This new podcast from a survivor-led network in Chile follows the stories and experiences of victims of institutional child sexual abuse across Latin America. The first episode is hosted by survivor and founder Eneas Espinoza, who describes the podcast as ‘a chorus of strong, organised voices that keep the cause alive’.
Read MoreEste nuevo podcast, creado por una red de supervivientes de Chile, narra las historias y experiencias de víctimas institucionales de abuso sexual a lo largo de América Latina. Eneas Espinoza, superviviente y fundador, nos presenta el primer episodio y nos describe el podcast como "un coro de voces fuertes y organizadas que mantienen viva la causa".
Read MoreThis week, CRIN staff recommend: A hopeful view of human nature, how mutual aid can become more political, re-thinking education, the danger of a single story, articulating eco-feminism and finding humanity.
Read MoreThis week, CRIN staff recommend: Period talk during the pandemic, Earth School and Nawal El Saadawi on feminism, fiction and the illusion of democracy.
Read MoreThis week, CRIN staff recommend: A glimpse into an alternative future on Earth Day, the language of martyrdom, collective grief and documentaries on American Circumcision and 2040.
Read MoreThis week, CRIN staff recommend: Looking at surveillance after coronavirus, Fridays for Futures online, re-imagining security, revolutionary woman making sanitary pads in India and more.
Read MoreTo produce the edition Power of the magazine, we read, listened to, discovered, and were inspired by the following materials.
Read MoreTo produce the edition Silence of the magazine, we read, listened to, discovered, and were inspired by the following materials.
Read MoreIt was the poet and music critic Stanley Crouch who said “Jazz predicted the civil rights movement more than any other art in America.” But it was the famous trumpeter and composer Miles Davis who said, “Don’t call it jazz. Call it social music”.
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