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The fourth conversation in this series, Our Stories, Our Faces, Our Voices; Who Tells Our Story?, moves the discussion of child protection beyond words and concepts to focus on the power of the visual arts and storytelling to portray the lives of children and families from a variety of perspectives and points of view.
The four speakers – Aisha Bain, Meredith Hutchison, Miriam Sugranyes, and Galuh Indri Wiyarti - reflect on the themes of the institute as articulated visually in the institute's artwork: possession, exploitation, discrimination, domination resistance, and rebellion.
Organized by the CPC Learning Network, housed in…...more
The fourth conversation in this series, Our Stories, Our Faces, Our Voices; Who Tells Our Story?, moves the discussion of child protection beyond words and concepts to focus on the power of the visual arts and storytelling to portray the lives of children and families from a variety of perspectives and points of view.
The four speakers – Aisha Bain, Meredith Hutchison, Miriam Sugranyes, and Galuh Indri Wiyarti - reflect on the themes of the institute as articulated visually in the institute's artwork: possession, exploitation, discrimination, domination resistance, and rebellion.
Organized by the CPC Learning Network, housed in the Program on Forced Migration and Health in the Department of Population and Family Health at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, this discussion brings forward critiques which have been marginalized to the fringes of international relations scholarship and teaching to the center of our discussions.
We hope that the Institute will be a vehicle for learning, information sharing, and taking actionable next steps. We are striving to create a space in which our discussions and resources can tackle hard topics while remaining a safe and respectful environment for evolution and growth among those who participate. Due to this sensitivity, please note that the views expressed by our speakers in each broadcast are personal and not a reflection of their organization's views.
Visit the Reconstructing Children's Rights Institute website to learn more and read the accompanying briefing note for this conversation: http://www.cpcnetwork.org/reconstruct....…...more