Protective Custody: A Phrase That Should Mean More So the question is not βare they in custody?β The question is: are they actually protected? Continue Reading →
We Were There; We’ll Make The List Phillips revealed survivors are now preparing their own list of names: βIt will be done by and for survivors.β You see they know the names because they were abused by them. Continue Reading →
Stateless in the Land of the Free: Ward Sakeik and the War on Belonging Over 10 million people worldwide are stateless, according to the UNHCR. Statelessness can result from colonial displacement, gender-biased nationality laws, war, migration, or bureaucratic erasure. Continue Reading →