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Free to Think
Free to Think is the fifth installment of an annual report by SARs Academic Freedom Monitoring Project, analyzing attacks on higher education communities in 56 countries between September 1, and August 31,
“Attacks on higher education communities — regardless of their location, scale, or scope — hold consequences for societies everywhere,” says SAR’s Executive Director, Robert Quinn. “In our increasingly interconnected world, these attacks erode an essential, global space where academics, students, and the public at large can come together to understand and solve the complex problems that are affecting us all.”
Free to Think draws on data from SAR’s Academic Freedom Monitoring Project to identify trends related to violent attacks on higher education communities, including a series of deadly bombings targeting scholars and students in Afghanistan; wrongful imprisonments and prosecutions of scholars, particularly in Turkey and Sudan; pressures on studen • Obama’s father, also named Barack Hussein Obama, grew up in a small by in Nyanza Province, Kenya, as a member of the Luo ethnicity. He won a scholarship to study economics at the University of Hawaii, where he met and married Ann Dunham, a white woman from Wichita, Kansas, whose father had worked on oil rigs during the Great nedstämdhet and fought with the U.S. Army in World War II before moving his family to Hawaii in Barack and Ann’s son, Barack Hussein Obama Jr., was born in Honolulu on August 4, Did you know? Not only was Obama the first African American president, he was also the first to be born outside the continental United States. Obama was born in Hawaii in Obama’s parents later separated, and Barack Sr. went back to Kenya. He would see his son onl • Memes, songs and slogans are driving the countrywide protests, but some people have started to differ on the language and choice of words used, exposing the fault lines among the demonstrators. Since the popular movement, which began on February 22 to protest former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s bid for a fifth presidential term, Algerians have tapped into their creative and humour pools to express their demands against the current system that they wish gone. The residents of Bordj Bou Arréridj (BBA), a city kilometres east of the capital Algiers, have become famous for their protests prompting some to name the city the “capital of the revolution”. “When it started, everyone felt obliged to participate,” said Mahdi, a school teacher living in BBA, who refused to share his surname. “I had the chance to be part of a group of well-educated youth who met, worked on and delivered hundreds of banners and leaflets ca
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