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Women's Center
University of North Alabama Women’s Center April 2010 Sexual Assault Awareness Month (excerpted from womenshealth.gov) Sexual assault is defined as any type of sexual activity that you do not agree to. The assault can be verbal, visual, or anything that forces a person to join in unwanted sexual contact or attention. Rape is the most common form of sexual assault and in many situations is committed on a date by a friend or acquaintance. If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted there are some steps you can take right away after the assault. If you plan to report the assault you should not wash, comb, or clean any part of your body and if possible do not change clothes. You should go to the nearest hospital if possible. If you are afraid of going alone call a friend or family member you trust or you can also call a crisis center or hotline. There are some steps you can take to lower your risk of assault. Some of these steps include: -Be aware of your surroundings. -Walk with confidence, it makes you appear -Be assertive and don't let anyone stronger. violate your space. -Lock doors and windows even if you are -Avoid walking or jogging alone leaving for just for a few minutes. especially at night. If you or someone you know has been assaulted and you want to speak to someone Rape Response offers crisis counseling as well as many other services. To receive counseling you do not have to be a new victim and it can even be an anonymous session over the phone. -
Northeastern Coyote/Coywolf Taxonomy and Admixture: a Meta-Analysis
Way and Lynn Northeastern coyote taxonomy Copyright © 2016 by the IUCN/SSC Canid Specialist Group. ISSN 1478-2677 Synthesis Northeastern coyote/coywolf taxonomy and admixture: A meta-analysis Jonathan G. Way1* and William S. Lynn2 1 Eastern Coyote Research, 89 Ebenezer Road, Osterville, MA 02655, USA. Email [email protected] 2 Marsh Institute, Clark University, Worcester, MA 01610, USA. Email [email protected] * Correspondence author Keywords: Canis latrans, Canis lycaon, Canis lupus, Canis oriens, cladogamy, coyote, coywolf, eastern coyote, eastern wolf, hybridisation, meta-analysis, northeastern coyote, wolf. Abstract A flurry of recent papers have attempted to taxonomically characterise eastern canids, mainly grey wolves Canis lupus, eastern wolves Canis lycaon or Canis lupus lycaon and northeastern coyotes or coywolves Canis latrans, Canis latrans var. or Canis latrans x C. lycaon, in northeastern North America. In this paper, we performed a meta-analysis on northeastern coyote taxonomy by comparing results across studies to synthesise what is known about genetic admixture and taxonomy of this animal. Hybridisation or cladogamy (the crossing between any given clades) be- tween coyotes, wolves and domestic dogs created the northeastern coyote, but the animal now has little genetic in- put from its parental species across the majority of its northeastern North American (e.g. the New England states) range except in areas where they overlap, such as southeastern Canada, Ohio and Pennsylvania, and the mid- Atlantic area. The northeastern coyote has roughly 60% genetic influence from coyote, 30% wolf and 10% domestic dog Canis lupus familiaris or Canis familiaris. There is still disagreement about the amount of eastern wolf versus grey wolf in its genome, and additional SNP genotyping needs to sample known eastern wolves from Algonquin Pro- vincial Park, Ontario to verify this. -
Press Notes 4 of 14 Wilma Mankiller Reads to Young Students
A Valhalla Entertainment and Red-Horse Native Productions documentary for Vision Maker Media with major funding by the Corporation of Public Broadcasting Directed and Produced by Valerie Red-Horse Mohl Executive Produced by Gale Anne Hurd Publicity: Educational Sales/ All Other Territories Valhalla Entertainment Distribution Valhalla Entertainment 3201 Cahuenga Boulevard Good Docs 3201 Cahuenga Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90068 Los Angeles, CA 90068 Sarah Feinbloom Lyndsey Miller [email protected] Julie Thomson [email protected] [email protected] (323) 850-3034 Home Sales (323) 850-3030 Vision Maker Media 1800 N 33rd St Red-Horse Native Productions Lincoln, NE 68503 Valerie Red-Horse Mohl Shirley Sneve [email protected] [email protected] (402) 472-3522 Not yet Rated, 74 min, Color © 2017 Red Horse Native Productions/Valhalla Entertainment About the Filmmakers Gale Anne Hurd Valerie Red-Horse Mohl MANKILLER Executive Producer MANKILLER Director/Producer Hurd’s career as a Producer was launched when A filmmaker of Cherokee ancestry, Red-Horse she produced and co-wrote THE TERMINATOR. Mohl’s body of work spans over three decades On location in San Francisco, the Mankiller Documentary crew interviews Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz. Pictured from left to right: Ms. Dunbar Ortiz, Hurd’s additional feature credits include the of film and television content creation and Valerie Red-Horse Mohl (Director/Producer), Tarin Anderson (Director of Photography), Robert Swanson (B-Camera Operator). Photo by Curt Mohl. Academy Award winning films -
A Sex Worker Rights and Anti-Trafficking Initiative
ANTI-TRAFFICKING REVIEW 12 (2019): 140-154 The ‘Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy’: A sex worker rights and anti-trafficking initiative Alexandra Lutnick Abstract This article presents a case study of how sex worker and anti-trafficking organisations and activists in San Francisco, California, worked together to develop and pass the ‘Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy’. This policy, as enacted by the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office and the San Francisco Police Department, creates a legal environment where people can come forward and report to law enforcement when they are a victim of or witness to an array of violent crimes while engaged in sex work, and not be arrested or prosecuted for their involvement in that criminalised behaviour or for any misdemeanour drug offences. The article details how the groups came together and the challenges they faced while developing the policy. The work was fuelled by the recognition that no one wants people in the sex industry to experience violence. That is true whether selling sex is their choice, influenced by their life circumstances, or something they are being forced or coerced to do. The Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy is a unique example of the way in which sex workers, people who have experienced trafficking, service providers, activists, women’s rights policymakers, the police department, and the District Attorney’s office came together around a common goal. Keywords: sex work, human trafficking, policy, coalitions, violence, crime victim Suggested citation: A Lutnick, ‘The “Prioritizing Safety for Sex Workers Policy”: A sex worker rights and anti-trafficking initiative’, Anti-Trafficking Review, issue 12, 2019, pp. -
COYOTES Animal Damage Control Lakewood, Colorado 80228
Jeffrey S. Green Assistant Regional Director USDA-APHIS- COYOTES Animal Damage Control Lakewood, Colorado 80228 F. Robert Henderson Extension Specialist Animal Damage Control Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas 66506-1600 Mark D. Collinge State Director USDA-APHIS- Animal Damage Control Boise, Idaho 83705 Fig. 1. Coyote, Canis latrans Damage Prevention and Shed lambing, kidding, and calving Toxicants usually reduce coyote predation. Control Methods M-44 ejector devices for use with Remove carrion to help limit coyote sodium cyanide-loaded plastic Exclusion populations. capsules. They are most effective Produce livestock in confinement. Frightening Agents and during cold weather (fall to spring). Repellents Herd livestock into pens at night. Livestock protection collars (LPC) Guarding dogs: Some dogs have containing Compound 1080 Exclusion fences (net-wire and/or (sodium monofluoroacetate) are electric), properly constructed and significantly reduced coyote predation. registered for use only in certain maintained, can aid significantly in states. reducing predation. Donkeys and llamas: Some are Fumigants Cultural Methods and aggressive toward canines and have Habitat Modification reduced coyote predation. Gas cartridges are registered as a burrow (den) fumigant. Select pastures that have a lower Sonic and visual repellents: Strobe incidence of predation to reduce lights, sirens, propane cannons, and Trapping exposure of livestock to predation. others have reduced predation on both sheep and calves. Leghold traps (Nos. 3 and 4) are Herding of livestock generally reduces effective and are the most versatile Chemical odor and taste repellents: predation due to human presence control tool. during the herding period. None have shown sufficient effectiveness to be registered for Snares are effective where coyotes pass Change lambing, kidding, and calving use. -
Human Rights Impact of Anti-Trafficking Interventions: Developing an Assessment Tool an International Consultation 11-13 June 2007, Utrecht, the Netherlands
Human Rights Impact of Anti-trafficking Interventions: Developing an Assessment Tool An International Consultation 11-13 June 2007, Utrecht, The Netherlands Summary Report 1. Introduction In recent years, non-governmental organisations, specialists and advocates in the field of trafficking in human beings, migrants’ rights and sex workers’ rights and related fields have observed with growing concern various negative consequences of anti-trafficking interventions. Examples are: 1. Existing measures to protect and assist individuals who are identified as victims of trafficking are inadequate and ineffective, The Humanist Committee on Human and in many instances actually further harm the rights of those Rights is a NGO based in the they are intended to benefit. Netherlands. Its mission is to contribute to the implementation of 2. Many anti-trafficking laws, policies and practices contribute to human rights throughout the world. It the stigmatisation and criminalisation of women working in non- specializes in human rights impact formal, unregulated and unprotected labour sectors, most prominently sex workers and domestic workers, both local and assessments and works closely migrant. Thus making them more vulnerable for abusive together with organizations from practices. different parts of the world. One of its products is the Health Rights of 3. In the long run, indiscriminate and repressive anti-trafficking Women Assessment Instrument laws, policies and campaigns, negatively impact on women’s (HeRWAI, see rights in general. http://www.hom.nl/english/womens_r To be able to minimise negative impacts and maximise positive ights_wrw.php ), which is a practical impacts of anti-trafficking interventions, it is important to analyse the tool for NGOs to analyse and precise relation between those interventions and the human rights influence the impact of policies on of the people affected by those interventions. -
Playing Political Games at the Olympics Cherokee Nation Vs
A PUBLICATION OF THE NEW JERSEY STATE BAR FOUNDATION FALL 2008 • VOL.8, NO. 1 A NEWSLETTER ABOUT LAW AND DIVERSITY Playing Political Games at the Olympics by Cheryl Baisden The spectacle of the 2008 Summer Olympics, the violent Chinese response to recent demonstrations held in Beijing, China, is probably still fresh in in Tibet, a nation the Chinese have occupied since 1951. your mind. Who could forget Michael Phelps winning a record-setting eight gold medals Oppression in Tibet/Genocide in Darfur or the USA final medal count of 110? Essentially, the issue in Tibet is one of sovereignty. While the Olympics are a great demonstration of In other words, who has power over Tibet. The Chinese sportsmanship and camaraderie, bringing together government believes it maintains sovereignty over Tibet. athletes from more than 200 countries, they also provide Tibet maintains that it has always been an independent an international forum for political causes and issues. state. There have been many Tibetan uprisings against With the world watching, the Olympics have always Chinese rule over the past half century, most notably in been an opportunity to give a voice to global injustices. 1959 when Tibet’s spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, was When it comes to basic human rights — forced to flee his home. More >continued on page 2 for example, the right to a nationality, the right to own property and the right to voice an opinion — Americans have it Cherokee Nation vs. Freedmen: made. But although the United Nations Civil Rights or Sovereignty? adopted the Universal Declaration of by Phyllis Raybin Emert Human Rights, spelling out the rights In March 2007, members of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma deserved by all members of the human voted to remove more than 2,800 Freedmen from its tribal rolls. -
Coyote Conflict Brochure
Coyotes in the Front Range? Most conflicts When are coyotes a risk between large While coyotes are found throughout the West, they dogs and coyotes to you? are extremely adaptable and can thrive in urban areas. are the result of From downtown Denver to the smallest suburb, coy- territorial Although naturally curious, coyotes are usually timid otes are not new to residential communities. They can behavior. animals and normally run away if confronted. Coyote and will be found in any neighborhood that provides attacks on humans are rare. their basic needs — food, water, shelter and space. In many cases these attacks occur as a result of people Make coyotes feel feeding coyotes. Coyotes have adequate food supplies uncomfortable around and are capable of surviving in the city without our you, your kids, your home help. A coyote that associates humans with food may or your pets. Teach them a become demanding and aggressive. A coyote that healthy fear of humans. bites a person must be destroyed. By feeding coyotes you put yourself, the neighborhood and coyotes at risk. It is unlawful to feed or intentionally attract coyotes in most urban areas. © Cat Urbigkit © Cat Be Prepared How can you protect your pet? If you have concerns about encountering a coyote, you may want to keep a deterrent handy. Deterrents can © Crystal Petersen/DOW It can be difficult to accept, but pets can be seen as a food source to coyotes and large dogs can be seen as a include rocks, pots and pans, vinegar in a water gun, Why are they here? threat or possible mate. -
Wilma Mankiller Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation 1985-1995
Wilma Mankiller Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation 1985-1995 Chapter 1 — 1:11 Introduction John Erling: Wilma Pearl Mankiller was the first female Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation. She served as Principal Chief for 10 years from 1985 to 1995. Before that she served as the first woman Deputy Chief of the Cherokee Nation. In this interview, you will hear Wilma talk about life events that motivated her to become active in Cherokee Tribal Affairs. The interview you are about to hear takes a wonderful glimpse into a meaningful and courageous woman’s life. It is exceptionally unique as it’s her story told in her own words. We encourage you to explore her work and become inspired by reading about her life and learning from this very accomplished woman. Please consult our “For Further Reading” Section. Voices of Oklahoma is honored to have captured Wilma Mankiller’s voice so that many generations from now others will be able to benefit from it. Chapter 2 — 2:12 Mankiller Flats John Erling: Today’s date is August 13th, 2009. Wilma Mankiller: My name is Wilma Mankiller. I’m 63. My date of birth is November 18, 1945. JE: And where are we recording this? WM: We’re recording it at the Cherokee Nation Headquarters in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. JE: Tell us where you were born. WM: I was born at Hastings Indian Hospital in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. JE: In 1945. WM: In 1945. JE: Right. You were raised at Mankiller Flats. WILMa MANKILLER 2 WM: Right. JE: Tell us about Mankiller Flats. -
Coyote Valley Bobcat Habitat Preference and Connectivity Report Prepared by Laurel E.K
COYOTE VALLEY BOBCAT HABITAT PREFERENCE AND CONNECTIVITY REPORT PREPARED BY LAUREL E.K. SERIEYS, Ph.D., and CHRISTOPHER WILMERS, Ph.D. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SANTA CRUZ PREPARED FOR PENINSULA OPEN SPACE TRUST SANTA CLARA VALLEY OPEN SPACE AUTHORITY JUNE 2019 AUTHORS Laurel E.K. Serieys, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow Christopher Wilmers*, Ph.D., Associate Professor Environmental Studies Department University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Santa Cruz, California, USA *Corresponding author at University of California, Santa Cruz E-mail address: [email protected] TECHNICAL REPORT PREPARED FOR Peninsula Open Space Trust and Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority June 30, 2019 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We would like to thank the following individuals for their work that ensured the success of this study: Neal Sharma, Peninsula Open Space Trust Galli Basson, Santa Clara Valley Open Space Authority Stephani Matsushima, Environmental Studies Department, UCSC Tanya Diamond and Ahiga Snyder, Pathways for Wildlife Matthew S. Rogan, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Cape Town, South Africa Barry Nichols, Ph.D. Candidate, Center for Integrated Spatial Research, UCSC Justin Suraci, Ph.D., Environmental Studies Department, UCSC Mercer Lawing, Caging Bobcats, Barstow, California Shawn Lockwood, Santa Clara Valley Water District Staff at Santa Clara County Parks FUNDING We would like to thank the following funders for supporting this study: Moore Foundation Peninsula Open Space Trust California Department of Fish and Wildlife Santa Clara Valley Habitat Agency Santa -
Economic Justice for Sex Workers Margo St
Hastings Women’s Law Journal Volume 10 Number 1 Symposium Issue: Economic Justice for Sex Article 2 Workers 1-1-1999 Economic Justice for Sex Workers Margo St. James Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/hwlj Recommended Citation Margo St. James, Economic Justice for Sex Workers, 10 Hastings Women's L.J. 5 (1999). Available at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/hwlj/vol10/iss1/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hastings Women’s Law Journal by an authorized editor of UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Economic Justice for Sex Workers Margo St. James * As long as Americans feel justified in blaming depreciating property values on the women who strut their dimly lit streets at night, no woman can achieve economic justice-never mind sex workers. *Margo St. James was born in Bellingham, Washington in 1937. She moved to San Fran cisco in 1959, joining the Beatnik scene in North Beach. She was erroneously arrested for prostitution in 1962. While working off her bail, she met defense attorney Vincent Hallinan who convinced her to attend law school. Although Ms. St. James never graduated, her edu cation at Lincoln Law School enabled her to successfully appeal her prostitution conviction. In 1973, Margo St. James founded Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics (COYOTE), the first prostitutes' rights organization in America. She lives in both San Francisco and on Orcas Island, Washington. -
Coyote Publishing, Inc. V. Miller: Blurring the Standards of Commercial and Noncommercial Speech Nicole E
Golden Gate University Law Review Volume 42 Article 9 Issue 1 Ninth Circuit Survey January 2012 Coyote Publishing, Inc. v. Miller: Blurring the Standards of Commercial and Noncommercial Speech Nicole E. Wolfe Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/ggulrev Part of the Commercial Law Commons, and the Constitutional Law Commons Recommended Citation Nicole E. Wolfe, Coyote Publishing, Inc. v. Miller: Blurring the Standards of Commercial and Noncommercial Speech, 42 Golden Gate U. L. Rev. (2012). http://digitalcommons.law.ggu.edu/ggulrev/vol42/iss1/9 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Academic Journals at GGU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Golden Gate University Law Review by an authorized administrator of GGU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Wolfe: Coyote Publishing, Inc. v. Miller NOTE COYOTE PUBLISHING, INC. v. MILLER: BLURRING THE STANDARDS OF COMMERCIAL AND NONCOMMERCIAL SPEECH NICOLE E. WOLFE* It is not easy to describe the present position of legal opinion on advertising and free speech. Only a poet can capture the essence of chaos.1 INTRODUCTION Prostitution is regarded as one of the world’s oldest professions.2 While the sale of sexual services has been in existence for centuries, practically every state in the United States has enacted laws that fully prohibit it.3 The underlying purposes for creating such laws include * J.D. Candidate, May 2012, Golden Gate University School of Law, San Francisco, California; B.A. Political Science and Law, Societies and Justice, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.