‘All of these elements push survivors into silence’
Opinion, comment and editorials of the day
Mónica Ramírez at Time
Migrant women in “agriculture, food processing, and domestic work face staggering rates of harassment and assault,” says Mónica Ramírez. The “lack of visibility, oversight and regulation of these jobs often exposes migrant women to exploitation and violence without meaningful protection.” Migrant “women — and any survivor — should have their stories heard if they choose to share them,” and should be protected, supported, and helped by the legal system, healthcare providers, and by community members.”
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‘The case for downsizing FEMA’
Saket Soni at The New York Times
Given the “colossal cost of rebuilding after major hurricanes, floods and fires,” no “state is in a position to shoulder the burden on its own” without FEMA, says Saket Soni. But “within Trump’s enormous disruption to the status quo lies a hidden opportunity for the longer term: States could get right what federal disaster response has long gotten wrong.” By “adapting our homes and communities year-round for the storms to come, every state can build a more resilient future.”
‘Citizen video challenges the administration’s account of a fatal ICE shooting in Minneapolis’
Tom Jones at the Poynter Institute
If you “listened to those within the Trump administration, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot at a woman who was using her car as a weapon” in Minneapolis, says Tom Jones. But “videos from regular citizens on the scene told a very different story.” Aside from the “debate about whether ICE should have been in Minneapolis,” the conversation was “about whether the agent who fired the shots that killed the woman reasonably believed his life or others was in danger.”
‘Is there still a place in the world for the Nobel Peace Prize?’
Lloyd Axworthy at The Globe and Mail
The Nobel Peace Prize was once a “beacon: a strategic, forward-looking instrument of ethical encouragement,” but “today, however, Nobel’s wager is in crisis,” says Lloyd Axworthy. Each “autumn, the announcement of the latest laureate is now met with a familiar, weary skepticism about recipients who might sit uneasily with Nobel’s original vision.” In a “world scarred by wars of territorial aggression, brazen authoritarianism, and the systematic flouting of international law, a pressing question arises: Has the Nobel Peace Prize lost its meaning?”