View allAll Photos Tagged Segregation
Urban Planning's Paavo Monkkonen hosts the International Symposium on Segregation and Neighborhood Effects on the UCLA campus on June 6, 2017. Presentations by Monkkonen and UCLA Luskin colleague Michael Lens were part of a daylong series of discussions about recent research. Photos by Les Dunseith
This is the tomb of Homer Plessy. He went to court in the 1890's to fight segregation on trains. The US Supreme Court upheld the local law requiring segregation, and by extension all racial segregation laws across the country in Plessy versus Ferguson in 1896. This was not overturned until the 1950's.
“This is Kandy and these is My sister Rachelle and Fat-Cat and This is My house 2127 dixie ave. and what I want to be when I grow up is a staff.”
-Kandy
“Friend.”
-Rachelle
“Hi, this is Fat-Cat trying to make my sisters go in the house.”
-Fat-Cat
30" x 34"
This is the header for my latest Blog post which illustrates how if Sam and Jimi had only performed for their own people, they'd still be alive today.
Here's Grimace leaving a "people-only" church because of protesting from the followers. Probably on his way to get a Happy Meal or something...if they even let him in the restaurant.
We are manufacturing Solid Waste Segregation Plants with a waste segregation capacity of more than 100 tons per day. Our machines have successfully segregated a huge amount of legacy waste at different landfills in India.
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Beyond Planetary Apartheid - Planetary Gentrification- institutionalised segregation with Loretta Lees at ISCTE-IUL on may 10th 2018.
A CEI-IUL Organization.
Fotografia de Hugo Alexandre Cruz.
The utilization of the Corizon Health Missouri reentry website is in full effect, and first year implementation reports show there are approximately 600 visitors to the site each month—missouri.corizonreentry.com. Of those, eighty percent are unique, or new, visitors. This growth is expected to continue as the need for the services referred by the reentry website increases. Additional enhancements to the website are currently underway.
The E.A.G.L.E. Program is currently being implemented throughout the Missouri Department of Corrections (DOC). The E.A.G.L.E. Program is an intensive in-cell program designed to improve and enhance overall communication, teach thinking processes, encourage positive reactions to anger, boost self-esteem and work toward adjusting negative behaviors. The program targets offenders in long-term segregation, while a second model will focus on those offenders suffering from serious mental illness.
Both the reentry website and the E.A.G.L.E. Program reinforce the Corizon Health Vision of providing quality healthcare and reentry services that help to improve the health and safety of our patients, reduce recidivism, and better the communities where we all live and work.
©Laura Rockett 2010. All Rights Reserved. If you would like usage/publishing information, please contact Laura Rockett through this site.
James Henry Magee was the first black schoolteacher in Alton at the separate black school in the 1860’s. He later moved to Chicago where he spoke in favor of the continued desegregation of the Alton schools, and he helped to raise money for the Alton School Case. This picture was included in a photo exhibit that was part of the History on Trial: Alton School Cases event.
Harvested skin requires cell segregation before being suspended in a solution that is sprayed on a wound where it multiplies and creates new skin tissue. (U.S. Army photo)
Read the full story at: mrmc.amedd.army.mil/index.cfm?pageid=media_resources.arti...
Story written by: Steven Galvan, USAISR Public Affairs Officer