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Practicing restorative justice at Northwestern

Northwestern Now Q&A with TiShaunda McPherson of the Office of Equity TiShaunda McPherson is senior associate VP for equity. Photo by Carden Katz In the most recent update on the University’s social justice commitments, Northwestern leadership announced the creation of a cross-University program to develop organizational capability for restorative justice practices. The program will be housed in the Office of Equity and will be available to students, staff and faculty. Program development is underway with the program sponsors, and facilitator training will begin this month, with the program anticipated to launch in Fall 2021. Restorative practices were introduced to the Northwestern community in August 2017 by Social Justice Education staff. Since then, Social Justice Education, Office of Community Standards, Office of Equity and Office of Human Resources have partnered to develop the practices into a University-wide program.

Launch Of Two Online Exhibitions Allows The Country Music Hall Of Fame® And Museum To Serve A Broader Audience

Launch Of Two Online Exhibitions Allows The Country Music Hall Of Fame® And Museum To Serve A Broader Audience One exhibition, Suiting the Sound: The Rodeo Tailors Who Made Country Stars Shine Bright, explores the artistry of Western-wear designers who helped create the indelible rhinestone cowboy image. The second exhibit, Dylan, Cash and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City, examines the artists and musicians who contributed to Nashville s expansion as a music center in the 1960s. News provided by Share this article ® and Museum unveiled new, free-to-access online exhibitions: . These multimedia exhibits are the first designed exclusively for the museum s website.

Launch of Two Online Exhibitions Allows Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to Serve a Broader Audience

  Today, the Suiting the Sound: The Rodeo Tailors Who Made Country Stars Shine Brighter and Dylan, Cash and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City. These multimedia exhibits are the first designed exclusively for the museum’s website. “As a national history museum and global cultural institution, we are charged to consistently expand access to the museum’s collection and the interpretive work of our curators and historians, while advancing the documentation and preservation of American musical history,” said museum CEO Kyle Young.  “These online exhibitions, made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, enabled the museum to create this novel exhibit platform. With it, we are not only able to reshare the story of the artists and musicians who helped to broaden Nashville’s reputation as a true Music City, but also to tell a new story, that of the clothiers who created unmistakable designs that are now synonymous with country music.”

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