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Shelf Help: 'The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome' [PSMag.com]

Historically, the relationship between gene science and racial justice has been uneasy at best. Too often, geneticists—or pundits brandishing their findings—have propagated bogus theories of racial superiority. And yet, in the current millennium, black Americans have embraced genetic testing with enthusiasm. The slave trade ripped Africans from their home tribes; once in America, black families were split apart as members were bought and sold—transactions for which...

Therapy that uses storytelling may be key to fighting trauma from bullying, family violence among teenagers [Buffalo.edu]

For teenagers from low-income households, trauma from bullying, parental abuse and dating violence often goes untreated, since many families can’t afford traditional therapy. In search of a less expensive, yet effective, form of therapy, a new study led by University at Buffalo behavioral health researcher Ellen Volpe will investigate the effectiveness of narrative exposure therapy (NET) at treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance abuse among adolescents who have...

A Comic Book for Refugee Children [DailyGood.org]

On August 3rd last year, 12-year-old Maher fled from his village to the Sinjar mountainside where he and tens of thousands of others sought refuge from ISIS attackers who swept up from the south to invade the region. Every person from Sinjar remembers the date, as men, women and children from each village and town in the area packed what they could carry on their backs and left their homes travelling by car or by foot to find safety. Stranded on the mountain, surrounded on all sides by ISIS...

5 of the most powerful moments from Idris Elba's speech on diversity in the media. [UpWorthy.com]

Earlier this week, actor Idris Elba addressed the U.K.'s Parliament, delivering a powerful speech about diversity. Maybe you know him from his role as Detective John Luther on BBC's "Luther"? Maybe you saw his powerful performance in "Beasts of No Nation"? Maybe as Stringer Bell on "The Wire"? Or maybe you just know him as that really good-looking guy who was rumored to be taking over as James Bond a while back. [For more of this story go...

Teaching Parenting Skills At Doctor Visits Helps Children's Behavior [NPR.org]

As researchers have come to understand how poverty and its stresses influence children's brain development, they've begun untangling how that can lead to increased behavior problems and learning difficulties for disadvantaged kids. Rather than trying to treat those problems, NYU child development specialists Adriana Weisleder and Alan Mendelsohn want to head them off. They say they've found a way: Working with low-income parents when they bring babies and young children to the pediatrician.

President Obama Wants More Funds To Feed Low-Income Kids In Summer [NPR.org]

It's a challenge making sure that low-income children who get free- and reduced-priced meals during the school year continue to get fed during the summer. Government meal programs served 3.8 million children on an average summer day last year — far fewer than the 22 million children who got subsidized meals during the school year. Now, the Obama administration wants to change that. The president will propose in his 2017 budget next month that families who qualify for subsidized school...

Albany: The HEARTS of the Matter

   In northern New Hampshire, where Heather Larkin practiced as a social worker after getting her MSW, the community mental health center was a one-stop shop: In addition to mental health treatment, it served people with developmental disabilities and those with addictions; it contracted with hospitals and schools.    Some individual clients and families needed all those services, all at once. Larkin realized that it was impossible to untangle those co-occurring problems...

Panel Calls for Depression Screenings During and After Pregnancy [NYTimes.com]

Women should be screened for depression during pregnancy and after giving birth, an influential government-appointed health panel said Tuesday, the first time it has recommended screening for maternal mental illness. The recommendation, expected to galvanize many more health providers to provide screening, comes in the wake of new evidence that maternal mental illness is more common than previously thought; that many cases of what has been called postpartum depression actually start during...

Obama Bans Solitary Confinement of Juveniles in Federal Prisons [NYTimes.com]

President Obama on Monday banned the practice of holding juveniles in solitary confinement in federal prisons, saying it could lead to “devastating, lasting psychological consequences.” The move, which Mr. Obama outlined in an op-ed article published by The Washington Post on Monday night, adds the weight of the federal government to a growing movement among state prison administrators, who have begun sharply limiting or ending the use of solitary confinement. [For more of this...

Science Can Quantify Risks, But It Can't Settle Policy [NPR.org]

Suppose you're a 45-year-old woman living in the U.S. You have no history of breast cancer, nor worrisome symptoms. Should you have a mammogram? If you follow the American Cancer Society's recommendation , the answer is "yes": You should begin routine mammography screening for breast cancer at age 45. But if you follow the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommendation , the answer is "no": You should probably wait another 5 years. Which recommendation is right? Answering this question...

Ban on Solitary for Juveniles in Federal Prison Could Ignite State Reforms [JJIE.org]

A new ban on solitary confinement for juveniles in federal prison could bring momentum to reform efforts on the state level. President Obama announced the ban and other prison reforms Monday, saying in an op-ed that he hoped the policies would be a model for state and local corrections systems. “How can we subject prisoners to unnecessary solitary confinement, knowing its effects, and then expect them to return to our communities as whole people? It doesn’t make us safer.

A Blueprint for Youth Justice Reform

DECEMBER 31, 2015 - BY YTFG   “For these are all our children. We will all profit by, or pay for, whatever they become. ” - James Baldwin, Writer The Blueprint for Youth Justice Reform is a call to action to funders, policymakers, community leaders, system stakeholders, advocates, youth and families. We seek your bold leadership, your commitment and your voices as we work in partnership for youth justice reform.   Together, we can transform the way we respond to...

A short comic gives the simplest, most perfect explanation of privilege I've ever seen. [UpWorthy.com]

Privilege can be a hard thing to talk about. Oftentimes, when it's implied or stated that someone is "privileged," they can feel defensive or upset. They may have worked very hard for what they have accomplished and they may have overcome many obstacles to accomplish it. And the word "privilege" can make a person feel as though that work is being diminished. The key point about privilege, though, is that it doesn't mean that a person was raised by wealthy parents, had everything handed to...

The Future of Restraint and Seclusion in Schools [TheAtlantic.com]

A teacher asks her students to take out a pencil for a pop quiz, but one child won’t pick up his pencil. The teacher repeats her request. The child refuses. What happens next—what sort of discipline is meted out, how long it lasts, and whether administrators or parents are notified—may differ drastically from one state to the next. While all educators struggle with how to cope with defiant or disruptive kids, there is no federal legislation and only a patchwork of state...

Growing use of neurobiological evidence in criminal trials, new study finds [ScienceMag.org]

In 2008, in El Cajon, California, 30-year-old John Nicholas Gunther bludgeoned his mother to death with a metal pipe, and then stole $1378 in cash, her credit cards, a DVD/VCR player, and some prescription painkillers. At trial, Gunther admitted to the killing, but argued that his conviction should be reduced to second-degree murder because he had not acted with premeditation. A clinical psychologist and neuropsychologist testified that two previous head traumas—one the result of an...

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