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[Tehran, Iran] Urban skyline of the ever growing and ever developing Iranian capital, Tehran, with a clean sky allowing a view of the last buildings of the city up the Alborz mountains.
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©2017 Germán Vogel - All rights reserved - No usage allowed in any form without the written consent of the photographer.
Liberia currently depends on imported rice to meet the population’s needs; imported rice represents over 60% of rice consumed in Liberia. USAID is working to reverse this trend by encouraging local production and increasing capacity. Since 2012, USAID FED has supported this effort by providing improved seeds, tools, inputs, and technical assistance. USAID FED also provides strategic support in land preparation, such as facilitating access to power tillers and building permanent irrigation structures on lowland fields.
Credit: USAID Food and Enterprise Development Program for Liberia (FED) / Nico Parkinson
From shyness to leadership: Louise promotes the interests of her fellow-villagers
“Before I had attended the [Vision, Commitment, Action] workshops at Zakpota Epicenter, my contributions to discussions in the village weren’t heard. Now I know much better how to articulate my opinion. Since attending these workshops I have become much more self-confident, and I am consulted more and more often when decisions are being made in my community. And, at the request of the women from my village, I have become the leader of the women’s credit group. Together we have taken out a loan at the Credit Bank, which we divide among us [to finance our income generating activities]. I also give the women advice about their businesses.”
To learn more about our work in Benin please visit: www.thp.org/benin
Photos by Johannes Ode. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme and his wife Justine Azangbe live in the village of Dovi, Benin. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project in Zakpota he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
To learn more about our work in Benin please visit: www.thp.org/benin
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
From shyness to leadership: Louise promotes the interests of het fellow-villagers
“Before I had attended the [Vision, Commitment, Action] workshops at Zakpota Epicenter, my contributions to discussions in the village weren’t heard. Now I know much better how to articulate my opinion. Since attending these workshops I have become much more self-confident, and I am consulted more and more often when decisions are being made in my community. And, at the request of the women from my village, I have become the leader of the women’s credit group. Together we have taken out a loan at the Credit Bank, which we divide among us [to finance our income generating activities]. I also give the women advice about their businesses.”
To learn more about our work in Benin please visit: www.thp.org/benin
Photos by Johannes Ode. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Ode. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit <a href="http://www.thp.org/benin"
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer. Emilienne Montchohodi (44 years old) from the village of Assalin proudly shows her peanut cookie business.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Ode. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
“From shyness to leadership: Louise promotes the interests of het fellow-villagers
“Before I had attended the [Vision, Commitment, Action] workshops at Zakpota Epicenter, my contributions to discussions in the village weren’t heard. Now I know much better how to articulate my opinion. Since attending these workshops I have become much more self-confident, and I am consulted more and more often when decisions are being made in my community. And, at the request of the women from my village, I have become the leader of the women’s credit group. Together we have taken out a loan at the Credit Bank, which we divide among us [to finance our income generating activities]. I also give the women advice about their businesses.”
To learn more about our work in Benin please visit: www.thp.org/benin
Photos by Johannes Ode. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Employee becomes employer.
To learn more about our work in Benin, please visit www.thp.org/benin.
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
Bienvenu Ijeme (43 years old) and his wife Justine Azangbe (41 years old) live in the village of Dovi. Bienvenu has been keeping chickens, turkeys and rabbits for a long time. Since the opening of the Epicenter of The Hunger Project (THP)in Zakpote he has been able to expand his business. “With the loans of THP’s credit bank I can buy more poultry, as well as the necessary feed for them. I already knew quite a bit about poultry farming, but the workshops at the Epicenter in Zakpota added to my knowledge in that department. This way I now know even better what my animals need to stay in good health. In addition, I have learned to read and write, and how to keep the books. So now I can keep track of how my business is going, and owing to my improved insight into the bookkeeping I am in a better position to grow with my business.”
Photos by Johannes Odé. Photographer must be consulted prior to any non Hunger Project use of images in any communication.
2011 Fiscal Summit. Solutions for America's Future. Sponsored by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. May 25, 2011. Washington, D.C.
2011 Fiscal Summit. Solutions for America's Future. Sponsored by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. May 25, 2011. Washington, D.C.
2011 Fiscal Summit. Solutions for America's Future. Sponsored by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. May 25, 2011. Washington, D.C.
These prompts are designed to challenge writers to take a stance on a particular issue and use their writing skills to argue their point of view.
by:
Laiq Ahmed Qureshi
Creative Director
Arrayed in finery and girth, these figures of affluence stand as the robust pillars of trade and commerce in the envisioned splendor of Praxis.
www.engageamerica.com/jobs_policy/comments/how-economic-f...
In the midst of the American economic recovery, one solution that comes up often with regard to reducing our deficit, is to relax corporate regulations so they can produce and manufacture goods at a higher volume as well as create jobs. As one can imagine, it is met with much criticism not only by the White House and other governmental organizations, but by many American business owners as well. Economic stability and regulation, are in fact tied together.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.
Boston, MA. March 7, 2025.
More than 500 hundred people rallied in the Boston Common near the State House to mobilize action against the cuts to science under the Trump administration. Participants protested the Trump administration’s funding cuts to scientific research, layoffs at federal science agencies, and censorship that they say imperils medical progress, innovation and economic stability. The cuts disproportionately affect Massachusetts, which receives more funding per capita from the National Institutes of Health, than any other state. In the last fiscal year, Massachusetts took in $3.5 billion that supported more than 5,783 projects, including finding drugs to treat Alzheimer’s disease, slow antibiotic resistance, and fight childhood cancer. Protesters voiced concerns about cuts to everything from cancer research to vaccine availability. The protest is taking place in Washington, D.C., as well as state capitals nationwide. It was inspired by the 2017 March for Science, when millions of marchers worldwide took to the streets to protest the first Trump administration’s policies that were viewed as hostile to science.