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Stories, Analysis Ajok Deng Stories, Analysis Ajok Deng

Forgetting and Remembering Collective Memory in Spain

By Ajok Deng

As a contributor to the Weaving the Streets project, I have been looking into the issue of collective memory and the reconstruction of identities in post-dictatorship Spain. My first two blog posts focused on Lavapiรฉs, a multicultural neighborhood in Madrid, using street art as a medium for juxtaposing modern-day activities with the history of the Franco dictatorship. This third post focuses on Santander, a city where the present and the past exist simultaneously.

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Stories, News, Analysis, Voices Savannah Crowley Stories, News, Analysis, Voices Savannah Crowley

Sinaloa, Mexico: Remembering Javier Valdez and Standing for Freedom of Expression

By Savannah Crowley

In her latest post for our Weaving the Streets project, Savannah Crowley reflects on her experience of traveling to Culiacan, Sinaloa (Mexico), to โ€œlearn from activists and community leaders on the ground who are building peace in the heart of the Drug Warโ€ in the aftermath of the assassination of renowned journalist Javier Valdez.

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Stories, News, Analysis Ajok Deng Stories, News, Analysis Ajok Deng

Whatโ€™s Written on the Walls: Gendered Resistance in Lavapiรฉs

By Ajok Deng

In the Madrid neighborhood of Lavapiรฉs, groups such as Mujeres Libres (Free Women) join anonymous street artists in expressing defiant resistance to the structures of patriarchy and the gendered violence that it generates. As part of our Weaving the Streets project, reporter Ajok Deng describes what she has been seeing on the walls, and in the streets, of Lavapiรฉs.

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Stories, Analysis Ajok Deng Stories, Analysis Ajok Deng

Lavapiรฉs: The Streets Speak Many Languages

By Ajok Deng

"Skulls and bones emerge from the ground beneath your feet. They peek right above the sidewalks and leave a chilling impression of what was once hidden." Ajok Deng joins our Weaving the Streets project with a report from Lavapiรฉs, an immigrant neighborhood in the heart of Spain's capital. "The history surrounding the dictatorship has long been buried, but it still has a way of creeping up to the surface."

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Stories, News, Analysis Wyatt Adams Stories, News, Analysis Wyatt Adams

Rational Environmental Politics: Report From Viennaโ€™s Climate March

By Wyatt Adams

โ€œHow can that be?โ€ asked the older Austrian man sitting on the next barstool. โ€œHow can that many people deny accepted science?โ€ Weave News reporter Wyatt Adams reports for our Weaving the Streets project on his visit to the annual Climate March in Vienna, where climate change denial is almost unthinkable.

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Stories, News, Voices, Analysis Savannah Crowley Stories, News, Voices, Analysis Savannah Crowley

Deported Veterans: A Visit to 'The Bunker'

By Savannah Crowley

On Sunday, April 23, I had the honor to ride alongside Mr. Jan Ruhman, a United Statesโ€™ Marine Corps Veteran who served during the Vietnam War, on the drive South of San Diego to the US/Mexican border at Tijuana. Crossing the border in Janโ€™s Ford Ranger, a speed bump was the only thing in our way, but for Janโ€™s friends and the United States veterans that I would soon meet, they would never again be allowed to cross the border and return home to the United States. Theyโ€™ve been permanently banished from the same country they swore to serve and defend.

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Stories, Analysis, Voices Steve Peraza Stories, Analysis, Voices Steve Peraza

Interweaving: Gene Grabiner on Police Reform in Buffalo and Beyond

By Steve Peraza

In the latest installment of our ongoing Interweaving series of in-depth conversations, Weave News reporter Steve Peraza speaks with Dr. Gene Grabiner, a SUNY distinguished service professor emeritus whose work addresses issues of social justice and social class. Their discussion focused on policing and the possibilities for meaningful police reform, particularly in Buffalo, NY.

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Stories, News, Analysis Gene Grabiner Stories, News, Analysis Gene Grabiner

Buffalo PBA VP Blog Post Threatens Cop Violence Against Civilians

By Gene Grabiner

In a July 2016 blog post that he refused to take down, Buffalo Police Benevolent Association (PBA) vice president John Evans said of civilian demonstrators: โ€œComply with our orders and you won't get yourself killed. Enough!!!โ€ Itโ€™s not enough that demonstratorsโ€™ First Amendment rights have already been eroded and circumscribed with the creation of โ€˜Free Speech Zones.โ€™ Now, exercise of First Amendment rights may be met with police deadly force. Is this a terroristic threat?

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Stories, News, Analysis Sheila Murray Stories, News, Analysis Sheila Murray

Calling Boston Artists to Action

By Sheila Murray

As a transplant to the Boston area, itโ€™s been interesting to familiarize myself with the city through the lens of current politics and social movements.  Unlike my years growing up in a small New Hampshire town and my time at university in upstate New York, Boston is positively bursting with events. That said, event spaces are not always conventional.  Here, a friendโ€™s apartment is the scene for a โ€œWomenโ€™s Brunch;โ€ there, breweries become writing labs, bouldering gyms host โ€œpostcard parties,โ€ and a tattoo parlor converts into a local artist marketplace.  In the past few months, my eyes have been on community engagement and the spaces that crop up as hosts.

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Stories, Analysis Wyatt Adams Stories, Analysis Wyatt Adams

Rebels with a Cause: Alternative and Oppositional Culture in Vienna

By Wyatt Adams

"It seems like a ritual here. On an almost biweekly basis, the Ringgasse goes silent, the barriers go up, and riot police in white helmets and shoulder pads take to the streets." In his latest Weaving the Streets post, Wyatt Adams explores the ubiquity of political demonstrations and other forms of oppositional street culture in Vienna.

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Stories, News, Analysis, Voices Julianne DeGuardi Stories, News, Analysis, Voices Julianne DeGuardi

Justice for Migrant Workers in Vermont!

By Julianne DeGuardi

In this report Julianne DeGuardi continues her investigation of the struggles facing migrant farm workers by looking at the situation in Vermont, where grassroots organizations like Migrant Justice play a key role in advocating for the rights of workers. This advocacy work has taken on a heightened importance in light of the changing national political climate. .

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Stories, Analysis, Voices Andrew Watson Stories, Analysis, Voices Andrew Watson

A Different Kind of Resistance at Bittersweet Farm

By Andrew Watson

It is the morning of January 16th, four days before Donald J. Trump is sworn in as the 45th President of the United States. It is, coincidentally, four days before many believe the end of the world will begin. For Brian Bennett, his wife Ann, and his daughter Catherine, it is just Monday. The Bennetts, owners and operators of Bittersweet Farm in Heuvelton, New York, are resistance fighters. However, they do not fight with guns, uniforms, or marching orders; their fight requires hand tools, a 1958 International Harvester, and an extensive knowledge of heritage breed ruminants and poultry.

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