So I was wondering why Olvia Troy was all bent about being "dox xed" for an address that appears she hasn't lived at for a while.
So pulling up the address
look who pops up
That's kinda weird, isn't anons?
alma and colin
So I was wondering why Olvia Troy was all bent about being "dox xed" for an address that appears she hasn't lived at for a while.
So pulling up the address
look who pops up
That's kinda weird, isn't anons?
alma and colin
>That's kinda weird, isn't anons?
>That's kinda weird, isn't anons?
Not sure how many Claudia Heinzes there are but…this one works on flooding countries with illegal migrants for the UN
Supporting displaced people in Mozambique
Claudia Heinze headshot.Claudia Heinze also works atGIZ. She is currently using the SPDI framework to support United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)in its role asfacilitator of the operationalization of the Global Compact on Refugees (GCR),helping people in northern Mozambique who have been displaced due to violent conflicts in their region. Heinze and her team are partnering with UNHCR to ease pressure on host communities while aiding people forced to flee their homes. Because the complex project involves many stakeholders, Heinze says that SPDI provides a good approach to help her structure information and organize her thinking, and she is introducing the approach to her team.
“My assumption is that we can implement the framework with varying depth and success, depending on the openness and willingness to learn of the staff we are able to recruit and the exposure they had previously to innovative approaches,” Heinze says. “It will be a journey of discovery and learning, one of failure and successes, one of frustration and joy for all of us.”
Heinze believes that the holistic framework taught in “Leading Smart Policy Design” would be relevant to anyone who works on policy design and implementation. “The structure the framework provides is not only very valuable for me in steering projects and guiding the project team, but likewise in communicating steps during project implementation to other actors,” she says. For Heinze, the illuminating research, expert faculty, and knowledge and support shared by her peers made the course both fun and meaningful.
The next session of “Leading Smart Policy Design” runs September 20 through October 11, 2022. Apply by August 29.
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Hero image: Children standing in a nursery in Lima, Peru. REUTERS / Mariana Bazo. Faculty portrait of Rema Hanna by Kent Dayton
>Claudia Heinze
Petra Barth has focused her art on memory, relating to human, social and environmental issues in rural communities worldwide which is influenced by her own upbringing.She is often working with groups such as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the German Cooperation, the Arab Renaissance for Democracy and Development and the Human Rights Center at Duke University. Her project on deported migrants, The Backpackers / Los Mochileros was shown at the 2017 Venice Biennale and My Original Face was shown there in 2019. Recently she has published the project Anderswo / Elsewhere with Schilt Publishing.
Barth’s work has been exhibited in museums, galleries and policy forums from the Climate Change Summit in Paris and the C40 Mayors Summit in Mexico City to the Galeria de Arte Contemporaneo Paul Baldwell in Medellin Colombia, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the Organization of the American States in Washington, D.C. Her work is included at the Human Rights Archive at theDavid M. RubensteinRare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library at Duke University. Her awards include the Project Launch Grant from the Center in Santa Fe, the Beth Block Award from Houston Center for Photography, more than 10 IPA and PX3 Prix de la Photographie de Paris awards.
601NFairfax St ALexandria there's luxury condos.
That could be an odd ball result pulling both N and S addresses
"The Oronoco"