A handle on it and proving there is potential in waste. Climate change affects everyone regardless of gender yet women are the main losers when it comes to its effects. d d 70 percent of all People Living below the poverty line on women and the poor are hardest hit by droughts extreme weather and bad harvests. When Drinking Water supplies run dry its typically women and girls who have to walk long distances to fetch water and that means missing work or school. When harvests of bad men are usually the ones to leave home to look for work elsewhere leaving their families behind in some places when theres not enough food to go around its not uncommon to exchange a daughter for some livestock but does all this mean that women are powerless no in the gambia we met a woman. Helping both the environment and the many women around. Walking woman is so enjoyable because to be one is woman when ever they are committed to committed and in any development in the world one woman gave only 20 percent
Getting a University Degree with ask any study or exams sound too good to be true can be a part of music and university destroyed this guy and actually like it or not hundreds of thousands of people have full and for pledges like this from fighting an online universities do you think these people are ready that these people that. Want to want to investigates the Pakistani Company allegedly pulling the strings behind the scam and the lengths they will guards are to keep the money flowing sunsets its the best and. Getting a degree isnt a z. For most students it entails years of study and hard work. Increasingly millions of students trying to gain vasile qualifications by studying online. But not all online degrees are what they see. Sanitations to everyone if you want to meet the head of the department of law a new Food University which says its based in the United States we should one of the most renowned faculty in the world new food promises no more marathon study sessions no more cra
You. [applause] cspanhistory. A panel of scholars and Museum Officials discuss approaches for addressing difficult aspects of u. S. History. They share ideas for how to remember and learn from topics such as lynching or the holocaust, or about the cultures and experiences of groups such as native americans and the disabled. The event took place in washington, d. C. And Syracuse Universitys greenberg house and Lender Center for social justice hosted the discussion. Good evening. Syracusehancellor of university and i think everyone for attending tonights roundtable discussion. I am pleased youre able to join us for this important conversation. First, i want to start with the most important acknowledgment. That itssome things important that somebody says. And there are some things that its important that everybody says. I want to ignore the shoshone people, on whose ancestrals Ancestral Lands Syracuse University now stands. I would also like to acknowledge and thank Syracuse University tr
And i just want to say that this book, americas black capital, is a really profound new way of looking at the history of atlanta. And so its only fitting that his first author talk in atlanta, be here at the Atlanta History Center are many of you all already have read the book, but some of you all might not might not be aware of his background. But professor ober is, a professor of history, and hes also the founding director of the center for the study popular music at the university of and he received his ph. D. From indiana university, bloomington and he received his undergraduate degree a bachelor of art in history from, Morehouse College and. Hes previously two books. His first book was black power radical politics and he wrote hip hop revolution. The culture and politics of rap. So this is his third book. And having read his first book, it was a great book. But this book broke new ground. And without further ado, i want to welcome to the stage dr. Jeffrey oji obaa. Good everyone t
Is aprofound new way of looking at the history of atlanta. And so its only fitting that his first author talk in atlanta, be here at the Atlanta History Center are many of you all already have read the book, but some of you all might not might not be aware of his background. But professor ober is, a professor of history, and hes also the founding director of the center for the study popular music at the university of and he received his ph. D. From indiana university, bloomington and he received his undergraduate degree a bachelor of art in history from, Morehouse College and. Hes previously written two books. His first book was black power radical politics and African American identity, and he wrote hip hop revolution. The culture and politics of rap. So this is his third book. And having read his first book, it was a great book. But this book broke new ground. And without further ado, i want to welcome to the stage dr. Jeffrey oji obaa. Good everyone to say its a pleasure to be here