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Missing Pieces Project maps buildings in 189 locations where African American abolitionists spoke against slavery
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Missing Pieces Project maps buildings in 189 locations where African American abolitionists spoke against slavery
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Transcript released by the White House added an apostrophe to ‘supporters’ to change meaning after conferring with Biden, email shows
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On Monday, Oct. 21, the Joan and Stanford Alexander South Texas Jewish Archives hosted a special lecture featuring renowned photographer and activist Janice Rubin. Entitled “Refuseniks Revealed: Stories of Struggle and Hope from the Soviet Union,” the talk shed light on Rubin’s daring 1986 mission to document the lives of Soviet Jews denied permission to emigrate – a group known as “refuseniks.”
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On Monday, Oct. 21, the Joan and Stanford Alexander South Texas Jewish Archives hosted a special lecture featuring renowned photographer and activist Janice Rubin. Entitled “Refuseniks Revealed: Stories of Struggle and Hope from the Soviet Union,” the talk shed light on Rubin’s daring 1986 mission to document the lives of Soviet Jews denied permission to emigrate – a group known as “refuseniks.”
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Center was one of the first US schools for formerly enslaved people, and now preserves Gullah Geechee culture
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Calling it "a blot on American history," president Biden formally apologized for the federal government's role in running boarding schools where thousands of Native American children endured abuse, neglect and eradication of their tribal identities.
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Le président américain Joe Biden a présenté vendredi des excuses rares et historiques pour les atrocités commises durant plus d'un siècle dans des pensionnats où des dizaines de milliers d'enfants autochtones, arrachés à leur famille par l'État, ont été placés et maltraités dans un but d'assimilation forcée.
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Expert says any suggestion of Human Diversity Foundation accessing sensitive data could affect public trust in science.
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A judge in South Carolina has erased the records of seven Black men arrested in 1960 for sitting at an all-white lunch counter.
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Plus de 350 défenseurs de l’environnement ont été assassinés ces six dernières années en Colombie, pays hôte de la COP16 sur la biodiversité, révèle l’ONG Fondation Paix et Réconciliation (PARES) dans un rapport publié mercredi à Cali.
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At least 10 gun industry businesses, including Glock, Smith & Wesson, Remington and Mossberg, secretly handed over names, addresses and other data to lobbyists, who used the details to rally firearm owners to elect pro-gun politicians.
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In response to the threat of erasure, the Russian Independent Media Archive (RIMA) has digitised 131 Russian media outlets. The collection, comprising print and online sites, is open access and searchable, with content dating back to the 1990s.
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Under new legislation fast-tracked by the Minister for Children, the destruction, alteration or removal of records pertaining to survivors of institutional abuse will be a criminal offence.
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Climate-related disasters are destroying precious records.
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Climate-related disasters are destroying precious records.
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As a graduate student at the College of Charleston, Lauren Davila found an ad for the auction of 600 enslaved people. A ProPublica story last year revealed her discovery and unearthed the identity of the family responsible for the sale.
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The South African Artificial Intelligence Association (SAAIA) has called on the Information Regulator to investigate the use of South African user data by LinkedIn to train its artificial intelligence (AI) models without prior consent. This comes as the association seeks to promote responsible AI practices, ensuring that AI developments do not infringe on individual rights, particularly when it comes to the processing of personal data.
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On October 14, the International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor, Karim A. A. Khan, announced that his office would step up investigative efforts in the Democratic Republic of Congo, focusing in particular on crimes committed in the North Kivu province since January 2022.
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Le 14 octobre, le Procureur de la Cour pénale internationale (CPI), Karim A. A. Khan, a annoncé que son bureau allait « réactiver » ses enquêtes en République démocratique du Congo, en particulier sur les crimes perpétrés dans la province du Nord-Kivu depuis janvier 2022.
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