Search for: "AFRICAN COMMUNITIES TOGETHER" Results 21 - 40 of 1,284
Sorted by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
16 May 2013, 4:30 am by Tom Kosakowski
The African Ombudsman and Mediators Association (AOMA) is a body that brings together Ombudsmen and Mediators from across the African continent to pursue issues of common interest in the area of the rule of law, good governance and integrity in state affairs. [read post]
16 Jun 2020, 6:19 am by Renata Schaffer
The officer accepted, and reportedly the two had coffee together after church. [read post]
18 Mar 2020, 10:16 am by Cory Doctorow
African WhatsApp modders are only doing what inventors have always done. [read post]
30 Oct 2019, 2:13 pm by Forrest G. Read IV
Four thousand Liberian holders of Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) status and their roughly 4,000 U.S. citizen children may have to leave the United States because of the decision in African Communities Together v. [read post]
30 Oct 2020, 7:00 am by Unknown
The work is the first continent-specific report on migration and is being released during a virtual meeting bringing together policymakers, experts on migration and UN partner agencies. [read post]
19 Feb 2024, 2:39 am by Yosi Yahoudai
Multiple attendees expressed the importance of bringing the community together, and often described the community as “tight knit. [read post]
6 Aug 2013, 9:17 pm by Afro Leo
The two news items together highlight the vast potential for African innovation to empower, and the role of IP in facilitating that." [read post]
25 Nov 2021, 9:02 pm by Joe Whitworth
“Taking into consideration the challenges facing the African continent, the conference was able to bring together experts to discuss various areas related to the improvement of food safety. [read post]
29 Dec 2022, 4:45 pm by Lawrence Solum
We address these questions by drawing on a set of disputes decided by international courts in Africa in the African Court, the Economic Community of West African States (“ECOWAS”) Community Court of Justice, and the East African Court of Justice. [read post]
26 May 2015, 11:58 am
In the eyes of the law, New Orleans’s free people of color did not belong to the same race as enslaved Africans and African-Americans. [read post]
13 Mar 2013, 12:54 pm by Kevin L. Britt
Vance describes a negotiation in which South Africans “sought out areas of agreement with the other side and worked together on a process of power sharing and reconciliation. [read post]
8 Jun 2016, 2:38 pm
Unlike community centers, it is also free of bureaucracy....These morning groups... are almost all segregated. [read post]
18 Jun 2011, 8:27 pm by Mary Whisner
For many black congregations, this weekend’s celebration of Juneteenth will feature a special emphasis on exposing the racial biases of our nation’s criminal justice system.Since attorney Michelle Alexander wrote The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, a network of churches has joined her in the fight against a criminal justice system that targets poor minority communities and locks up a disproportionate percentage of African American men.The… [read post]
18 Aug 2020, 5:24 am by Cory Doctorow
Last week, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa alarmed human rights N.G.O.s and the digital rights community when he returned the draft copyright law to Parliament, striking out both the E.U.- and U.S. [read post]
24 May 2023, 7:35 am by Lisa Larrimore Ouellette
Watch her video for Invent Together, entitled Challenges Encountered as a Diverse Inventor. [read post]
29 Jul 2022, 4:00 am by Canadian Forum on Civil Justice
Overall, community-based justice services are part of an overall continuum of services that – together – can effectively address the specific justice needs of all people in society, specifically including the most vulnerable. [read post]
4 Dec 2008, 1:31 pm
"the biggest problem in the African American community is that they don't have health insurance. [read post]
3 Aug 2015, 11:45 am by Karen Tani
” His first book, The Claims of Kinfolk: African American Property and Community in the Nineteenth-Century South, won the Organization of American Historians’ Avery Craven Prize. [read post]