Calendar

9896
Apr
20
Mon
Forum on Community Choice Energy in Berkeley @ Brower Center
Apr 20 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Forum on Community Choice Energy in Berkeley

solar_panels.jpgLearn about Alameda County’s plans to create a not-for-profit Community Choice Energy program with the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, create clean energy jobs and provide stable electricity rates for Berkeley and other Alameda County communities. This panel discussion is presented by the Berkeley Climate Action Coalition, Ecology Center and David Brower Center.

The event is open to the public, free of charge and wheelchair accessible.

 

PANELISTS

Shawn Marshall, Executive Director of LEAN Energy, former mayor of Mill Valley and former Vice-Chair of Marin Clean Energy

Jess Dervin-Ackerman, Conservation Program Manager at Sierra Club San Francisco Bay Chapter

Woody Hastings, Renewable Energy Implementation Manager at Climate Protection Campaign, Sonoma County Community Choice campaigner

Luis Amezcua, Community Choice Energy Working Group, Berkeley Climate Action Coalition

The discussion moderator is Kira Stoll, Sustainability Manager, UC Berkeley.

 

58522
Apr
21
Tue
Postal Banking Conference Call
Apr 21 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

Friends of Postal Banking Conference Call Series w/ Guest Speakers, 1st&3rd Tuesdays each month

This free conference call is intended for anyone who wishes to learn more about postal banking and to discuss its possibilities. The first 5 minutes of each call is a straightforward review of the basics of existing USPS money services and how they can be extended to include functions such as bill pay, payroll advances, and short-term, small dollar credit. The next 10-15 minutes is time for the guest speaker to speak on any postal banking topic s/he may wish. This is followed by a 30-40 minute open discussion among invited participants. Screenshare capability, if needed, will be provided.

The list of scheduled speakers is:

April 21st, Sheldon Garon, Professor of History, Princeton University, Author of book, Beyond Our Means: Why America Spends While the World Saves. Presentation: Postal Financial Services, A Global Perspective, Presentation: http://www.pewtrusts.org/~/media/Assets/2014/07/FIN_Panel-2–Postal-Financial-Services-A-GlobalHistorical-Perspective-by-Sheldon-Garon.pdf

May 5th, David C. Williams, USPS Inspector General, OIG published Providing Non-Bank Financial Services for the Underserved (see https://www.uspsoig.gov/sites/default/files/document-library-files/2014/rarc-wp-14-007.pdf )in January, 2014. Follow up report to be published before this conference call.

Register here.

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Justice 4 Yuvette Henderson: Call for Speakers at the City Council Meeting @ City Hall, off Oscar Grant Plaza
Apr 21 @ 5:30 pm – 11:00 pm

WE FORCED THE STATE TO CONCEDE!!!!

Two weeks ago, 100 members of the Anti-Police Terror Project, along with members of Yuvette Henderson’s family put forth a demand to the Oakland Police Department to allow the family of Yuvette to view the videos at Home Depot where Yuvette was assaulted and injured by Home Depot security, and in front of Extra Space Storage where Yuvette was murdered by the Emeryville Police Department.

This was the SECOND time we have delivered this letter. The first time, even after shutdowns of the Emeryville Police Department and Home Depot, they still said NO. But the people are persistent and …

THIS TIME … THE POWER OF THE PEOPLE FORCED THEIR HAND!

Yuvette’s family will be viewing the videos THIS WEEK at the Oakland Police Department. We are concealing the date and time to provide much-needed privacy for the family, but will get back to you with updates – and next steps – soon!

—————————————————————-

IMPORTANT CITY COUNCIL MEETING TUESDAY, APRIL 21!

There is an Oakland City Council meeting beginning at 5:30pm and we need APTP to show up in force!

Over the last few months, police have killed two women of color. Both Guadalupe Ochoa and Yuvette Henderson were unarmed when they were gunned down by police.

In both cases, police deliberately withheld reports and spread misinformation. And in both cases, the people-led APTP investigations called into question (and disproved) statements made by the police and the media.

And with both women, OPD actively engaged in the dehumanization of these mothers, wives and grandmothers, while causing extreme emotional stress for their loved ones.

COPS CAN’T BE TRUSTED TO INVESTIGATE COPS!!!

That is why we are joining the Coalition for Police Accountability in demanding that all investigations of police misconduct and crime be transferred OUT of Internal Affairs and INTO the hands of the people.

And we are demanding that the investigations into the state’s murders of Yuvette Henderson and Guadalupe Ochoa be transferred over to a community-led investigation team.

We know the CRPB is not a silver bullet, and it is a looooong way from dismantling a system built to oppress, incarcerate and kill people of color. But we believe this is a good step in the right direction toward accountability for officer-involved crimes.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

​SHOW UP TO CITY COUNCIL TOMORROW. Bring signs with our demands or just show up as we will have some to distribute.

SIGN UP TO SPEAK. Let City Council know that we have ZERO faith in police investigations of police crimes and we want the CRPB to be made up of everyday people, and survivors of police terror, to review ALL complaints of police terror. The CRPB should have the power to discipline offending officers.

You can sign up for a speaker card here: http://www2.oaklandnet.com/Government/o/CityClerk/s/SpeakerCard/SpeakerCard/OAK032373

​Y​ou do not have to speak if you fill out a card, you can cede your time to another speaker who needs more time. But PLEASE fill out a card!

Some additional reading about why we NEED a CRPB in Oakland and the dirty history of OPD:

Oct 2011 Deadly Secrets: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/deadly-secrets/Content?oid=3012922
Nov 2011: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/opd-facing-more-legal-trouble/Content?oid=3048080
Dec 2011: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/opd-used-violent-cops-against-occupy/Content?oid=3076433
Aug 2012: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/the-high-costs-of-outsourcing-policeandnbsp/Content?oid=3306199
March 2013: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/SevenDays/archives/2013/03/04/thomas-frazier-appointed-opd-compliance-director
April 2013: Deanna Santana Blocks Reform of Internal Affairs: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/deanna-santana-blocks-reform-of-internal-affairs/Content?oid=3530211
May 2013: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/frazier-to-reexamine-police-misconduct/Content?oid=3541392
Sept 2014: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/why-oakland-cant-fire-bad-cops/Content?oid=4074076
Feb 2015 OPD Still Appears to be Targeting Blacks: http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/opd-still-appears-to-be-targeting-blacks/Content?oid=4185368

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Disrupt City Council in Memory of Lupe Ochoa! @ Oakland City Hall, off Oscar Grant Plaza
Apr 21 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

STOP POLICE VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN OF COLOR!

Facebook event.

Tell Oakland City Council to put pressure on OPD, the District Attorney, and Alameda Coroner!

We demand them to release the police and autopsy reports in the police killing of 27-year-old mother of four, Guadalupe (“Lupe”) Manzo Ochoa. Lupe was killed by San Leandro Police in East Oakland December 7th and now OPD is investigating the shooting and refuses to be transparent with the family!

WEAR HOT PINK (Lupe’s favorite color), bring noisemakers and signs that say @[null:#Justicia4Lupe]!

*We want to get a long line of people to sign up to speak and simply state “on behalf of Lupe Ochoa’s family, release the reports!”

*Please note that the formal meeting begins at 630pm though sign up may begin as early as 530. Some of us will be in attendance early to sign up for those who wish to speak.

We will have some chants. We want to disrupt City Council and remind them that police devastated Lupe’s family and community and we want answers!

 

Update: sign up to speak on item number 13. It’s for an independent review board for OPD. Utilize the time to talk about how OPD cannot be trusted to investigate themselves let alone San Leandro police and that the police and coroners reports in the killing of Lupe Ochoa needs to be released now! Sign up for a speakers card online through this link:
http://www2.oaklandnet.com/Government/o/CityClerk/s/SpeakerCard/SpeakerCard/OAK032373

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ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION ABOUT THE STATE OF THE PLANET @ Humanist Hall
Apr 21 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm

ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION ABOUT THE STATE OF THE PLANET

with Florence Windfall

Earth Day is Everyday

We invite you to participate in our Earth Awareness meeting at Humanist Hall. Come and share your own impressions of the current state of the Earth whether your impressions come from your own experiences and ideas or from those of someone you recommend we read. You are welcome to read from material that you bring to our group or to talk about your own experiences and/or ideas. What do you think is the current condition of planet Earth and its short term and/or long term fate? And what is your reaction to these thoughts you have?

Everyone will have at least 15 minutes to make their point or express their feelings. Discussion will follow each participant’s presentation. The time allowed for discussion will be longer or shorter depending on how many participants there are. If you are not so familiar with current developments in climate change science or politics, please see the list of articles, photos, and a radio program for your reading/viewing/listening pleasure that’s on our website, shown in the link below! For more articles and videos, check out our past Earth Awareness programs that are shown on our website.

Humanist Hall is wheelchair accessible around the corner at 411 28th Street.

$5 donations are expected.

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Apr
22
Wed
NO MORE JAILS, NO MORE COPS! @ San Francisco City Hall, Room 250
Apr 22 @ 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm

Tomorrow, the Budget and Finance Committee will meet to discuss the proposed spending costs for public safety services for this year. This hearing is critical as San Francisco Police Department will ask for an additional $23 million from the general fund to hire and train at least 150 new police officers.

“More cops means more arrests,” said Chief Suhr.

This is the city’s justification for the SF replacement jail that will cost upwards of $280 million to build and operate. Last week, there were 293 prisoners locked up in CJ4, yet this replacement jail irresponsibly calls for 521 new cages. We know this new jail would only mean devasting consequences for poor, POC, trans, and LGBQ San Franciscans.

In San Francisco, the African American population is less than 5%, yet black people make up 56% of the imprisoned population. Two-thirds of women in jail have non-violent sentences and have trauma and/or substance abuse issues. As reported by the Controller’s Office, 50% of prisoners presently inside county jails have mental health issues. It’s time we invest in real solutions to public safety, housing, jobs, education, mental health care, not more of the same failed policies that harm our community.

Stand with us tomorrow as we say NO MORE JAILS, NO MORE COPS!

When: Wednesday, April 22 at 1:00 pm
Where: City Hall, Room #250, San Francisco

Together we will demand San Francisco to make real and lasting investments in the health and sustainability of our city! 

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Film Screening: Street Politics 101, the 2012 Montreal Student Strike @ La Idea
Apr 22 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Film screening of subMedia.tv’s “Street Politics 101” about the 2012 student strike in Montréal, Canada. Plus a screening of the latest Stimulator episode with updates from the student strike currently unfolding in Montréal.

Description of Street Politics 101 from subMedia.tv:

In the spring of 2012, a massive student strike in opposition to a tuition hike, rocked the streets of the Montréal for over six months. Protests and militant street actions became part of the daily and nightly reality of this Canadian metropolis. Several times during this tumultuous spring, the numbers in the streets would reach over one hundred thousand. Police routinely clubbed students and their allies, and arrested them by the hundreds. Some were even banned from entering the city. But every time the cops struck, the student movement got bigger and angrier.

This is a story about how the arrogance of a government, underestimated a dedicated group of students, who through long term organizing laid the foundation for some of the largest mass demonstrations in Canada’s history. But it is also a story of how a crews of determined anarchists, educated a new generation of students, in the importance of owning the streets.

In Street Politics 101, subMedia.tv features some of the best footage from what some called “the maple spring.” It also features interviews with students, teachers and anarchists involved in one of the most militant rebellions in Quebec.

 

800_streetpolitics101.jpg original image ( 1760x1360)

 

58606
Roman Mars Talk. @ Kaiser Center, Suite 250
Apr 22 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

No matter the topic, Roman Mars, creator of the wildly popular “99% Invisible” podcast, will blow your mind with his observations on everything from architectural heists to barcodes, from cow tunnels to DIY space suits. Join the “Ira Glass of Design” and his Radiotopia colleagues for a fascinating evening.​

+ Roman Mars / 99% Invisible
+ Sam Greenspan / 99% Invisible

Pre-registration is required for this event. Please use the links below to sign up.

ADMISSION:

Pre-registration is required for this event. Please register below:
Free for SPUR members
$10 for non-members

58514
Oakland Privacy Working Group Meeting @ Impact Hub, upstairs
Apr 22 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Join Oakland Privacy Working Group to organize against the Domain Awareness Center (DAC), Oakland’s citywide networked mass surveillance hub, and other invasions of privacy by our benighted City Government

Stop by and learn how you can help guard Oakland’s right not to be spied on by the government & if you are interested in joining the Oakland Privacy Working Group email listserv, send an email to:

oaklandprivacyworkinggroup-subscribe AT lists.riseup.net

For more information on the DAC check out

58588
Protection, Justice and Compensation: A Panel Discussion @ Omni Commons
Apr 22 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Compensation for rape or other violent crimes is crucial to recovery, yet many victims are denied it. Find out
what can be done!

Build on a victory: In 2013 a campaign spearheaded by US PROStitutes Collective, with key support from other sex worker organizations and women’s and prisoners rights campaigners, pushed the California Victim Compensation Program (CalVCP) to drop a discriminatory regulation that denied compensation to sex workers for involvement in the crime of prostitution. Sex workers who are victims of rape, sexual assault or had suffered domestic violence can now get compensation.

• Compensation is still denied to victims who have suffered other violence, or who are prisoners or formerly incarcerated people (FIPs).
• A “cooperation with police” requirement is a further obstacle to compensation, particularly for immigrants and people of color, and any who fear retaliation, deportation, and/or police racism or other bias.
• Similar criminalization and discrimination exists in other countries, and we are campaigning together internationally against this.

Speakers:
Linda Evans, All of Us or None – the impact of compensation programs on prisoners and FIPs.

Nina Lopez, English Collective of Prostitutes and Legal Action for Women, UK – opposing criminalization based on the ‘Swedish model’; the use of anti-trafficking laws to target sex workers & immigrants.

Margaret Prescod, Black Coalition Fighting Back Serial Murders – fighting for justice over the murders of 100 Black women in South Central LA, dismissed by law enforcement as “no humans involved.”

Rachel West, US PROStitutes Collective – what’s next in the struggle for compensation.

From Ferguson and NYC to Los Angeles and Oakland sexism and racism ensure criminalization and even murder. In campaigning for justice we draw on our experiences to demand what we are entitled to.

Event called by: US PROStitutes Collective. Planning Group: All of Us or None, Erotic Service Providers Union: Global Women’s Strike; In Defense of Prostitute Women’s Safety Project; Queer Strike; Sin Barras; Kate Grünke-Horton, UCSF PhD Student; Meleiza Figueroa, and other individuals.

http://www.facebook.com/events/890003634396292/

58607
“Occupy the Farm” Film at the Roxie in SF @ Roxie Theater
Apr 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

The San Francisco Urban Agriculture Alliance and the Roxie present “Occupy The Farm”  on Earth Day! This is a very special screening since Earth Day is the anniversary of the original action by Occupy the Farm . Occupy the Farm, a film by Todd Darling, tells the story of 200 urban farmers who walk onto a publicly owned research farm and plant it with two acres of crops in order to save the land from becoming a real-estate development.

The film captures an intense conflict over one piece of land. Compelling characters on both sides of the battle create a remarkable narrative in which community members employ an ingenious strategy to confront a powerful institution in the effort to preserve public land for urban farming.

From preparing the soil to police raids, from lawsuits to overflowing harvests, Occupy the Farm reveals a determined community responding with a direct action to address a major social need: healthy food and access to public land.

Join us on April 21st & 22nd to celebrate Earth Day at the Roxie in San Francisco. Screening will be followed by Q&A with the filmmaker Todd Darling and with Ashoka Finley, one of the organizers of Occupy The Farm. Be sure to get your tickets now: http://www.roxie.com/

Critics Say:

“Riveting from the start”, says the Village Voice’s film critic Ernest Handy about OCCUPY THE FARM. “It illustrates the staggering extent to which corporate interests dictate policy and shape scientific research.”

“Sweeps up the viewer in a fast-paced, character-driven narrative,” says Sarah Burke in her film review of OCCUPY THE FARM in East Bay Express.

“Empowering food for thought,” says Los Angeles Times film critic Michael Rechtsaffen.

58643
Earth Day Film Fest: “Disruption” & “Wapapura Film” @ Little Roxie
Apr 22 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
58594
Apr
23
Thu
Statewide Coordinated Events to End Solitary Confinement – Oakland @ Laney College parking lot on 8th
Apr 23 @ 11:30 am – 1:30 pm

Informational Demonstration: PLEASE come help share information and hold a huge banner.  There will be thousands of passers-by that day at Laney College!
 

58647
Prisoner Hunger Strikers Study Session @ Qilombo
Apr 23 @ 5:30 pm – 10:00 pm

Solidarity w/ The Prisoner Hunger Strikers Study Session:

Every week The Bay Area Solidarity Committee for Jalil Muntaqim hosts a Political Education Class “New Afrikan Prisoner Writings Study Sessions”from 5:30-7:30PM.  We will dedicate the April 23rd session in solidarity with the prisoner hunger strikers.  We will be reading and discussing “the five core demands” as well as the “Agreement to End Hostilities“.  We will also be dissecting different writings by Abdul Olugbala Shakur, Chairman & founder of George Jackson University. The event, hosted by The Bay Area Solidarity Committee For Jalil Muntaqim and George Jackson University, will end in an open mic and political hip hop Show.

Political Education 5:30pm – 7:30pm,
Show/Open Mic 8:00 – 10:00pm

Group Website: https://www.facebook.com/committee.jalil

58648
“What’s Happening with Greece, Spain and the European Union” @ Humanist Hall
Apr 23 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Wellstone Club Meeting
“What’s Happening with Greece, Spain and the European Union”
Conn Hallinan

Potluck at 6PM; Meeting at 6:45PM
please bring something to share

58455
Fund Raiser: Help Movement Generation send Brooke to Palestine this summer!
Apr 23 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm

Help Movement Generation send Brooke to Palestine this summer!

Join MG for a screening of the provocative film “Enduring Roots” and take a stand against the greenwashing of the Israeli occupation.

Movement Generation is proud to send a delegate – collective member, Brooke Anderson – on the 2015 Land Defense Delegation to Palestine, hosted by the Stop the Jewish National Fund (JNF) Campaign.

The delegation connects international activists involved in land-based struggle, indigenous sovereignty movements and environmental/climate justice work to Palestinians working to defend their land from further colonization by the Jewish National Fund. Through the collection of charitable donations for “environmentalism,” the JNF confiscates land, uproots olive trees, and builds parks and fake forests over Palestinian villages to hide ethnic cleansing and to prevent Palestinians from returning to their homes.

Self-determination and freedom lie at the heart of ecological justice. Free the Land. Free the People. Free Palestine.

Join us on Thursday, April 23rd at the Orchard (Gopal’s place). We’ll watch the film, hear from activists working to stop the JNF, and enjoy some brew and snacks. Please bring a cash or check donation.

If you can’t make the event, you can still make a donation at http://www.gofundme.com/BrooketoPalestine.

For more information about the JNF, visit:
www.stopthejnf.org
www.ijan.org/category/projects-campaigns/stopthejnf

58557
NLG Training: Getting Appropriate Medical or Mental Health Care On The Inside
Apr 23 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Training 7

Challenges to Getting Appropriate Medical or Mental Health Care On The Inside: Tools For More Effective Advocacy and Better Outcomes for Incarcerated People and Supporters On The Outside

RSVP & Survey: Please complete to shape venue, content, and number of copies for the series.
Email List Sign up for announcements here http://eepurl.com/7WwfL 

Materials, resources, and flyers for this training series are available here http://caitlinkellyhenry.com/support/
Cost If you can afford to, please donate to cover expenses http://www.nlgsf.org/contribute.
This training will teach participants the legal rights of inmates with medical or mental health needs. The trainer(s) will focus on strategies to advocate for better treatment, including evaluations, medications, and emergency care, for individuals in jails and prisons. Examples will be drawn from experiences with individual and systemic legal advocacy.

1.5 Hours General CLE Credit

Invite Here https://www.facebook.com/events/699605036802805

Trainers will include: Aaron Fischer, Esq., Associate, Rosen Bien Galvan & Grunfeld LLP (San Francisco)  Attorney expeerienced in disability rights, Eighth Amendment rights, systemic jail mental health reforms, diabetes anti-discrimination issues.  http://rbgg.com/attorneys/associates/aaron-j-fischer

58535
Planning meeting for Justice 4 Yvette Henderson actions @ Alan Blueford Center 4 Justice
Apr 23 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Come help plan continued actions in the fight for justice for Yvette Henderson, gunned down by Emeryville police.

58621
Fundraiser: ‘Life in Occupied Palestine: To Exist is to Resist!’ @ La Pena Cultural Center
Apr 23 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Jewish Voice for Peace – Bay Area presents “Life in Occupied Palestine”: To Exist Is to Resist! a journal launch, music and fundraiser featuring contributors to a special issue of the journal Biography on Thursday, April 23rd, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m, at La Pena!

This evening of readings and music will feature: Magid Shihade (faculty member at Birzeit University, Palestine), Sarah Ihmoud (PhD candidate, Department of Anthropology, Univeristy of Texas at Austin), and Cynthia Franklin (Biography co-editor, University of Hawai’i faculty member, USACBI Organizing Collective, and co-founder of Jewish Voice for Peace – Hawai’i). There will also be sweets for all to enjoy.

Come hear timely insights and analyses from these outstanding academics and activists. Invite your friends!

La Pena, our wonderful community resource, has agreed to host this evening as a special “La Pena Presents!” event.

Check out the La Pena website for tickets in advance: http://lapena.org/event/life-in-occupied-palestine-to-exist-is-to-resist/

 

58608
A Living Wage for Mothers and Other Caregivers @ La Commune Bookstore, Omni Collective
Apr 23 @ 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Selma James and Nina Lopez of Global Women’s Strike:

“Invest in Caring Not Killing”, A talk on Sex, Race, and Class plus A Living Wage for Mothers and Caregivers

Selma James is a women’s rights and anti-racist campaigner and author. From 1958 to 1962 she worked with C.L.R. James in the movement for West Indian federation and independence. In 1972 she founded the International Wages for Housework Campaign, and in 2000 helped launch the Global Women’s Strike whose strategy for change is “Invest in Caring not Killing”. She coined the word “unwaged” which has since entered the English language. In the 1970s she was the first spokeswoman of the English Collective of Prostitutes. She is a founding member of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network. She co-authored the classic The Power of Women and the Subversion of the Community which launched the “domestic labour debate.” Other publications include A Woman’s Place (1952), Women, the Unions and Work, or what is not to be done (1972), Sex, Race and Class (1974), Wageless of the World (1974), The Rapist Who Pays the Rent (1982), The Ladies and the Mammies—Jane Austen and Jean Rhys (1983), Marx and Feminism (1983), Hookers in the House of the Lord (1983), Strangers & Sisters: Women, Race and Immigration (1985), The Global Kitchen—the Case for Counting Unwaged Work (1985 and 1995), and The Milk of Human Kindness—Defending Breastfeeding from the AIDS Industry and the Global Market (2005).

Nina López is the joint co-ordinator of the Global Women’s Strike. Her writings and edited volumes include: Prostitute Women and AIDS—Resisting the Virus of Repression (1988), Some Mother’s Daughter: The Hidden Movement of Prostitute Women Against Violence (1998), The Milk of Human Kindness (2002), and Creating a Caring Economy: Nora Castañeda and the Women’s Development Bank of Venezuela

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