Organized with the scholar Nicole R. Fleetwood, an expert on art's relation to incarceration, the Spring issue of Aperture magazine addresses the unique role photography plays in creating a visual
record of a national crisis.
«We need to get involved because this has become a
kind of national crisis with about 1 in 10 adults are now suffering from mental illness so we're just called to be involved because this is becoming an absolute sort of epidemic problem.
We have decided that in the
face of this national crisis we are going to put together a committee to study the societal impact of the options that are available for the betterment of everyone involved.
In the
case of a national crisis this emptiness could in the high - sounding name of security, be occupied with ease by a fascist tyranny.»
Against this
backdrop of national crisis and confusion, Mary and Evelyn are steady, peaceful, deliberate, and joy - filled ambassadors of hope.
And his supporters are right to say that last year's shambolic coup attempt damaged the party: it was both outrageous and the mark of a farcical absence of political strategy to cripple the opposition at a time
of national crisis immediately after the Brexit vote.
The thing that matters is whether Cameron and Clegg can sell this as a time
of national crisis where we all must pull together -LRB-..
It's a testament to George's confident handling of the material... that while it touches on many
elements of the national crisis... the project avoids feeling like a bulletin - board movie.
During the
middle of a national crisis on policing, Michele Wells, a visionary theater director, brings together police and formerly incarcerated people on a community stage for dialogue and perhaps reconciliation in Richmond, California.
In recent years, Chicago has become
emblematic of a national crisis concerning the fates and futures of Black boys, and nowhere are the depths of the crisis more frighteningly clear than within our big cities» public schools.
While many national media outlets have perpetuated an
image of a national crisis and a Central American invasion, there is also a growing current across the country seeking to humanize these young people and to cast the issue as a humanitarian concern.
After the Russians launched the Sputnik satellite in 1957, a space race emerged, and, writes Brian Gill in the journal Theory Into Practice, «The homework problem was reconceived as
part of a national crisis; the U.S. was losing the Cold War because Russian children were smarter.»
«It is extraordinary that at a time when the shortage of primary school places amounts to nothing
short of a national crisis that the government is persisting with the folly of its free school policy,» she said.
Addressing the unique role photography plays in creating a visual
record of a national crisis, this exhibition and issue are accompanied by a series of six public programs — featuring speakers such as Nigel Poor, Aliya Hana Hussain, Keith Calhoun, Chandra McCormich, Jamel Shabazz, Deborah Luster, Bruce Jackson, Shani Jamila, Jesse Krimes, Sable Elyse Smith, Joseph Rodriguez, and more — all to take place at Aperture Foundation's gallery.
They describe the draft as «un-British» in that, even at
moments of national crisis and retrenchment, during for example two world wars, «governments always understood the need to keep the tradition of world history alive in schools and to have an emphasis on British history in the context of the world».
«It's
kind of a national crisis,» said Tom Wilbanks, a senior scientist at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory and a co-author of the 109 - page report.
Indications of such support are everywhere, as are the warnings — like the ubiquitous and vaguely threatening «Americans Unite» bumper stickers — that this time
of national crisis is not the time for dissent.
Third, in times
of national crisis it is very difficult to possess a surge capability within a national industry base if that national industry base no longer exists — a probable consequence of reliance on OTS procurement.
Well, she certainly emerged at a time
of national crisis.
Jeremy Corbyn's official leadership campaign has blamed Labour MPs who tried to oust him «at a time
of national crisis» for the party's dramatic poll slump.
«This is a time
of national crisis,» he said.
«We support Obasanjo for his timely intervention because at a time
of national crisis and with people losing their lives across the Middle Belt and Southern Nigeria, anybody discussing partisan politics under such an atmosphere of mass misery is not fit to be regarded as a human being talk more, a leader.
Watching the film, it's hard not to feel a cold chill of recognition, particularly when Miller's interviewees discuss immigration, patriotism and war, and civil liberties versus homeland security in a time
of national crisis.
In a time
of national crisis, Duncan began his tenure by advocating for federal dollars to stave off impending layoffs in schools across the country.
This spring, Aperture magazine will release «Prison Nation,» addressing the unique role photography plays in creating a visual record
of this national crisis.
But I hope that large firms are using their resources to help in this time
of national crisis.