Sentences with phrase «addresses police violence»

Zeal Harris» -LRB-»07 MFA) new solo exhibition Home Remedies for Driving While Black addresses police violence through the lens of interpersonal relationships.

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A theology of police work is no answer, but a religious message that seriously addresses itself to the problems of violence and the need for order and authority within a democratic, legal framework must be, as I see it, a central task for the theologian and for Christian apologetics.
It's become second nature to the mayor: at an earlier event unveiling a police body camera program, he teed off on Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who is appearing on Long Island Friday to address violence carried out by a Central American street gang.
Domestic violence advocates say the task force, which expired in late 2011 at the end of Steve Levy's administration, brought together police, court and county personnel and domestic violence victims and allowed the group to address problems as they emerged.
Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and District Attorney Cy Vance, Jr. are among the speakers who addressed violence in Upper Manhattan.
opens in theaters August 11, perfectly timed with Kathryn Bigelow's film Detroit as the two films address racial violence and police brutality.
After the faculty member confirmed that the student's uncle had returned to health, this unexpected turn in the lesson plan was utilized as an opportunity to address safety and violence and the role of the police in providing security in a properly run democracy.
In this deeply affecting study of grief, the artist addresses representations of race and police violence.
This year, the Ball will also be addressing the recent acts of Police violence against «Black» people in America.
But more than just dinner talk, these conversations have addressed topics such as police violence, the 2016 Pulse nightclub shootings in Orlando and the need for sanctuary spaces; black female and male subjectivity; and racial subjugation in Latin American history.
Like his vibrant fabric «Tondos» and black - and - white «Soundsuits,» these wire works possess an aesthetic beauty that belies their underlying gravity — the pieces comprising «Weather or Not» address urgent issues like gun violence and police brutality.
The panel painting in the main gallery, Untitled (2017), addresses the topic of violence, with each panel making note of how violence begets violence, ending with two white police officers — both red in the face, as if about to pounce into action — standing above a sign reading «And - Niggers.»
We should be addressing the meanings that divide us on an issue like this, because they divide us on lots of things — not just the use of violence by individuals of one race on those of another, or even the use of it by the police against private citizens, but also matters as diverse as whether climate change is occurring or whether schools should vaccinate pre-adolescent girls against HPV.
Involvement of the provinces and territories in the inquiry is essential in order to ensure more coordinated responses to violence and to address the root causes of Indigenous women's marginalization within systems and institutions that fall under both federal and provincial / territorial responsibility (such as child welfare, policing, criminal justice, housing, social assistance, and many others).
Many of the reports advance recommendations to address this problem: more funding for community based Indigenous groups treating survivors and victims of violence and their families, more training for police engaging with Indigenous women and communities, more data collection and sharing, more public education and better coordination of services and programs.
The policing of violence against Aboriginal women brings particular problems that need to be specifically addressed.
I also welcome initiatives such as the recently announced National Emotional and Social Well Being Framework for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People and some of the new Shared Responsibility Agreements that seek to encourage communities to address family and community safety — through for example, establishing night patrols in communities where there is little if any police presence, through empowering and strengthening women, or through encouraging the community's men to work closely with family violence prevention services.
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