View allAll Photos Tagged Deliberative
Igreja Nossa Senhora Do Rosário. Construída no início do Séc. XIX pelos escravos que eram impedidos de assistir as cerimônias religiosas na Igreja Matriz, a Igreja Nossa Senhora do Rosário foi inicialmente feita em adobe e pau-a-pique, servia para comemorar a festa de sua padroeira que tinha como ponto alto a dança do Congado. No início do Séc. XX estava em ruínas, o Padre Carlos Otaviano Dias (28/10/1899 - 06/02/1964) construiu outra no mesmo local aproveitando o material que restou da antiga, mantendo-se as mesmas características da original. Passando por nova reforma no início da década de 50. Em 1998, o conselho deliberativo municipal do patrimônio cultural de Lima Duarte resolveu tombá-la e restaurá-la, obras concluídas em 11/99. Conceição do Ibitipoca, MG
Nossa Senhora do Rosario Church. Built in the early nineteenth century by slaves who were prevented from attending religious ceremonies in the Church, the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary was initially made of adobe and cob wall, served to celebrate the feast of its patron saint as he had highlight the Congo dance. At the beginning of the twentieth century was in ruins, Father Carlos Octavian Days (10/28/1899 - 02/06/1964) built on the same site another advantage of the material that remains from the former, keeping the same characteristics as the original. Passing through further reform in the early 50s. In 1998, the deliberative council of the municipal cultural heritage of Lima Duarte decided to spill it and restore it works completed in 11/99. Conception Ibitipoca, MG
picasaweb.google.com/alvaro.dias.batista/ConceicaoDoIbiti...
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
Harmonious Blossom was born into house of Mnemnon Farik Garis to a slave tutor who has a brief affair with her as of yet unexalted dynast student. Her parentage was quietly forgotten when he did come into his birthright but Blossom, unlike many such children born to House Mnemnon, was not quietly disposed of thanks mainly to her father pulling several strings but she and her mother were quietly shipped off to a house holdings in the south, near Harborhead.
A naturally intelligent child, she became the friend and playmate of a Mnemnon Jakia, a dynastic girl about her age. The two grew up together, as close as a slave and the child of her master could be, perhaps closer as social strictures had become somewhat lax in this outlaying household. The two complimented each other and their friendship lasted when they both came of age (and Jakia into her Exaltation).
Jakia was groomed as a sage and thaumaturgist and become a proficient sorcerer after Exaltation, practically self taught and began to explore the occult mysteries of the South with Blossom as her faithful aid and lover. While investigating a tomb, allegedly the resting place of a long dead Anathema Jakia triggered one of the ancient traps. Their guards and bearers died instantly, crushed by mystically shifting stones. Jakia’s exalted might spared her and Blossom from that fate but it was only a brief reprieve. Their true salvation came when Blossom was touched by the Sun.
With her awakened memories and new powers, Blossom was able to lead them out of the shifting magical labyrinth to safety. Jakia knew her duty but couldn’t bring herself to strike down the demon that had taken her friend’s body and soul and that spoke so familiarly to her. Her essence was nearly exhausted as in event but instead of striking her down, Blossom, with one sad glance back, merely left, walking off into the wilderness with terrible feeling that the next time she met her friend one of them would not walk away.
Harmonious Blossom is the core of the Circle and it’s de facto leader. She brought them together, vigorously tracking down rumors of Anathema across the South and following some innate instincts from her past life. She feels that the key to restoring the Deliberative and returning the glory of Sol Invictus to Creation lies in the South
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
The United Nations General Assembly is the main deliberative, policymaking and representative organ of the United Nations. Comprising all 193 Members of the United Nations, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter.
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
The United Nations General Assembly is the main deliberative, policymaking and representative organ of the United Nations. Comprising all 193 Members of the United Nations, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter.
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
City of Fort Collins | Madeline Bechtel
CSU's Center for Public Deliberation CPD) collaborated with the City to host a Deliberative Forum on April 26, 2023 Approximately 50 participants attended including representatives from HOAs and neighborhood associations, the BIPOC Alliance, Boards and Commissions, and the business community. The agenda included roundtable discussions and activities guided by student facilitators.
The United Nations General Assembly is the main deliberative, policymaking and representative organ of the United Nations. Comprising all 193 Members of the United Nations, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter.
City of Fort Collins | Madeline Bechtel
CSU's Center for Public Deliberation CPD) collaborated with the City to host a Deliberative Forum on April 26, 2023 Approximately 50 participants attended including representatives from HOAs and neighborhood associations, the BIPOC Alliance, Boards and Commissions, and the business community. The agenda included roundtable discussions and activities guided by student facilitators.
Toisten puolue is an art project, a political party but first and foremost i think it's a fascinating thought experiment, a tool and a deconstuction of otherness, deliberative democracy, propositional language and animal. Thanks!
The United Nations General Assembly is the main deliberative, policymaking and representative organ of the United Nations. Comprising all 193 Members of the United Nations, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter.
The United Nations General Assembly is the main deliberative, policymaking and representative organ of the United Nations. Comprising all 193 Members of the United Nations, it provides a unique forum for multilateral discussion of the full spectrum of international issues covered by the Charter.
A few of the impassioned speakers around the sacred flame and ceremonial ground in front of Old Parliament House.
Uluru Statement from the Heart in English
5m
SBS Radio - in consultation with the Uluru Dialogue, Indigenous Law Centre UNSW - is sharing the Uluru Statement from the Heart in various languages to continue the national dialogue. For the first time, this podcast collection includes more than 20 Aboriginal languages (from communities in the Northern Territory and from Northern Western Australia), which will continue to grow as more First Nations languages are translated. The collection also includes more than 60 languages for Australia’s Culturally and Linguistically Diverse communities. The Uluru Statement from the Heart is an invitation to the Australian people to walk with First Nations peoples to create a better future. In May 2017, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander delegates came together at the First Nations National Constitutional Convention near Uluru and presented the Uluru Statement from the Heart to the Australian people. The Statement calls for a First Nations Voice to Parliament, enshrined in the constitution, and a process for agreement making (Treaty) and truth-telling. It was the culmination of 13 deliberative Regional Dialogues across Australia with First Nations communities. The Statement seeks to establish a relationship between Australia's First Nations peoples and the Australian nation based on truth, justice and self-determination. Music by Frank Yamma. Photo by Jimmy Widders Hunt. Video collection: www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/uluru-statement-from-the-heart-in... Podcast collection: www.sbs.com.au/language/ulurustatement
City of Fort Collins | Madeline Bechtel
CSU's Center for Public Deliberation CPD) collaborated with the City to host a Deliberative Forum on April 26, 2023 Approximately 50 participants attended including representatives from HOAs and neighborhood associations, the BIPOC Alliance, Boards and Commissions, and the business community. The agenda included roundtable discussions and activities guided by student facilitators.
An overlooked gem at the Northwest corner of the Capitol grounds is a little brick summerhouse designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. A large fountain in the center, with water fountains for a cool drink in the summer heat and stone seats set into the walls with cover for shade. And the window on the eastern side of the structure looks out onto a little grotto, a little postage stamp piece of wilderness just spitting distance from the chambers of what used to be the most powerful deliberative body on the planet, till the modern GOP took over and stopped all serious work. I can imagine some Congressmen or Senators in the late 19th century coming out to the summer house in the spring just before summer recess, to sit in the shade, drink cool water and discuss weighty matters. But Congress has changed a lot since then.
Washington, DC
March 2015
City of Fort Collins | Madeline Bechtel
CSU's Center for Public Deliberation CPD) collaborated with the City to host a Deliberative Forum on April 26, 2023 Approximately 50 participants attended including representatives from HOAs and neighborhood associations, the BIPOC Alliance, Boards and Commissions, and the business community. The agenda included roundtable discussions and activities guided by student facilitators.
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
I had a few other ideas rolling around, but when I asked my husband for a good "visual" song title, this was his first idea...brilliant! I got started that night and loved every minute of it. I listened to the song at least six times through while working on this. It's mostly improvisational. I just cut some rolling hills and arranged them right onto the batting and quilted them together. Then I stitched on the strawberries in a deliberatively sketchy way. I had just enough of that perfectly psychedelic binding fabric to do a single layer, so it is a fused binding cut with a wavy rotary cutter, because that's all I had!
10.5" x 18" I made a challenge to myself that no side could be more than 20" this time, because last time I started too big! Then I had to trim the sides a little because that's all the binding fabric I had! But I only used scraps and I'm proud of it!
By Emma Thomas-McGinnis, Urbandale, IA
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
Uluru Statement from the Heart in English
5m
SBS Radio - in consultation with the Uluru Dialogue, Indigenous Law Centre UNSW - is sharing the Uluru Statement from the Heart in various languages to continue the national dialogue. For the first time, this podcast collection includes more than 20 Aboriginal languages (from communities in the Northern Territory and from Northern Western Australia), which will continue to grow as more First Nations languages are translated. The collection also includes more than 60 languages for Australia’s Culturally and Linguistically Diverse communities. The Uluru Statement from the Heart is an invitation to the Australian people to walk with First Nations peoples to create a better future. In May 2017, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander delegates came together at the First Nations National Constitutional Convention near Uluru and presented the Uluru Statement from the Heart to the Australian people. The Statement calls for a First Nations Voice to Parliament, enshrined in the constitution, and a process for agreement making (Treaty) and truth-telling. It was the culmination of 13 deliberative Regional Dialogues across Australia with First Nations communities. The Statement seeks to establish a relationship between Australia's First Nations peoples and the Australian nation based on truth, justice and self-determination. Music by Frank Yamma. Photo by Jimmy Widders Hunt. Video collection: www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/uluru-statement-from-the-heart-in... Podcast collection: www.sbs.com.au/language/ulurustatement
Not a lot of activity on the Capitol Square tonight, but the chalk slogan in the foreground nicely captured the mood after Democrats won their two recall elections today. In the 12th Senate District, Jim Holperin trounced his Tea Party challenger, Kim Simac, furthering the impression that the Tea Party's time has come and gone. In the 22nd District, Bob Wirch cruised to an even bigger margin against Jonathan Steitz, though Steitz had raced off to a big lead before the Kenosha returns came in.
In the process, Republican posturing was revealed to be just what it was -- hot air. For six months they argued that the Senate Democrats in the Fab 14 had walked out on their jobs. All along, they had charged the Fab 14 who left the state to block passage of Walker's "budget repair" bill and its anti-collective bargaining provisions were coppping out and fleeing from their responsibilities. The voters, it seems, disagreed. None of the Democrats were recalled, but two Republicans who backed the Walker budget were recalled.
No matter how Republicans spin the recall results, they're a disaster for Walker. When the Senate returns Republicans will no longer have the 3-vote margin they used to ram through the Walker agenda. It will be more of a deliberative body with he "new math" shown here: 16 hardcore (until now) Republicans, 16 solid Democrats, and one wild card. The wild card is moderate Republican Dale Schultz who voted against Walker's budget bill. Walker's rubber stamp days are over.
What's next? The words on the sidewalk do a pretty good job of spelling it out. The clock is ticking . . .
(Cross-posted at Letter from Here.)
City of Fort Collins | Madeline Bechtel
CSU's Center for Public Deliberation CPD) collaborated with the City to host a Deliberative Forum on April 26, 2023 Approximately 50 participants attended including representatives from HOAs and neighborhood associations, the BIPOC Alliance, Boards and Commissions, and the business community. The agenda included roundtable discussions and activities guided by student facilitators.
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography
March’s Friday Late welcomed attendees to engage with a myriad of contemporary activism practices, 100 years on from when a qualified group of women in the UK were granted the right to vote. From deliberative democracy workshops to installations depicting radically soft lives, from feminist zine making to tours of radical women in the history of art, this Late asked attendees to examine narratives that are too often left unaccounted.
Photos © PeanutButterVibes Photography
www.peanutbuttervibesphotography.com
@peanutbuttervibesphotography