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Blog

April 20, 2015 - 10:10am
At NIOT.org/COPS, we profile leaders in the law enforcement community who are working to make a difference in their towns and schools. This month we profile Detective Rudy Perez, the Region 9 director of the National Association of School Resource Officers.
April 18, 2015 - 5:15pm
Moses Robinson is a veteran School Resource Officer (SRO) in Rochester, NY who is working to address tensions in his school and in his community  
April 16, 2015 - 10:10am
Events in Ferguson, MO and elsewhere have inevitably brought to head long overdue discussions about race and community policing. [ALPACT] On the day that the St. Louis Grand Jury decided not to indict Police Officer Darren Wilson in the Ferguson, MO shooting of unarmed black teen Michael Brown, a group focused on police-community relations in Grand Rapids, MI had come together to watch and discuss the Not In Our Town documentary, Waking in Oak Creek. The group, Advocates and Leaders for Police and Community Trust (ALPACT), exists to grapple with these very issues. ALPACT started nearly 20 years ago in Detroit, when citizens complained that the city’s law enforcement officials were profiling and harassing them.
April 14, 2015 - 9:49am
In preparation for reading Farhana Zia’s The Garden of My Imaan, a lovely young adult novel about an American Muslim girl named Aliya, my students and I wrote down what we knew about Muslims. I teach in a public middle school where the majority of students are white and Christian, so I expected a steep learning curve. I encouraged all the students to write down their thoughts and ideas and to be open and honest about their thinking. Sometimes I would chime in and contradict incorrect ideas, but mostly I would just record student thoughts on the whiteboard as they recorded their thoughts on our worksheet.
April 13, 2015 - 12:00pm
A group of ‘Super Citizens' in Bosnia have formed to fight back against hate and prejudice. During the Bosnian War, more than 8,000 citizens of Bosnia were victims to an ethnic cleansing genocide, primarily focused at Muslims. It was the worst the world has witnessed since World War II. While the war has been over for 20 years, people in Bosnia-Herzegovina (BiH) continue to fight for equality and against hate-motivated crimes. These individuals are known as Supergrađanke, or Super Citizens. They focus their powers on promoting positive examples of cohesion from citizens of mixed ethnic and religious backgrounds. The group includes 20 “Coalitions Against Hate,” comprised of 120 organizations, including war veterans, women’s associations, youth, people with disabilities, eco-associations, schools, and social welfare centers.