#1Thing to #Care4Advocates Mind, Body, and Soul
“This 3-part webinar series will feature tools and strategies for supporting advocates’ health and wellness, including ways to prioritize self-care and avoid burnout.”
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“This 3-part webinar series will feature tools and strategies for supporting advocates’ health and wellness, including ways to prioritize self-care and avoid burnout.”
“Advisors have drafted a document of demands that are fundamental to focus and learning. Schools’ recognition of these demands will accord girls and gender-expansive students of color the rights of dignity and respect that are inherent to all human beings.”
“The EMERGE Reentry Program is a new promising model and educational approach that is designed to dismantle existing pathways to school disengagement and confinement and instead build pathways to college and careers for Black girls and other girls of color who have been involved in the juvenile-legal or foster care systems.”
“If you have, or think you might have PTSD, this app is for you. Family and friends can also learn about PTSD and coping from this app.”
“The author, founder and CEO of a nonprofit driving culture change around workplace mental health, offers five ways for managers and leaders to support their people and themselves through violent, devastating events.”
“What are you trying to say?” informs a lot of my presentations or workshops. In bringing this approach to our data and the ways we visualize it, I was able to cut out a lot of the noise and distractions that interfered with our key takeaways being fully useful, understood, and germinating conversations around violence prevention solutions and strategies.”
15 DV-related resources discussing identity or system intersections from the past year
“Best practices in assisting victims of youth hate crimes, incorporate victim assistance strategies into their programs by sharing examples of current programming, and understand ways to assist those impacted by youth hate and bias-based crimes.”
“There is a severe resource gap impacting the ability of tribes to address intimate partner violence in their communities.”
“Native American persons experience crime victimization at higher rates than non-Native people. Furthermore, the unique position of American Indian and Alaska Native tribes as both sovereign nations and domestic dependents of the U.S. creates jurisdictional complexities in responding to crime, justice, and safety.”
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