of course, the climate and ecological emergencies are now so urgent, that they cannot wait for this process to play out. That is why practising what we preach as well as campaigning hard to get the media, banks, oil corporations and governments to change is so crucial.

Once we make the kinds of adjustments we need, its easier to then demand our governments practice what they preach on climate and protecting nature, comfortable in the knowledge that you are only asking of them what you have already asked of yourself.

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Why making small, green changes to your lifestyle is more beneficial to the environment than you think - The Independent

(Exclusive) Non-profit works to transform fear of police into empowerment for young men of color – BuzzFeedzz

Watch Now! Non-profit works to transform fear of police into empowerment for young men of color

Other nation continues to tackle race relations in the justice system a local non-profit is doing their part to teach young people of color how to bring about change today replace fear of police with empowerment the goal to prevent unnecessary or violent encounters because many feel it's a matter of survival pages kelly has the story.

Videos and moments like this have become common over the years like many black children and children of color am on did not grow up with a good perception of police always taught like not to.

Interact with cars or one of us are go the other way but as we've seen interactions can turn deadly.

It's interactions like this that word is bond local non-profit is trying to prevent it's taught me to use my voice.

And, it's tommy to be able to be to the leader that I am today silicon your jury is the executive director of is bond his goal is to empower all about owning your story owning your experience been sharing that with the world change one way word is bond empowers is by teaching young men of color how to interact with police on.

And, the importance of calmly and respectfully standing up for their own rights Did not a way they do that is through videos like this is classic?

You're teaching them their rights and what to do encountering an officer Not only do they use real-life scenarios but also real officers like collegiate abraham who says this work is personal I grew up here in northeast north pole and then now I'm back in my community where I grew up and basically serving it again given back to commute I grew up in abraham is the officer in this video he said he happily signed on to help hoping to bridge the ongoing gap between communities of color and police from here to listen if people want to reach out to me and they want to talk to me sit down, you know, teach me things learn things for me I'm happy to sit down and the says the program has done more for him than just make him comfortable talking to police he says it changed his life is not just the program where we say and talk to police officers a program learned a lot of things as a plaque now and also helps.

Many black young black male get-together and build a bond kelly on ktwo new this week word is bond started their summer internship program called rising leaders which is a six-week program for youth leader's between the ages of sixteen and twenty one for summer twenty, twenty they have a record number of law enforcement agencies participating in the workshops.

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(Exclusive) Non-profit works to transform fear of police into empowerment for young men of color - BuzzFeedzz

Nelson Mandela’s views and relevance to the education system of India – The Kashmir Images Newspaper

Added on July 18, 2020Other View

By: Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank

18th of July is celebrated across the world as International Nelson Mandela day. Honourable Prime Minister Narendra Modi while paying homage to him, stated The beloved Madiba`s work, ideals & principles continue to inspire us. He demonstrated the triumph of peace, equality and service,. Today, through this column, I am sharing his ideas and views in the field of education, in an attempt to connect them to the scope and possibilities for the qualitative growth of the Indian education system.

In his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom, Mandela describes how education impacted various phases of his life. Though incarcerated in jail, he obtained his legal education through correspondence courses. The critical question for Mandela concerning education was regarding the purpose of education. He viewed education as serving manifold purposes.

Stressing upon Education as the means for personal development and as a vehicle for equality of opportunity, he said: Education is the great engine of personal development. It is through education that the daughter of a peasant can become a doctor, that the son of a mineworker can become the head of the mine, that a child of farm workers can become the president of a great nation. He thus viewed education as having the power to liberate the individual socially, economically and philosophically.

For Madiba, education is not confined to formal institutional spaces. To quote him: To a narrow-thinking person, it is hard to explain that to be educated does not mean being literate and having a BA, and that an illiterate man can be a far more educated voter than someone with an advanced degree. His views are amply reflected in the draft New Education Policy of India. The policy recognizes the skill and the value of learning from experts in their fields, even if they do not possess a professional degree. The policy advocates that local experts from various trades like carpenters, masons, etc. will be formally called to schools to impart skill education. And going several steps ahead, the policy also states that students of upper primary classes shall have a ten-day internship with local crafts and trade persons, to not only learn their trade craft, but also to become sensitized to the contributions of such self-learnt experts and skilled persons to the progress and growth of society.

Madiba believed that Education is a tool for empowerment and transformations. To meet this objective, however, education needs to be contextualized. One of his famous quotes related to education is that it is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world. Education was also seen as the enemy of prejudice. Hence Mandela said The power of education extends beyond the development of skills that we need for economic success. It can contribute to nation-building and reconciliation. Mirroring Mandelas view the ministry is coming out with a policy which envisages that the curriculum and pedagogy of our institutions must develop among the students a deep sense of respect towards the fundamental duties and Constitutional values, bonding with ones country, and conscious awareness of ones roles and responsibilities in a changing world.

In the quest to pursue modern education, one should not forget ones cultural history. Mandela opined that one needs to know and understand ones cultural history eg. music, arts, dances and local language. He confessed that in his own personal life he had learnt a lot about his country and its people through cultural expressions. India has a rich cultural history spanning millennia. The Ministry is coming out with a new education policy. The vision of the Policy is to instil among the learners a deep-rooted pride in being Indian, not only in thought, but also in spirit, intellect, and deeds, as well as to develop knowledge, skills, values, and dispositions that support responsible commitment to human rights, sustainable development and living, and global well-being, thereby reflecting a truly global citizen.

Mandela always emphasized discipline, hard work and physical fitness and sincerely practised it in his own life. He said: I have found that I worked better and thought more clearly when I was in good physical condition, and so training became one of the inflexible disciplines of my life. He would take time out to jog on the spot during the periods when he was in hiding. Exercise and physical fitness were critical not only for him in his personal life, they also became an inalienable part of his educational philosophy. When Government of India launched the Fit India Movement on 29th August 2019 to inculcate physical activity/sports into the daily life of citizens, it reiterated the Indian culture of centuries of considering physical, mental and spiritual wellness in a single continuum, just as Mandela did. Thirteen Lakh schools and Eleven Crore students all over the country took the fitness pledge. Through the firm commitment in the new education policy to treat physical education and skill education as an integral part of the academic curriculum, (and not as an extra-curricular or co-curricular activity), the government will bring back the focus on these areas for ensuring the holistic development of every child.

Its quite heartening to note Madibas views on Computer literacy. In fact, they were quite modern. Mandela urged teachers to ensure learners were computer literate from Grade 1 itself. He thus wanted todays learners to be in sync with the contemporary technological developments. His views are more relevant in todays world when most of the learning is shifting towards blended e-learning. The Government of India has launched Prime Minister E- Vidya for providing multi-modal access to education through DIKSHA (one nation-one digital platform), TV (one class-one channel), SWAYAM; Air through Community radio and CBSE Shiksha Vani podcast; and study material for children with disabilities. These will usher in an era of availability of quality e-content on the public domain, thus enabling technology to become the harbinger for equity in education.

Nelson Mandelas vision has the transformative power for education. The path of education in India is established on the foundational pillars of access, equity, quality, affordability, and accountability as outlined in the New Education Policy, and these were very close to Mandelas heart. Indeed, we take inspiration from him, as we commit to harness the creative potential of each learner while empowering them to become socially, economically and philosophically liberated for contributing from an equity standpoint in transforming India into a global knowledge hub.

The writer is Union Minister for HRD in Government of India

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Nelson Mandela's views and relevance to the education system of India - The Kashmir Images Newspaper

Beyond Covid-19: Building a better Kenya – Daily Nation

By Rogers DhliwayoBy Julius Chokerah

Six months after Chinese scientists notified the World Health Organization (WHO) of a new virus that caused deadly pneumonia, Covid-19as the disease was later dubbed has spread to almost every country around the world. Globally, cases have reached more than 14 million and the pandemic has killed close to 600,000 people. As of July 17, Kenya has confirmed 12,062 cases and 222 deaths.

Following the first confirmed case on March 13, the government moved swiftly to curb the spread of the pandemic through a number of measures. However, four months after the detection of the first case, the economic impact of the pandemic is already being felt. Treasury has lowered its 2020 growth forecast from 6.2 per cent to 2.5 per cent. Among the key sectors mostly affected are aviation, hospitality, tourism, and horticulture. Generally, the export sector, has been adversely affected.

The livelihoods of roughly 14.3 million vulnerable Kenyans have been affected by the pandemic. About 84 per cent of Kenyans are employed in the informal sector and movement restrictions have affected their income generation, which has reduced their ability to meet basic needs. Many went into the crisis without significant savings or liquid assets and have few personal assets to fall back on. The 36 per cent of Kenyans that live below the poverty line are disproportionately affected by decreases in income, more so for women.

The closure of borders has affected trade, including disruptions to the steady supply of staple foods from Uganda and Tanzania. The effects of the pandemic have strained an agriculture sector which was already suffering from locust invasion, raising food shortages concerns, particularly relating to maize, which is Kenyas staple food.

Covid-19 will impact learning, especially for poor girls and boys because despite the school curriculum having been adapted for distance learning, underprivileged children could not afford internet and other tools needed to stay connected.

The pandemic reminds everyone, in the starkest way possible, of the price to pay for weaknesses in health systems, social protection programmes, public servicesand economic growth that is not inclusive enough and fails to eradicate poverty quickly enough. It also showsthe world the risks to humankind created by its own reckless exploitation of natural resources, including wildlife.

The pandemic is laying bare the way in which the formal economy has been sustained on the back of an informal economy and invisible and unpaid care labour.

As Kenya responds to the spread and impact of the coronavirus, it has the choice to rapidly go back to the old economy and societal model or chart a path forward. Building forward better would embrace a fair and sustainable transition to a new social contract, capable of avoiding, mitigating, withstanding and recovering from such extreme crises in the future.

Building a better, post-pandemic future for Kenya will require environmental, social and economic interventions that lead to greater resilience. Recovery efforts need to accelerate, rather than undermine decarbonisation and protection of the countrys natural capital.

A clear recovery path that recognises the role that environmental and natural capital will play, is critical so that everyone in Kenya can be whatever they aspire to be in life. Attention must also be paid to peace, good governance, gender equality and empowerment as well as the protection and promotion of human rights for all.

Rogers Dhliwayo is an Economics Advisor at the UNDP Kenya Country Office and Julius Chokerah is a Development Coordination Officer/Economist at the United Nations Resident Coordinators Office, Kenya. Both authors provide policy advisory services to UNDP programme in Kenya.

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Beyond Covid-19: Building a better Kenya - Daily Nation

To contribute to the prevention of COVID-19, LEAP Africa lends a Hand to Communities in Nigeria – BellaNaija

A recent estimation by the World Food Programme indicates the lives and livelihoods of 265 million people in low and middle-income countries will be under severe threat during the COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2020, the Nigerian Federal Government announced a total lockdown of major cities across the country to curb the spread of the deadly virus. The big question on the lips of many people when the government announced a total lockdown was, how will people who depend on daily income survive?

The LEAP Africa COVID-19 Response launched out with a goal; to work through our network of social innovators and alumni members to reduce the impact of the pandemic on the most vulnerable communities across Nigeria.

About Mamamoni

Mamamoniis a Fintech social enterprise in Lagos with the objective to empower low-income rural and urban women with instant money loans to support/start small businesses. According to Nkem Okocha, the founder of Mamamoni, as soon as the news of an imminent lockdown became public knowledge, she said she started receiving calls from her network of women, and their major concern was about survival, and this is because the majority of the women depend on the daily income to support their family, and their families would be at the risk of starvation if there were a total lockdown.

About Hope Behind Bars Africa

Hope behind bars Africaprovides access to justice for underserved inmates in Abuja. At the onset of the virus in Nigeria, the authorities had placed a ban on visits to prison as a proactive measure to protect prison inmates. Funke Adeoye, the founder, said the news created anxiety amongst inmates.

The story is similar in Ilorin, Kwara state whereVicfold Recyclers, an indigenous incentive motivating waste recycling social enterprise. Vicfold captures value from waste while empowering women and youth in low-income neighborhoods. According to Victor, the spread of the pandemic meant their workers could be susceptible to infection, and asking them to stop work would also mean they had to go hungry. Dreams from the slum initiative in Ajegunle is an initiative committed to making the dreams of vulnerable persons living in remote and desolate communities a reality through Education, Empowerment, and Mentorship. Ajegunle is a slum in Lagos with people who barely struggle to survive even without a lockdown.

These were some of the propelling triggers behind the actions of the social innovators and alumni members. They decided to take on the responsibility of supporting and being the binge of hope for the women, widows, prisoners, and almajiri children, at a time when they desperately needed help. They decided to take personal leadership and lead the way. There could not have been a better time, especially in a country like Nigeria with no safety net or any limited social protection programmes for its citizens. In the words of Mother Teresa, do not wait for leaders, do it alone, person to person. Twelve social innovators across different states in Nigeria; are sharing hope and love in bags of goodies and ensuring families do not go hungry.

Agnes Nwachukwu is a 65-years old widow who depends mostly on gifts from people to go through the day. Of course, with the lockdown, the hope of getting anybody to drop by and give her gifts was almost impossible, so she had resigned herself to fate. However, during one of the outreaches, she happened to be a beneficiary. On sighting the COVID_19 Response team, she began to smile as she headed towards the distribution area. After she received her package, with the help of her grandson, she placed the food box on his head; almost moved to tears, she prayed fervently for the sponsors. Her grandson was very excited and told the team that her grandma wont have to depend on anyone in the next few weeks before they can feed again.

The echoes were the same everywhere the team visited; Lagos, Kwara, Abuja, Kano, Nasarawa, Osun, Ondo, Delta, and Ogun Rivers state. Many of the community dwellers said they were weighed down not just by the fear of the virus itself but the uncertainty of where their next meal would come from. They were happy to welcome the team and grateful for the bags of goodies.

Victoria Gbadamosi; a pregnant woman with two children, thanked the team profusely after receiving the food items. She narrated how her husband (who has not gone to work for weeks due to the lockdown) and her children had barely had any decent food to eat for some days. According to her, prioritizing what the children would eat was more important and even that, was becoming nightmarish. She said the COVID-19 response team was God sent and the food supply she received was a miracle just in time.

When information is truly power

What was the place of sensitization and awareness? Information they say is power. With the news going around some quarters that the virus is an elitist disease, while some believed it was a totally false alarm. Some of our social innovators were at the forefront of creating awareness and sensitizing the people.

Almajiri Child Rights Initiative

Almajiri Child Rights Initiativeis an advocacy and educational support platform that amplifies the call for social inclusion of vulnerable children in Northern Nigeria. Mohammed Sabo Keana, founder and his team were on ground to educate and sensitize almajiri children in Abuja and its suburbs while also providing them with food and safety materials.

At one of the outreaches to Oke Aro Community, the Chairman of the community expressed his appreciation and noted that the sensitization would go a long way in empowering his people to understand the true and authentic stories about the virus and the right guidelines to follow. He also noted that the relief materials will serve as an incentive for the community dwellers to always remember to uphold the guidelines and reflect on the dangers in non-adherence in the fight against the deadly virus.

Alone we can do so little, together we can do so much, Hellen Keller

45 weeks, 79 states, over 2,5000 households, and more than 8,14000 individuals spread across different communities; all of these would not have been possible without the collaboration and support from Citi and Dow Chemical. Thank you to all the social innovators who are working tirelessly on the frontline; Lagos Food Bank Initiative, Cato Foods, NATAL Cares, Ashake Foundation, RUDERF, 100,000 Smiles Project, Vicfold Recycling, ACRI, Sonocare healthcare, Mamamoni Limited, Dreams from the Slum, Hope Behind Bars Africa.

No time in the history of the world has collaboration across sectors;- public, private, development matters the most than now, when we have all come to understand the true meaning of the world being a global village. There is no better time than now to also take on the mantle of personal leadership. If each one can reach out, the effort is too small. You can join us to do more because we believe that together, we can beat this.

Please visit here to contribute.

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To contribute to the prevention of COVID-19, LEAP Africa lends a Hand to Communities in Nigeria - BellaNaija

Businesses Have More Data Than Ever Before, But Do They Measure What They Manage? – Forbes

Do each of your team members have tangible metrics that they can use to manage their own ... [+] performance?

We love data. Weve been talking about artificial intelligence and machine learning for years. We love the big five tech firms (Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, and Microsoft), masters of data, even if they come with potential costs when it comes to security and privacy. As we look to the future, theres one prediction we all can make: There will be lots more data and well struggle with the same problem. What are we using it for?

There are two reasons we collect and use data: to monitor performance (reactive) and to innovate (proactive). Most companies monitor a number of metrics if they didnt their businesses would be put at risk way too often. But not enough companies use data proactively. Proactive use of metrics, in contrast to reactive use, is strategic. Its about using the data that you have to find new opportunities and to think about a business differently. Innovative companies do this daily. Stodgy companies may do it as part of strategic planning on an annual or even a five- or 10-year basis. But its hard to be adaptive and stay ahead of the market without proactivity.

Proactive management isnt about boiling the ocean. Instead, its about looking at an issue first and finding data to prove or disprove a theory. Once its proven, that metric becomes the mantra. And when a goal is reached, its time to find a new opportunity.

This is the approach some strategy consulting firms use. After conducting an initial assessment of a company, looking both internally and externally at competitors and the market, they help to set an agenda for CEOs a short list of metrics (generally no more than five) that become the focus of the organization. This approach upends business as usual and delivers a successful corporate transformation in 12-18 months. Its effective because it gives companies focus: measure what you need to manage. The rest becomes a distraction.

Most companies, however, dont do this. They collect and store reams of data, but might not organize or catalogue it in ways that make it easy to access or use. They have metrics to monitor, but not necessarily to manage or lead. They likely report (at least internally) on metrics that are accessible or traditional, but may not be reporting dynamically on what could be the most impactful. Their reports may be informational, but not actionable. Similarly, individuals at these companies have jobs they do, but dont have the ability to measure the impact of their efforts. Most importantly, the leaders at their companies dont understand that they are missing opportunities. How could they? No one is looking at the data. Even though they think they are.

At many firms, metrics are standardized across departments. This helps executives and senior officers look across business units and competitors to see how the company is performing in terms that they understand. For that reason, they are often the types of metrics you learn in business school, like market share or throughput. But limiting the types of data we look at and who has access to information prevents companies from maximizing their value, for a number of reasons.

None of these challenges, however, is insurmountable and you likely dont need artificial intelligence or machine learning to get there. You do, however, need greater transparency, empowerment, and a questioning culture.

When it comes to data, many businesses struggle with transparency what should they make available to whom. But the real issue isnt transparency; its trust. When employees are trusted, they feel more connected to the business and are often more engaged.

When information isnt accessible, we make it harder for people to question, challenge, or innovate. But, if we make the information accessible, we give employees the space to take more interest in the business and to get creative. That is where new insights and innovation come from. They are much harder to find when everyone keeps their heads down.

Of course there may be bad actors, so trade secrets and personal information should still be kept under strict controls. But in all of the data we collect, how much really do we have to protect?

When executives spend their time monitoring metrics, they cant spend their time looking for more strategic opportunities. Focusing on strategy requires different data and a different approach. To create more space for strategy and innovation, leaders have to empower the managers that work for them. That can be hard for some: Empowerment is delegation without control. But leadership isnt about control; its about influencing others to do more and to be better. So leave the running of the business to the managers. Everyone will be better off.

One way to empower managers is to give them goals, by being clear about your expectations for the outputs from their teams. Let them work with their teams to determine what they would need to measure to manage the work themselves. That gives each individual on the team clarity on how their efforts impact the organization and accountability for delivering on their metric. When they are empowered and challenged, you may be surprised by how they approach the problem and what they come up with.

Leaders look to change the conversation, so metrics for executives should be used to point out what we can do to be better, not to flex the muscles we already have. That makes them strategic. Whether its an internal strategy team or a data-driven insights team, having a group that is tasked with challenging the status quo and using metrics to look at the business differently daily can create the same types of opportunities that the CEOs agenda provides. Just make sure to keep that focus. If a new metric is introduced, something else should fall off. Its no longer the priority. When goals are achieved, new metrics or ideas are needed and that analytical team will be the group trained to help.

Metrics do matter, but metrics alone dont do much. Individuals be they managers or leaders have to have the right mindset when looking at the data. If the mindset is one of stability lets just keep the ship afloat then monitoring is what matters, but change cant happen.

Instead, we can create cultures where inquisition is expected. Encourage critical thinking and challenging the status quo. Have your employees ask questions of management about why the company does things in certain ways and then help them find the data to test if another approach would be better. Or carve out time for them to develop questions about the business and then help them work to answer them. Who knows what they might uncover? After all, doing the work day in and day out does give them a very different perspective and a more nuanced understanding that can be more valuable than leadership sometimes remembers.

While I dont want to underplay the importance of monitoring performance, its active management and strategic leadership that benefit most from metrics. As leaders, we want to ask the hard questions and challenge the business. Metrics at best give us new insights when they are constantly being re-evaluated. At worst, they at least give us direction, and the wind is always changing.

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Businesses Have More Data Than Ever Before, But Do They Measure What They Manage? - Forbes

Apple Teams Up With HBCUs to Bring Coding and Creativity Opportunities to Communities Across the US – Business Wire

CUPERTINO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apple today announced it is deepening its existing partnerships with Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), adding 10 more HBCU regional coding centers that will serve as technology hubs for their campuses and broader communities. This effort is part of Apples Community Education Initiative, designed to bring coding, creativity, and workforce development opportunities to learners of all ages.

Last month, Apple launched a new Racial Equity and Justice Initiative focused on challenging systemic barriers to opportunity for communities of color by advancing education, economic equality, and criminal justice reform efforts.

Apple is committed to working alongside communities of color to advance educational equity, said Lisa Jackson, Apples vice president of Environment, Policy and Social Initiatives. We see this expansion of our Community Education Initiative and partnership with HBCUs as another step toward helping Black students realize their dreams and solve the problems of tomorrow.

Launched last year, Apples Community Education Initiative now extends to 24 locations across the US 12 of which are HBCUs and 21 of which predominately serve majority Black and Brown students. Across the country, these partnerships have already introduced thousands of students and adult learners to coding and app design, using Apples Everyone Can Code and Everyone Can Create curricula.

Apple has been working with Tennessee State University for the past two years to launch and expand the schools HBCU C2 initiative, which brings coding and creativity experiences to all 100-plus HBCUs. Tennessee State University now serves as a national hub for training educators and supporting its peer institutions as HBCUs expand coding and creativity opportunities to their own communities. A recent virtual HBCU C2 summit brought together nearly 300 educators from across the HBCU community to share best practices and hear from colleagues about workforce development, connecting with their communities, and bringing coding to students of all ages.

Dr. Robbie Melton is Tennessee State Universitys associate vice president of the SMART Global Technology Innovation Center and dean of Graduate and Professional Studies. She is also a champion of the HBCU C2 initiative. She is proud of what the program has already accomplished, and sees unlimited potential for the future.

In two years, I want all HBCUs to be coding and creating, said Melton. In two years, youre going to see many more people of color entering the STEM workforce and in two years were going to double the number of Black women in technology through this program.

Ten HBCUs, which have been working alongside Apple and Tennessee State University for the past year, will now become hubs to promote coding in their broader communities: Arkansas Baptist College, Central State University, Claflin University, Dillard University, Fisk University, Lawson State Community College, Morehouse College, Prairie View A&M University, Southern University at Shreveport, and Tougaloo College. Apple expects to double the number of HBCU partners by the end of this summer, expanding the network of schools offering coding, creativity, and career pathway opportunities.

Each hub is designed to create a multiplier effect, building capacity at the HBCUs that extends beyond the campus through partnerships with local K-12 schools, community partners, local governments, and other community stakeholders. Melton views the added regional hubs as a key element of the programs holistic approach.

A hub is a core of empowerment that goes beyond the campus, said Melton. Its about going into the community, into the home, into businesses so that when people code, it becomes part of their lives and its helping them solve big problems. This initiative is going to help those who have been broken through COVID-19, broken through racism and its going to empower them through knowledge and skills.

Over the past year, Southern University at Shreveport in Louisiana has started to gradually introduce Apple coding and creativity curricula to students, faculty, staff, and community members. Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Institutional Priorities Dr. Sharron Herron-Williams has seen the effect it has had. Our students are blossoming, she said. We invited community business leaders to our Coding Academy and they saw the work we were doing one food truck owner asked the students to design him an app to help track his trucks. This fall, our team is going to start working with him to make that app a reality.

Herron-Williams graduated from Stillman College in Alabama and sees the Apple expansion as a game changer for education within the HBCU community.

This is causing a resurgence at HBCUs a renewed interest in technology as something that can help design the future, she said. Because so many HBCUs have been faced with financial challenges, they have been more focused on how do we keep the doors open rather than how do we continue to grow and expand more programs to make HBCUs remain attractive to everyone. So this Apple initiative is helping give HBCUs their energy back.

Later this month, educators from the 10 HBCUs will be part of a group of nearly 500 teachers and community leaders taking part in a virtual Community Education Initiative Coding Academy that Apple is hosting for all Initiative partners. Educators will learn the building blocks of coding with Swift, Apples easy-to-learn coding language. Participants will work in teams to design app prototypes to address real community challenges. After completing the coding academy, educators will begin to integrate the coding and creativity curricula into their communities by launching coding clubs and courses at their schools, hosting community coding events, and creating workforce development opportunities for adult learners.

Apple revolutionized personal technology with the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984. Today, Apple leads the world in innovation with iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. Apples five software platforms iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS provide seamless experiences across all Apple devices and empower people with breakthrough services including the App Store, Apple Music, Apple Pay, and iCloud. Apples more than 100,000 employees are dedicated to making the best products on earth, and to leaving the world better than we found it.

NOTE TO EDITORS: For additional information visit Apple Newsroom (www.apple.com/newsroom), or call Apples Media Helpline at (408) 974-2042.

2020 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Everyone Can Code, Everyone Can Create, and Swift are trademarks of Apple. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

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Apple Teams Up With HBCUs to Bring Coding and Creativity Opportunities to Communities Across the US - Business Wire

Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training Offers The Community Personal Safety Classes – Osprey Observer

Firing a gun may be a new or an awkward experience or just uncomfortable because of a lack of practice for some people. Cora and James Simon want everyone who wants to fire a gun to feel comfortable and safe doing it.

Its our mission to keep people safe and make communities safer, said Cora, co-owner of Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training.

Cora and her husband, James, feel Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training is the reflection of their personal, career and business experience.

It is an organization whose concerns are heavily focused on prevention and avoidance of injury due to the acts of others, while training and preparing individuals for that ever-possible potential confrontation, Cora said. The development of the organization was started in stages as I recognized and became active in Damsel in Defense, whose goal is the nonlethal protection and womens personal empowerment for self-protection, this experience plus my own career in real estate recognizes the vulnerability of these agents.

James, on the other hand, was raised in a firearm environment, so he had an opportunity to learn about guns throughout his growth years.

His career, before retirement, as a CEO in hospitals put him in a 24/7 role of being responsible for the safety of patients, staff, physicians and visitors, Cora said. In some of his hospitals, he was also faced with external disasters that impacted on the hospital.

Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training offers a variety of firearm training and concealed carry classes. In July, it will be offering its Countering the Mass Shooter Threat class. This class will be held on Sunday, July 12.

This program is designed to address a newer and more troubling threat and that is mass or active shooting incidents, Cora said. Our course includes prevention, preparation and practice training for surviving an active shooter event. Our program is designed for houses of worship, businesses, healthcare and community groups.

If you would like to learn more about the various classes offered at Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training, you can visit its Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/Simon-Firearm-Family-Safety-Training or contact Cora Simon by phone at 363-7576 or email at besafe@simonsafetytraining.com.

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Simon Firearm & Family Safety Training Offers The Community Personal Safety Classes - Osprey Observer

Guest opinion: Bringing your ‘A’ game to work and home – Business Record

"Everything is energy, and thats all there is to it. Match the frequency of the reality you want and you cannot help but get that reality. It can be no other way. This is not philosophy. This is physics." --Albert Einstein

What a year this has been! It is no surprise that many of us are physically and mentally exhausted. So much of our energy has been spent responding to the chaos around us. It happened so fast, we didnt even recognize how our personal energy was being consumed daily (sometimes hourly) by the challenges that were popping up everywhere.

The ratio of energy-out to energy-in has been dramatically disproportionate. So now, only halfway into 2020, you may be feeling like there are no reserves left in your energy tank. I feel it too. It has caused me to pause and reflect how I want to show up and engage in the second part of 2020.

My desire is to make a positive impact in the world. That starts with a strategy to fill my energy bucket and be intentional about where I direct it. Here are three essential energy codes I keep top-of-mind as I work to bring my "A" game to work and home.

The energy code of Attitude

One of the greatest gifts we have is choice. Each day offers a new opportunity for how we want to show up. Energy influences how we act, because it is the lens through which we perceive the world. We can see the world as constructive and healing (anabolic energy) or destructive and draining (catabolic energy).

Both types of energy are necessary, but the key is to be aware of how we are approaching situations so we can make a conscious choice and use the energy that best serves us. Attitudinal energy can fuel or drain us, and it influences what we have to offer others. Choose wisely.

The energy code of Alignment

Being aligned is about feeling fulfilled both personally and professionally. We find fulfillment when we tap into our passions, talents and interests. We find meaning here. Especially through the pandemic, it can feel like life is just happening, without any sense of control or ability to align with our true desires.

Yet there are small things we can do daily to bring alignment to our lives. One of my clients had a draining job and she was coming home every day exhausted. Her passion was writing. By integrating 30 minutes of writing into her daily routine she found energy. Pay attention to what brings you meaning and take steps to create alignment. Energy will flow.

The energy code of Action

The wonderful thing about energy is its constant change and movement. Through our actions, we have more control over our personal energy than we may realize. This action code is a personal empowerment code. I implement this principle by outlining my intentions on a written plan. I write down actions I will take over a 31-day period that bring energy into my personal life and into my business.

By focusing on what is right in front of me, 31 days at a time, momentum is created. My energy is constantly flowing, and I am directing it. What actions will you commit to over the next 31 days that will bring energy to your personal and professional life?

By combining Attitude + Alignment + Action we can fill our energy bucket and create a powerful momentum. Be intentional about the way you spend the second half of 2020, and never forget the impact you can make by stepping fully into your "A" game to bring a positive energy to the world.

Dorene MacVeyis the owner of ithrive31, a coaching and personal development company. Dorene has over 25 years corporate leadership experience with Rockwell Collins (currently Collins Aerospace) and works with organizations and personal clients providing one-on-one leadership and group coaching. She is a certified professional coach and a master practitioner of Energy Leadership Attitudinal Assessment.

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Guest opinion: Bringing your 'A' game to work and home - Business Record

Black Lives Matter is reviving racist thinking – Spiked

Australias notorious White Australia policy was abolished in 1967 at a time when judging human beings by their skin colour was out of step with prevailing attitudes.

More than half a century later, the concept of White Australia is back in fashion thanks to the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. Skin colour is once again assumed to be a measure of character, but this time whiteness has become a vice not a virtue.

The contrived message of BLM sits awkwardly in Australia, where slavery has never been legal and imperialism was practiced in its most enlightened form.

The principle that indigenous and non-indigenous Australians are equal in the eyes of the law has applied since a penal colony was first established. In a novel twist in the colonial project, most of the settlers were prisoners while the indigenous inhabitants roamed free.

Equal rights were formalised by referendum in 1967 with more than 90 per cent votes in favour of amending the constitution. Today those historical facts are being erased by the brutal nihilism of BLM ideology. The same movement that says we have downplayed the ugliness of its colonial past wants to expunge everything noble in Australias history. In the process they are slandering historical figures who, however imperfectly, upheld liberal ideals.

Children are now taught that James Cook was an invader, not the explorer, navigator and cartographer we had previously assumed him to be. The term is used on the ABC without any reference to the facts.

Until recently, Governor Lachlan Macquarie was regarded as a liberal reformer who emancipated convicts, established the first school for Aboriginal children and returned land to Aboriginal control. Now he stands accused of genocide.

The search for stains in the hitherto unblemished character of those who laid the foundations of freedom and democracy has become ruthless.

Statues of Edmund Barton have been targeted in Port Macquarie and Canberra. Could that be the Barton who became Australias first prime minister in a democratically elected parliament? The one who became a founding member of the High Court, which dispenses justice without fear or favour?

Perhaps he is in trouble for umpiring the 1879 match between New South Wales and England at the Sydney Cricket Ground that ended in a riot. In the end it doesnt matter; intergenerational virtue-signalling seldom depends on evidence.

It is driven by the arrogance of asserting no generation has been as enlightened and compassionate as ours and no one who came before us possessed the moral clarity that we do.

History must be framed as a story of humanity stripped of humans, the slow progression of society from barbarism to utopia. Historical figures are allowed no flaws or allowed the luxury of extenuating circumstances. Instead they are displayed as a rogues gallery of bad white men in which colonialism is characterised by its most illiberal, brutal form. All are portrayed as irredeemably evil with little distinction and without reference to facts or context.

Underpinning the new race narrative is the belief that destiny is determined by biology. To be born white gives access to a lifetime of privilege. To be born black is to become a member of an oppressed underclass, constantly beaten down by prejudice in an alien land.

Conceptually, it is a return to the theory that differences between people were determined by biology, not their culture. BLMs fight on anti-blackness portrays all black people as victims, regardless of how successful they might be in life.

It frames itself as part of the global black family, pushing the significance of skin colour to a whole new level.

BLMs solution is not personal empowerment, urging black people to discover success through hard work and persistence. Victory will come through a collective, global struggle against violence by the state and the actors it sanctions.

This radical black ideology was present in the late 1960s and 1970s with the emergence of the Black Power Movement. In its latest incarnation it has crossed to the mainstream not just in the US, but also across much of the world.

Perhaps those who have taken the knee in sporting contests are unaware of BLMs revolutionary manifesto, which pitches the moment not just against racism, but also against the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure which it pledges to disrupt.

Instead, it promotes extended families and villages that collectively care for one another, especially our children.

Groups allied to BLM, like the Black Alliance for Peace, go further, declaring themselves part of a global liberation movement intent on overturning the interlinked systems of white supremacy, imperialism, capitalism and patriarchy.

If BLM really was an anti-racism moment, the sanctioning of the taking the knee gesture by executives of our major sporting codes might be understandable.

Yet anti-blackness in the form that BLM frames the term is a divisive term that privileges some forms of racial prejudice over others, such as anti-Semitism.

It is irrevocably tied to a radical, quasi-Marxist agenda that calls for the overthrow of institutions that continue to serve us well. It demands social and economic revolution rather than changes in personal behaviour and reform.

As BLM co-founder Opal Tometi told the New Yorker last month, the issue of police brutality was merely a spark point for a wider campaign against inequality that demands a revolutionary solution.

In Australia, the movement has latched hold of Indigenous politics as its raison dtre. The concept of a universal fraternity of blackness that bundles the descendants of Australias first inhabitants with the descendants of African slaves is problematic.

The notion that disadvantage is a result of skin colour, rather than low education, remoteness, poor health or welfare dependency, is absurd.

Aboriginal leaders like Noel Pearson argue strongly that notions of entrenched victimhood hinder, rather than help, Indigenous people. It fosters a culture of low expectations, and robs people of a sense that they can change their lives for better or worse.

A serious discussion about the value of black lives in Australia would begin with the injustice of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander life expectancy. The average age of death for Indigenous men living in remote communities is 66 years, compared to 81 years in the general community.

The factors that lie behind those 15 lost years of life are complex. They extend to health, education, remoteness, the shortage of skills and much more.

Improving the lives of Indigenous people is a slow and patient process for which there is no magic fix.

It will not be helped by telling people that their skin colour condemns them to a second-class existence and that nothing can change that except a social revolution.

Nick Cater is executive director of the Menzies Research Centre and a columnist for the Australian.

Picture: Getty.

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Black Lives Matter is reviving racist thinking - Spiked

MST3K stars revisit Ed Wood’s Glen or Glenda: ‘Its not the worst movie ever made.’ – Asbury Park Press

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Let's clear something up right away: Contrary to popular opinion,Ed Wood is not the worst filmmaker of all time.Furthermore, his films idiosyncratic though they may beare not the worst movies ever made.

Trace Beaulieu and Frank Conniff should know. They've been poking fun at bad movies for 30 years, most notably as writers and co-stars for the Peabody-winning cult classic sci-fi comedy series "Mystery Science Theater 3000."

The duo has worked in recent years as "The Mads"(in reference to their villainous "MST3K" characters Dr. Clayton Forrester and TV's Frank), with live shows featuring the famously malignedWood creations "Glen or Glenda" (1953) and "Plan 9 From Outer Space" (1959).

"Alot of bad were made back then that nobody remembers," Conniff said, "but everybody remembers Ed Wood movies. And I think thats because he was a very singular, very unique talent. And I think he lacked certain skills of craft but something still comes through in his movies and personally I love his movies.

Ed Wood's "Glen or Glenda" will be riffed online by "The Mads," Frank Conniff and Trace Beaulieu of "Mystery Science Theater 3000" fame on Tuesday, July 21.(Photo: Art by Tim Alan Holly/Courtesy of Dumb Industries)

Bealieu and Conniff, whose 2020 dates were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, will take their show online for an 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 21 stream of "Glen or Glenda," featuring the pair riffing over the film. A portion of the proceeds from the tickets will support NAACP Empowerment Programs.

A psychological drama bordering on the surreal that was written and directed by Wood, who also starred in the film, "Glen or Glenda" is the saga of a cross-dresser trying to decide whether he should come out to his fiance.

The film's opening text describes "Glen or Glenda" as "a picture of stark realism."As detailed in Tim Burton's 1994 Oscar-winning biopic "Ed Wood," the director himself was known to dress in women's clothes, and Wood's girlfriend, Dolores Fuller, co-starred as Glen's fiance.

"He really put himself into his movies, especially this one," said Conniff."And they really were a reflection of his personal sensibility and I think that really comes through in his films, especially this film which was, in many ways, very ahead of its time and, especially for a movie made in the 1950s, completely unusual and unique."

While Wood's filmmaking is clumsy and his characters' views of gender identity can be charitably described as dated these days, there is a passionate earnestness to the film that's hard to deny.

Ed Wood's "Glen or Glenda" will be riffed online by "The Mads," Frank Conniff, left, and Trace Beaulieu of "Mystery Science Theater 3000" fame on Tuesday, July 21.(Photo: Photo by Joe Martin/Courtesy Of The Mads)

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Sure, Leonard Maltin has said "Glen or Glenda""could well be the worst movie ever made."But in his 1994 review of Burton's film Roger Ebertwas more sympathetic to Wood's work, writing:"It takes a special weird genius to be voted the Worst Director of All Time, a title that Wood has earned by acclamation. He was so in love with every frame of every scene of every film he shot that he was blind to hilarious blunders, stumbling ineptitudeand acting so bad that it achieved a kind of grandeur. But badness alone would not have been enough to make him a legend; it was his love of film, sneaking through, that pushes him over the top."

Beaulieu and Conniff's stream of "Glen or Glenda" will let online audiences see for themselves, with plenty of jokes thrown in for good measure.

"Obviously, its a personal story for Ed Wood but its supposed to be exploitation and maybe it had that element back then there are certainly some bizarre sequences which need explaining but there is so much heart and warmth and compassion in what I think is often regarded as just, Oh, its just an Ed Wood film, its a terrible film, its the worst movie ever made," Beaulieu said. "And I think on Mystery Science Theater we proved that its not the worst movie ever made, or Plan 9 is not the worst. There are plenty in front of this one and Plan 9, or any other Ed Wood film."

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And to be clear, while the film does address gender identity issues and borrows elements from the life story of transgender pioneer Christine Jorgensen, Beaulieu and Conniff are not in the business of making fun of the transgender community.

People are concerned that we (may) mock the subject matter in this movie, and the movie takes itself so seriously and thats not our approach to this subject matter," said Beaulieu, with Conniff later adding that "were not out to do cheap jokes about transgender people. Well do cheap jokes about everything else."

There's a scrappy, D.I.Y. beauty to Wood's work. His films are by and large messy affairs, chock full of stock footage, florid dialogue and, in the case of "Glen or Glenda," nearly wally-to-wall voice-over by a pair of narrators: a psychiatrist, played by Timothy Farrell, and a nearly omnipotent figure known only as Scientist, played by fallen horror icon Bela Lugosi.

The end result was described by Beaulieu as "like an assemblage sculpture."

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I think that filmmakers who set out to be avant-garde, whether its Stan Brackhage or Jonas Mekas or Shirley Clarke or any of the people from that era of experimental filmmaking, on their best day they cant be as avant-garde as Ed Wood is without even trying to be avant-garde," said Conniff. "Theres just so much in this movie thats so bizarre.

In the coronavirus pandemic era, as artists have had to find increasingly creative ways to connect with audiences and generate income, there's a certain "let's put on a show" zeal in Wood's filmography that is downright inspiring.

It just really speaks to the creativity of Ed Wood going, I have no money, I have some friends that can help me out and Ive got some footage I can use and he crafted I used the word craft he did, he crafted a really great, entertaining movie," Beaulieu said."Now we see it in a different light because we can riff on it and still pay homage to it.

The Mads' live online riffing of Ed Wood's "Glen or Glenda," 8 p.m. Tuesday, July 21. Tickets, $10, available via Eventbrite. For more information, visitwww.themadsareback.com/event/glen-or-glenda-livestream-screening.

Alex Biese has been writing about art, entertainment, culture and news on a local and national level for more than 15 years.

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MST3K stars revisit Ed Wood's Glen or Glenda: 'Its not the worst movie ever made.' - Asbury Park Press

Ivanka Trump Advises The President, Violates Ethics, And Still Finds Time To Cook Up A Tasty Can Of Beans For Her Family – Above the Law

Last night Ivanka Trump owned the libs by posting a photo of herself on Twitter with a can of black beans. Just a billionaire heiress in a white dress with gigot sleeves, planning her familys meals for the week, NBD.

Well, thats slightly less awkward than her father posing with an upside-down bible outside a locked church. At least nobody got teargassed for this living room photo-op. (If Ivanka Trump even knows how to work a can opener, then Im the Queen of England.)

On Thursday, Goya CEO Robert Unanue appeared in the Rose Garden to proclaim the country truly blessed to be led by an incredible builder like Donald Trump. Presumably Mr. Unanue was not referring to the tent cities constructed to imprison refugees and migrants, built by a president who continually describes immigrants as criminals, drug dealers, rapists.

Amid calls for a boycott of the prominent Hispanic-owned food company, the First Daughter, an official White House advisor, offered her unequivocal endorsement. But only in her capacity as a private citizen!

Only the media and the cancel culture movement would criticize Ivanka for showing her personal support for a company that has been unfairly mocked, boycotted and ridiculed for supporting this administration one that has consistently fought for and delivered for the Hispanic community, White House spokeswoman, Carolina Hurley, said. Ivanka is proud of this strong, Hispanic-owned business with deep roots in the U.S. and has every right to express her personal support.

Why is a government employee whose salary is paid using taxpayer money defending the First Daughters social media posts if they were made solely to express her personal support? Well, thats unclear. But according to Walter Shaub, the former head of the Office of Government Ethics, the post represents a flagrant violation of ethics rules.

Theres a particularly unseemly aspect to this violation: it creates the appearance that the governments endorsement is for sale, he told ABC. Endorse the president and the administration will endorse your product.

Indeed, according to 5 CFR 2635.702(c), Anemployee shall not use or permit the use of his Government position or title or any authority associated with his public office to endorse any product, service or enterprise[.] While Ivankas Twitter bio claims to be her Personal Pg. Views are my own, it also lists her official position as Advisor to POTUS on job creation + economic empowerment, workforce development & entrepreneurship. Like her father, she rarely uses her personal account for anything other than White House and Trump campaign announcements.

Ivanka Trumps post of herself LARPing as Vanna White was immediately turned into a meme, with her cousins book, a burning cross, and various, ummm, marital aids photoshopped in place of the can.

Which is hilarious, of course, except that this is real life, and the White House is endorsing private companies who publicly support its agenda in the run up to the election.

As Democratic ethics lawyer Norm Eisen told ABC In the Trump administration, she will probably be rewarded. That bespeaks an ethical degradation for which the voters are about to punish the president severely.

No beans about it.

Like father, like daughter.

Ivanka Trumps social media posts about Goya beans provoke ethics backlash [ABC]

Elizabeth Dye (@5DollarFeminist) lives in Baltimore where she writes about law and politics.

Originally posted here:

Ivanka Trump Advises The President, Violates Ethics, And Still Finds Time To Cook Up A Tasty Can Of Beans For Her Family - Above the Law

Decision on whether to keep school cops highlights uneven role of CPS local school councils – Chicago Sun-Times

Many students and teachers at Roberto Clemente Community Academy celebrated last Wednesday evening when the high schools elected governing body voted to remove the Chicago police officers stationed in their building.

The Chicago Teachers Union voiced support on social media, and advocates of police-free schools said this latest victory could spur similar decisions at other high schools that have cops.

But had Clementes Local School Council actually voted out their school officers?

The next morning, an LSC member tried to clarify what happened a night earlier: The council had taken an advisory vote that was not a vote set in stone. They would reconvene for a binding vote at a later meeting after taking more community input.

Please stop speculating, we are trying to do what is best for Clemente students, the LSC member wrote on social media.

Those confusing 24 hours for the Clemente school community and even some LSC members who thought the vote was real exposes the sometimes muddled affairs of Chicago Public Schools LSCs, about 70 of which the mayor and district have now tasked with making their own monumental decisions on school police.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and schools chief Janice Jackson have said LSCs are the ultimate authority on the issue because they know best each schools unique needs.

But more than a dozen schools where police are stationed either have an LSC that doesnt have full voting authority several councils dont have at least seven members, the number needed for a quorum or dont have an LSC at all. Those schools without functioning LSCs are all with the exception of one on the Northwest Side on the South and West Sides and serve almost entirely low-income Black and Latino students.

Apathy has been a central theme for many LSCs soon after they were created in a landmark 1988 school reform law that tasked them with hiring and evaluating principals, and approving a schools budget and expenditures. The first LSC election year in 1989 saw more than 17,000 candidates and 312,000 voters. Those numbers dwindled to about half that the very next election.

In the latest LSC election in 2018, there were 5,000 candidates citywide and more than half of schools didnt have enough names on the ballot to fill the 12 non-principal positions on a typical LSC six parents, two community members, two teachers and one staffer who isnt a teacher.

LSC meetings at many schools also see low attendance by the public, and even finding out how to contact members of the council can be difficult for constituents.

When CPS put the decision on school police in the hands of LSCs last year, the district said every one of them voted to keep their officers. But many members across the city said they received little information and minimal notice before voting.

Northside College Preparatory High School became the districts first school last week to remove its officers. But even at Northside, one of the districts most prestigious schools that has heavy parent and community involvement, the vote last year to keep the officers was a scramble at best.

We voted on it in August, and that was just a rushed vote that CPS said we had to make this decision, Luna Johnston, the student member of the LSC, said last week. We voted to keep our SROs just because we knew our SROs and we didnt have any personal issues with them. But we didnt really understand what their job was and really we voted conditionally in hopes that CPS would add training.

On Wednesday, CPS plans to issue guidelines for making the decision and has a meeting scheduled for LSC members across the city to discuss their votes. The district has asked LSCs to vote again by Aug. 15.

City Inspector General Joe Ferguson, who issued a scathing report on the school cops program in 2018, renewing the uproar for change, testified earlier this month at a City Council committee hearing on school police and took a shot at Lightfoots stance that the decision should be kicked down to members of Local School Councils. He said the choice to limit community representation on this issue to Local School Councils is insufficient by national standards.

This tendency to give short shrift to quality community engagement is a broader issue for CPD and municipal government generally, Ferguson said. The tightly controlled and orchestrated community dialogue exercises that have become the norm exclude and alienate many concerned and engaged constituents and community members.

The mayor and CPS call to leave the decision to LSCs has also left the people calling for the removal of officers from schools in a peculiar position: Theyre some of the same advocates who have argued for empowering LSCs, but theyre now saying this choice shouldnt be left up to the councils.

Raise Your Hand, a parent advocacy group closely aligned with the teachers union, has been part of a social media campaign for police-free schools.

The organizations executive director, Jianan Shi, reiterated Tuesday that Raise Your Hand strongly supports LSCs. The group hosted workshops in the spring to educate parents and school staff about upcoming LSC elections which were delayed until the fall because of the pandemic and has held a dozen support calls with council members since the pandemic started.

But Shi said its disingenuous to spring a major decision on LSCs, with little support, and call that empowerment.

LSCs could not vote out a citywide contract like Aramark, Shi said, comparing the districts food and cleaning contract to the police contract. This conversation is not, again, about were trying to establish community control or were trying to empower LSCs.

Shi said advocates would think differently if CPS allowed schools to keep the money used to pay police once they removed officers. But CPS has said it wont.

That actually gives them power, he said.

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Decision on whether to keep school cops highlights uneven role of CPS local school councils - Chicago Sun-Times

Beware of where you buy your face mask: it may be tainted with modern day slavery – The Conversation UK

From July 24, people in England will have to wear a face mask when inside shops, as well as on public transport. This brings England in line with many other countries that have similar rules already in place.

Once mainly used in hospitals and science labs, masks, visors and disposable gloves are now a feature of everyday life. As a result, sales of these items are through the roof. This is cause for concern for many of the worlds poor, not just because protecting themselves is harder and more expensive in the face of a surge in demand, but because many will find themselves at risk of being exploited becoming modern slaves as production rapidly increases.

Over the last few years, following legislative reforms, big medical supply buyers, such as the NHS, have monitored their supply chains for modern slavery. They have found these practices among personal protective equipment (PPE) manufacturers, textile suppliers and medical device producers.

An expos in the Guardian in 2018 revealed exploitation and slavery around NHS rubber glove suppliers, leading to reviews, reforms and contracts ending. The textile industry and mask makers have also been implicated in using child and bonded labour and for violating human rights.

This concerns us all. Some 40.3 million people are estimated to be in slavery, 25 million of whom are involved in making goods and providing services. According to the Global Slavery Index, the G20 countries alone continue importing products at risk of being made by slave labour worth US$354 billion (278 billion) annually.

Coronavirus is driving many into unemployment and increasing economic vulnerability, making recruitment into slavery even easier and the profits of such exploitation higher. The International Labor Organization estimates that 1.6 billion people will lose their livelihood in the informal economy because of the pandemic. And the most vulnerable may become the unwitting victims of unscrupulous recruiters and companies that use bonded labour to ramp up production in the face of increased demand.

The issue is twofold. One, demand has surged, upending many of the usual mechanisms we use to address modern slavery. Supply chain monitoring has been reduced as urgent purchasing of PPE has become a priority and as people have bought their own equipment. Governments have lifted bans on buying PPE from companies known to use slave labour in order to get additional supplies. Two, more vulnerable people are making riskier decisions to survive economically, making recruitment into exploitation easier.

1. Make and recycle

Consumerism drives a lot of the economic motivation behind exploitation. We want cheap goods, so businesses secure slaves or underpaid, exploited workers to cut costs. By shopping differently and using what we already have to make what we need, we can change this. Reusing and repurposing the textiles we already have is not only more environmentally sound, it also reduces the risk of more people being enslaved.

We can use old clothes and bedding to make many necessary pieces of PPE, including making our own masks. The World Health Organization also provides information on using homemade masks safely.

2. Buy survivor-made goods

Survivors often need work after they emerge from exploitation. Empowerment is critical and survivor-made goods create the possibility of real and lasting freedom while assuring you as a consumer that you arent supporting human rights abuses. Rethreaded and FreesetGlobal are two examples of such businesses. Look locally for survivor-run or survivor-employing businesses, many of which have moved into making PPE during the pandemic.

3. Buy goods from suppliers who check their supply chains for slavery

In the past, big businesses were often afraid of exploring their supply chains for fear that theyd discover something that would get picked up in the press. Legislation around the world has made these businesses consider the possibility of slavery in the supply chain and report on it. But you as a consumer also play a role.

You can start by checking a companys modern slavery report. This often isnt possible on third-party sellers on platforms such as Amazon or eBay, so a number of businesses have emerged that are selling PPE direct to consumer, including To The Market and Masks for Freedom.

These are just a few steps you can take when buying masks and other products to keep you and your loved ones safe. A number of apps also allow you to explore your wider slavery footprint, and help you buy products that protect fair trade, good labour practices and human rights around the world.

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Beware of where you buy your face mask: it may be tainted with modern day slavery - The Conversation UK

Meet the 10 artists shortlisted for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize – CBC.ca

The 2020 Polaris Music Prize short list is here.

Following a similar reveal aslast year, this year's 10 nominees were announced on CBC Music, in a radio special hosted by Angeline Tetteh-Wayoe. (Listen to the full special here.)

This year's list is an even split of new and familiar names, with five previously shortlisted acts going up against five first-timers. Of the five who have been nominated before, three have already won: Caribou, Kaytranada and Lido Pimienta. Scroll down to learn more about each nominee.

Due to the ongoing pandemic, Polaris has chosen not to host a winner's gala this year. Instead, the short list will be celebrated in a special cinematic tribute, which will take place on Oct. 19, and will be broadcast in Canada on CBC Gem, CBC Music's Facebook, Twitter and YouTube pages and around the globe at cbcmusic.ca/polaris. The winner of the 2020 Polaris Music Prize and the $50,000 cash prizewill be revealed live at the end of thatevent.

For this special, Polaris is searching for Canadian filmmakers to create commissioned films honouring each shortlisted album. For more information, head over to the Polariswebsite.

Listen to CBC Music's Polaris Picks playlistnow, and read on for introductions to this year's short list nominees.

Name: BackxwashAlbum: God has Nothing to do With This Leave him out of It Hometown: Montreal, via Lusaka, ZambiaRelease date: May 28, 2020Polaris history: This is Backxwash's first Polaris short list nomination. She was also longlisted for Deviancy this year.

About the album:Arresting, urgent and in your face, God has Nothing to do With This Leave him out of It is the album rapper/producer Backxwash has been working toward during her relatively short career. The production is industrial and explosive, surprising listeners at every turn by combining everything from televangelical sermons, Zambian singer Angela Nyirenda and church choirs to samples from Led Zeppelin, Patti Smith and Black Sabbath. The self-titled track begins with Ozzy Osbourne yelling, "Oh no no, please God help me," a plea that is all the more haunting given the title of the album.

Over this uneasy sonic bed, Backxwash explores issues of faith and identity, particularly the transfeminine experience. "Feel like you lost a son but you gained a daughter," she raps on "Redemption," a sparse, deeply personal song that closes the album. "Before you write, you ask yourself 'Are people ready to listen to this? Are people ready to receive these lyrics the way they are?'" she said in an interview with Bandcamp, adding, "Am I ready for people to listen to these lyrics?" Ready or not, the album is a powerful statement that demands our attention.

Recommended if you like: Death Grips, JPEGMAFIA, Danny Brown, Run the Jewels

Name: CaribouAlbum: Suddenly Hometown: Dundas, Ont.Release date: Feb. 28, 2020Polaris history: Caribou's Andorra won the third Polaris Music Prize in 2008. Since then, Caribou has made two more appearances on the Polaris short list: in 2010 for Swim and 2015 for Our Love.

About the album: Ten albums in, Caribou frontman Dan Snaith continues to find new ways to grow and evolve his brand of dance music. Suddenly is his first new Caribou album in six years, following up the Polaris shortlisted Our Love, and it picks up where things left off. Looking inward and exploring themes of loss and grief, Suddenly is one of Snaith's best and most personal albums to date. While the dance-floor bangers that made albums like 2010's Swim a breakoutare still there ("Never Come Back" being a highlight), many of these songs embrace a more toned-down sound that uses samples, hip-hop influences and Snaith's tender vocals to build something just as compelling and beautiful as any of his previous work.

Recommended if you like: Four Tet, Floating Points, Hot Chip

Name: Junia-TAlbum: Studio MonkHometown: MississaugaRelease date: Jan. 24Polaris history: This is Junia-T's first Polaris nomination.

About the album:As the story goes, Toronto rapper/producer/DJ Junia-T was ready to quit music, but instead channelled his frustrations into making one of the best Canadian albums of the year. It was a two-year journey in which Junia-T surrounded himself with like-minded creatives and embraced his inner Quincy Jones, as he told Complex. Junia-T moved his rapping to the background and instead focused on producing and sequencing a front-to-back classic, an album that takes the listener down various sonic paths that end up in the same place at the end.

With an impressive roster of guests such as Jessie Reyez (a longtime friend, he was also her tour DJ), River Tiber, Faiza, Storry, Sean Leon and more Studio Monk effortlessly traverses genre and compartmentalization. Whether it's radio-ready hits ("Sad Face Emojis" with Reyez), jazz improvisations ("Tommy's Intro"), laid-back rap with a touch of soul ("Ooowee" with Elijah Dax) or boom bap and bars ("Complicated" with Adam Bomb), Studio Monk has something for everyone.

Recommended if you like: Kaytranada, Frank Ocean, Anderson. Paak, Jessie Reyez

Name: KaytranadaAlbum: Bubba Hometown: MontrealRelease date: Dec. 13, 2019Polaris history: Kaytranada's debut album, 99,9%, won the 2017 Polaris Music Prize.

About the album: When Kaytranada's Bubba was released at the tail end of 2019, reviewers praised it as a "dance album front-to-back" and an "addictive club record" with "more-is-more production." And while the album does boast some tremendously danceable beats and richly layered sounds, these descriptions belie the subtlety employed by Kaytranada to evoke various moods across its 17 tracks. "Oh No" pairs bongos (and not much else) with British soul superstar Estelle; "What You Need" updates '90s pop as a vehicle for Charlotte Day Wilson's stylish singing; instrumental track "Scared to Death" is a swarm of insects that have come from the future to torment you; Island beats infuse "Need It" and "Midsection;""Taste" is a delicious disco number, and in President Obama-endorsed "Go DJ," SiR enlists you in an irresistible call and response. As with 2016's 99,9%, these diverse emotional states flow ingeniously from start to finish and have got Kaytranada poised to pull off the Polaris Music Prize's first two-peat.

Recommended if you like: The Internet, Thundercat, Col3trane, Free Nationals.

Name: nhiyawakAlbum: nipiy Hometown:amiskwaciy (Edmonton)Release date: Oct. 24, 2019Polaris history:This is the band's first appearance on both the Polaris long and short lists.

About the album: nhiyawak skillfully merges traditional storytelling with modern sounds for music that simultaneously propels you forward while digging deep to shine light on the past all of which is a bit difficult to classify. So Kris Harper, one-third of the band, gave it a shoegaze-adjacent label."I created the term moccasin gaze to describe something that did not exist," he tweeted earlier this year."Excited about the traction, exciting for new voices. Listen closely, genre is a colonial trap."

Harper and bandmates Marek Tyler (Harper's cousin) and Matthew Cardinal hail from amiskwaciy, also known as Edmonton, on Treaty 6 territory, and nipiy is their debut full-length. The album title is Cree for "water," as the element holds a distinct rhythm throughout the album, bookending it with songs dedicated to the North Saskatchewan River. Working with traditional drums, powwow beats,a one-of-a-kind synthesizerand the flow of water, nehiyawak's music slides along the lines of rock, pop and ambient music while being firmly rooted in place and a sense of self."Nipiy is for those who don't seem to fit in for a myriad of reasons," explains Harper. "To inspire others to use their voice and to send messages to future generations."

Recommended if you like:Half Moon Run, Whoop-Szo, Agnes Obel

Name: PantayoAlbum: Pantayo Hometown: Eirene Cloma: North Vancouver; Michelle Cruz: Mandaluyong, Philippines; Joanna Delos Reyes: Tondo, Philippines; Katrina and Kat Estacio: Pasig, Philippines.Release date: May 8, 2020Polaris history: This is the band's first appearance on both the Polaris long and short lists.

About the album: Pantayo's self-titled debut album is a stunning collection, a skillful layering of traditional kulintang music with pop, R&B and even punk influences for a sound that builds on tradition while feeling genuinely modern. The all-women, queer Filipinx crew is based in Toronto, where the founding members met at a Philippine arts and culture centre in 2012. Together they started workshopping kulintang, a musical tradition played on sets of gongs from the Southern Philippines and parts of Southeast Asia, forming what they've since called a "super girl gong group."

Pantayo, a word meaning "for us" in Tagalog, is the collective story of current members Eirene Cloma, Michelle Cruz, Joanna Delos Reyes, and sisters Kat and Katrina Estacio, one that mixes Tagalog and English lyrics with the sounds of their Filipino heritage and a DIY aesthetic that breaks down genre walls creating connections in their place instead of erecting new walls. Pantayo is a delightful surprise on the Polaris short list, and one that we're glad to have.

Recommended if you like: Zaki Ibrahim, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Kimmortel, Lido Pimienta

Name: Lido PimientaAlbum: Miss ColombiaHometown: Barranquilla, Colombia, before moving to London, Ont.Release date: April 17, 2020Polaris history: Lido Pimienta's debut album,La Papessa,won the 2017 Polaris Prize.

About the album: Wading into the first tracks of Lido Pimienta's Miss Colombia is the musical equivalent of submerging in a warm pool of water, draped in sunlight and surrounded by lush greenery. Time stops, and the distinct feeling of oneness with the world around you is heavy. Pimienta's unmistakably skilled vocals, paired with exquisite Afro-Colombian instrumentation, serve as this type of conduit to what's sacred, what's "home" musically honouring the roots and textures that influenced her, while lyrically challenging the oppressive systems and states that have been built overtop of them. Sung almost entirely in Spanish, Miss Colombia is a resilient statement that demands political accountability and rises above past heartbreak, all while painted in colours so dazzling that you can't help but feel hope for a brighter future.

Recommended if you like: FKA Twigs, Helado Negro, Y La Bamba, A Tribe Called Red

Name: Jessie ReyezAlbum: Before Love Came to Kill Us Hometown: Brampton, Ont.Release date: March 27, 2020Polaris history: This is Reyez's second year in a row on the short list. Last year, she was nominated for her EPBeing Human in Public. Her first EP, Kiddo, was longlisted in 2017.

About the album: Kicking off your album with the line"I should've f--ked your friends" is a bold move, but one that fits perfectly with Jessie Reyez's unapologetic personality. The Grammy-nominated, Juno-winning R&B singer has been a rising star for years off the strength of early EPs. Before Love Came to Kill Us marks her official full-length debut, a collection of old and new tracks that fearlessly lay out all of Reyez's feelings of love, heartbreak, revenge and empowerment, sometimes all at once. But Reyez, armed with a powerful and emotive voice, proves here that she can do it all, from tender love ballads to the more bombastic moments that deliver lines like the one she opens with. This album is just the momentous beginning to what will be a long-running, successful career ahead.

Recommended if you like: Teyana Taylor, Kehlani, 6lack, H.E.R.

Name: U.S. GirlsAlbum: Heavy Light Hometown: Toronto(originally from Chicago)Release date: March 6, 2020Polaris history: This is U.S. Girls' third appearance on the Polaris Music Prize short list in five years. Her two previous albums, Half Free and In a Poem Unlimited, were nominated in 2016 and 2018, respectively.

About the album: U.S. Girls' latest album is crowded with voices, but make no mistake: Heavy Light is still very much the singular vision of leader Meg Remy. As the sonic palette expands here to include more singers and collaborators (Basia Bulat, Rich Morel; vocal arrangements by Kritty Uranowski), the subject matter often a Venn diagram of the personal and political continues to dig deeper into the mind of Remy as she looks both backwardand forward in time in search for introspection. Fans of Remy will recognize some old cuts polished anew on Heavy Light ("Overtime," "Red Ford Radio"), and the album'sinterludes offer her guests to reflect on past experiences and their younger selves.But the real triumph of the album is its ability to illuminate a path ahead that offers a glimpse, even if so slightly, of hope.

Recommended if you like: David Bowie, Patti Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Debbie Harry, Basia Bulat

Name: Witch ProphetAlbum: DNA Activation Hometown:Born in Kenya, raised in TorontoRelease date: March 24, 2020Polaris history: This is Witch Prophet's first time on the Polaris Music prize long and short lists.

About the album: DNA Activation is a wild and creative excavation of the sacred and the spiritual, and it's as intense and personal as it is joyful and inspiring. Witch Prophet and her partner and co-producer SUN SUN have crafted a record full of purpose and intention. DNA Activation is a deliberately feminist queering of sonic and linguistic landscapes the songs are a cool collective tangle of jazz, R&B, hip hop and soul sung in English, Amharic, and Tigrinya fuelled by Witch Prophet's Ethiopian and Eritrean roots, and inspired by her own family members, mythology, and Bible stories. "I will not forget that power lies in me," Witch Prophet sings, and with her aptly titled new album, she delivers on that promise. (From CBC Music's 2020 Spring Preview)

Recommended if you like: Ibeyi, Lido Pimienta, THEESatisfaction, SassyBlack, Missy D, Noname

Excerpt from:

Meet the 10 artists shortlisted for the 2020 Polaris Music Prize - CBC.ca