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In this interview, Peltier discusses his time in (and release from) prison, his ongoing struggle for Indigenous rights, and more.
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How can we archive against genocide in Gaza and its extension elsewhere in Palestine and surrounding countries like Lebanon in this urgent moment while avoiding the pitfalls of white guilt and paternalistic benevolence?
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A century after the Chinese Exclusion Act introduced its requirement for mass registration, the records created in this hostile context are being used to pursue collective healing, grounded in the personal, painful work of recovering ancestors who lived through the shame and regret of exclusion in silence.
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Arson attacks during protests in Nepal destroyed buildings, court files and even records of international agreements and state investments.
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Career experts warn of decades of progress lost as administration fires staff, slashes budgets and buries data
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War crime investigators at Yale discovered a program of re-education and military and police training that was larger than estimated earlier.
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War crime investigators at Yale discovered a program of re-education and military and police training that was larger than estimated earlier.
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La loi sur l’accès à l’information varie d’une province à l’autre. Des gouvernements ou des organismes peuvent rendre publiques ou pas certaines informations.
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The Syria Prisons Museum will provide an immersive experience paying homage to victims and survivors of the Assads’ brutal prison system.
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Ruth Weiss, a Jewish journalist, author and human rights activist, was a tireless opponent of apartheid who used her pen to fight hatred and racism. A look at her extraordinary life.
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Seaming together many different records of the civil war in the early 1990s we see a country’s fracture unfold through a crowd of partisan views
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Revelation relating to then Northern Ireland home affairs correspondent, Vincent Kearney, a ‘matter of grave concern’
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A UN special rapporteur shares the stories of those trying to record the horrors of Gaza even as they live through them
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Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have been scouring the university's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology to create a visual archive of Iraq's Yazidi communities from photos left behind.
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Conspiracy theorists wonder about what Epstein and his powerful friends may have done to cover up his crimes. But they barely were covered up
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In tonight's edition: a South African court has reopened an inquest into the death of anti-apartheid leader Steve Biko, 48 years after he died of brain injuries in police custody.
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The US has long fused politics and violence, often through firearms. To claim that such shootings betray ‘who we are’ is to forget that the US was founded on this form of political violence.
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A Tasmanian coroner has released his findings from an investigation into 177 human specimens held in the collection of a university museum without the consent or knowledge of families. The investigation required complex manual searches and reconciliation of records with "very little additional resources" provided to the Coroners' Office to do the work.
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This book focuses on Greenlandic oral history and how to better understand people, their cultural remains, and their landscape through their own stories. It offers a way to consult Inuit oral history that opens a perspective on houses and landscapes that may otherwise be invisible to the barren eye. Working with and re-activating Indigenous knowledge of Greenland, the study draws on more than two thousand stories collected between 1735 and 1981, preserved, and later enrolled in an online and searchable database.
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