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Home, Not-So-Sweet Home
Students are searching home deeds in Washington state for racially restrictive covenants. Their findings are sobering.
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COVID Challenges for Caregivers
Through testimonios, graduate student Olivia Orosco explored the COVID experience of Latinx caregivers.
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Adventures in Cybersecurity
Students in the Jackson School of International Studies delve into cybersecurity policy and its societal implications.
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Honoring Sam Dubal's Vision
A new graduate fellowship in memory of anthropology professor Sam Dubal reflects his commitment to building an anti-racist society.
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U.S. Climate Agenda In The Aftermath Of The Afghanistan Withdrawal
Aseem Prakash, professor of political science, discusses the situation in Afghanistan and its possible effects on climate change policy.
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Blue-collar workers at Silicon Valley companies hope for better future
As tech companies continue to delay return to offices, some service workers hope for a full return in the coming months. Margaret O'Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.
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The circle of life: Amazon reportedly to open department stores in latest physical retail bid
Amazon is making another move into physical retail, this time with plans to open department store-like locations in Ohio and California that would sell items such as clothing and electronics, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal. Margaret O'Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.
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America’s moral responsibility for the tragedy unfolding in Afghanistan
Without the ongoing prospect of U.S. military support, the Washington-backed Afghan government quickly fell - and on Aug. 15, 2021, the Taliban declared the creation of a new political order, the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, writes Michael Blake, professor of philosophy and of public policy and governance at the UW.
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Wildfires, Heatwaves, And The IPCC Report: Yet Climate Policy Is Losing Steam
Aseem Prakash, professor of political science, explains why climate policy is lacking even amidst increasing evidence of its importance.
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UW human rights report questions compliance with state law restricting cooperation with immigration officials
The Clark County Sheriff’s Office staffers regularly shared nonpublic information with ICE about immigrants booked into the county jail, according to a report published by the UW Center for Human Rights. Phil Neff, project coordinator at the center, is quoted.
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Report: Washington police agencies continued working with ICE despite sanctuary laws
Collaboration between police departments and federal immigration enforcers has persisted around Washington, despite laws designed to tamp it down, according to a report released on Wednesday. Phil Neff, project coordinator at the UW Center for Human Rights, is quoted.
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WA law enforcement continues to violate Keep Washington Working Act by feeding info to ICE
Police, jail staff and other local law enforcement across Washington continue to share information with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, and Customs and Border Protection, facilitating arrests and deportations, despite a law that prohibits such cooperation, according to a new report by the UW Center for Human Rights.
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Report: WA law enforcement agencies still cooperate with ICE, despite state law banning practice
Local law enforcement agencies across Washington have worked with federal immigration agents to detain undocumented immigrants, despite a state law banning such collaborations. That’s according to a new report from the UW Center for Human Rights. Angelina Godoy, professor of law, societies and justice and of international studies and director of the Center for Human Rights at the UW, is interviewed.
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The maximum human life span will likely increase this century, but not by more than a decade
"When Jeanne Calment of France died in 1997 at the age of 122 years and 164 days, she set a record for oldest human. That record still stands. As statisticians who study demography, we expect that record will be broken by 2100," write the UW's Michael Pearce, a doctoral student in statistics, and Adrian Raftery, professor of statistics and of sociology.
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How America tells me and other Asian American men we’re not attractive
"I was born in a small port town in Japan and moved to Eugene, Oregon, when I was 5 years old, where I lived until I graduated college. I’m half-Asian — my mom is Japanese, and my dad is white — but that was enough to be mostly treated as Asian growing up in a town that’s around 83% white and only around 4.5% Asian," writes The Seattle Times' Jade Yamazaki Stewart. Connie So, teaching professor of American ethnic studies at the UW, is referenced.