[농지투기 추적] ① 데이터로 추적한 ‘강남 농부’...개발 발표 5개월 전 농지 산 회장님

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[농지투기 추적] ① 데이터로 추적한 ‘강남 농부’...개발 발표 5개월 전 농지 산 회장님

[농지투기 추적]누더기가 된 헌법정신... 누가 농지 투기로 돈을 벌었나

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[농지투기 추적]누더기가 된 헌법정신... 누가 농지 투기로 돈을 벌었나

BAYANGA, République centrafricaine — Pour beaucoup à l’extérieur, la République centrafricaine s’identifie par un ensemble d’images familières : conflits, infrastructures faibles, instabilité et État peinant à étendre son autorité au-delà de Bangui, la capitale. Loin d’être imaginaires, ces réalités continuent de façonner le quotidien dans une grande partie du pays. Les routes sont en mauvais […] The post L’histoire méconnue de l’écotourisme émergent en République centrafricaine appeared first on Nouvelles de l'environnement.

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Mongabay
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BAYANGA, République centrafricaine — Pour beaucoup à l’extérieur, la République centrafricaine s’identifie par un ensemble d’images familières : conflits, infrastructures faibles, instabilité et État peinant à étendre son autorité au-delà de Bangui, la capitale. Loin d’être imaginaires, ces réalités continuent de façonner le quotidien dans une grande partie du pays. Les routes sont en mauvais […] The post L’histoire méconnue de l’écotourisme émergent en République centrafricaine appeared first on Nouvelles de l'environnement.

This year was not the “start of a different path” that I had hoped for the West Virginia Legislature.  In January, I wrote that environmental advocacy organizations in West Virginia came together to write a blueprint for environmental policy. It contains concrete steps that the Legislature, governor or state agencies could take to begin addressing […]

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West Virginia Watch
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This year was not the “start of a different path” that I had hoped for the West Virginia Legislature.  In January, I wrote that environmental advocacy organizations in West Virginia came together to write a blueprint for environmental policy. It contains concrete steps that the Legislature, governor or state agencies could take to begin addressing […]

Implementation of a previously approved federal rule meant to help prevent black lung in the nation’s coal miners has been delayed indefinitely, according to an update posted this week in the Federal Register. According to the update, the Mine Safety and Health Administration will wait to implement most of the rule until a federal court […]

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West Virginia Watch
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Implementation of a previously approved federal rule meant to help prevent black lung in the nation’s coal miners has been delayed indefinitely, according to an update posted this week in the Federal Register. According to the update, the Mine Safety and Health Administration will wait to implement most of the rule until a federal court […]

The ‘Oklahoma Golf Trail’ features three tribal courses along with 15 others to draw visitors to the state The post Oklahoma’s new tourism initiative puts spotlight on tribally-owned golf courses appeared first on ICT.

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ICT
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The ‘Oklahoma Golf Trail’ features three tribal courses along with 15 others to draw visitors to the state The post Oklahoma’s new tourism initiative puts spotlight on tribally-owned golf courses appeared first on ICT.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with news on the city’s public school system.The number of Philadelphia kids injured by gunfire is falling — but it’s not falling as fast as the total number of shooting victims. In 2020, children who were injured by gunfire but not killed made up about 8% of Philly’s 2,245 shooting victims, according to a Chalkbeat analysis of data from the city’s Office of the Controller. But they made up 11% of that category in the city last year, when 939 people were shot. The toll of the last few years has left an excruciating mark on the city, even as the numbers have begun to fall. And community experts and physicians say the rising share of those victims who are kids stems from the problem that unlike adults, young people are more susceptible to peer and social-media pressure to wield guns. All across the city, children are recovering from bullet wounds. There have been 852 nonfatal shootings of people ages 17 and under since 2021, according to city data.“The kids are just infatuated with this gun violence,” said Tone Barr, director of victim services for the Anti-Violence Partnership of Philadelphia. “Until we get a hold on that you’re still going to see this turmoil, this trauma.”Barr shared those comments at a press conference last Thursday, following the April 1 shooting of a 3-year-old boy in a South Philadelphia home. The child has a head wound and was in critical condition as of late last week. His 17-year-old uncle has been charged with a felony weapons offense. A “ghost gun” — a type of firearm that’s hard to trace and easy to order online — was found under the teen’s bed, officials said. They noted a different weapon was used in the shooting.“Please check bookbags, check rooms,” Barr pleaded. “This is a tragedy that shouldn’t have happened. We can’t normalize reckless behavior.”Activists like Ant Brown say the key to combatting the trend is reaching teens through different media.“If the music is all death culture, is negative, how do we expect for these young kids to act?” he said, adding that many “bouls” — Philly slang for young boys or young men — “want to be street dudes.”He and a few other organizers recently teamed up with the University of Pennsylvania to launch Creators for Community Safety, which trains social media influencers on anti-violence messaging. A similar project in Chicago taps into social media to emphasize that guns are dangerous, not cool. “I feel like it’s up to content creators to get involved, in how they push out content to young people that can also ease their mind in a way,” Brown said. “When we talk about the arts, we got to figure out a way where we’re not just re-traumatizing young people.”City faces grim reality: ‘Guns are plentiful’Two children have been killed by gunfire in Philadelphia in 2026. A 13-year-old was fatally shot in the city’s West Oak Lane section Tuesday night. And in January, a 16-year-old Imhotep Institute Charter High School student, Khyon Smith-Tate, was fatally shot in North Philadelphia.During the height of the gun-violence crisis after the pandemic, Philadelphia’s students were shot while walking to school, at bus stops, and at football games. At the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, ICU physician Dr. Anireddy Reddy treats traumatic brain injuries, abdomen wounds, and other complex physical trauma caused by bullets.It’s part of why she and her colleague’s in the hospital’s Center for Violence Prevention now counsel families about safe firearm storage and provide gun locks.“We know that access to a firearm significantly increases a child or a teen’s risk of either accidental injury, death by suicide, or other injury within the home,” she said.Victoria Wylie, who started working to prevent gun violence after her 20-year-old brother was killed in 2008, said easy access to guns is especially dangerous in Philadelphia’s lowest-income communities.“Guns are plentiful, and we’re dealing with a more traumatized society,” said Wylie, who cofounded the Donte Wylie Foundation support group for adults with long-term gunshot injuries, like people who use wheelchairs. “There’s more PTSD, there’s more anger in communities. And problems result in violence because of it.”Even though gun violence in Philadelphia has declined recently, each shooting sends a ripple of grief and fear through entire school communities, said Nora Gross, an assistant professor of education at Barnard College.In 2020, Gross spent significant time at a Philadelphia high school and collaborated with several young men on a short film, “Our Philadelphia,” about losing classmates to gun violence. She argues schools should give students more grace and space to process their feelings after a student is shot. That might mean easing up on discipline and providing extra counselors after such incidents.When gun violence happens, teachers and other adults step up, often without getting formal training beforehand, Gross said.“There’s a lot of adults in school buildings who are doing this hidden emotional labor,” she said. “People like the secretaries in the main office, the security guards, the janitors, the lunch people.”The School District of Philadelphia contracts with multiple violence prevention nonprofits to provide grief and trauma services. However, pending budget cuts could mean fewer adults are available to help kids affected by gun violence.This story is part of a collaboration between Chalkbeat Philadelphia and The New York Times’s Headway Initiative, supported by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF) via the Local Media Foundation.Sammy Caiola covers solutions to gun violence in and around Philadelphia schools. Have ideas for her? Get in touch at scaiola@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with news on the city’s public school system.The number of Philadelphia kids injured by gunfire is falling — but it’s not falling as fast as the total number of shooting victims. In 2020, children who were injured by gunfire but not killed made up about 8% of Philly’s 2,245 shooting victims, according to a Chalkbeat analysis of data from the city’s Office of the Controller. But they made up 11% of that category in the city last year, when 939 people were shot. The toll of the last few years has left an excruciating mark on the city, even as the numbers have begun to fall. And community experts and physicians say the rising share of those victims who are kids stems from the problem that unlike adults, young people are more susceptible to peer and social-media pressure to wield guns. All across the city, children are recovering from bullet wounds. There have been 852 nonfatal shootings of people ages 17 and under since 2021, according to city data.“The kids are just infatuated with this gun violence,” said Tone Barr, director of victim services for the Anti-Violence Partnership of Philadelphia. “Until we get a hold on that you’re still going to see this turmoil, this trauma.”Barr shared those comments at a press conference last Thursday, following the April 1 shooting of a 3-year-old boy in a South Philadelphia home. The child has a head wound and was in critical condition as of late last week. His 17-year-old uncle has been charged with a felony weapons offense. A “ghost gun” — a type of firearm that’s hard to trace and easy to order online — was found under the teen’s bed, officials said. They noted a different weapon was used in the shooting.“Please check bookbags, check rooms,” Barr pleaded. “This is a tragedy that shouldn’t have happened. We can’t normalize reckless behavior.”Activists like Ant Brown say the key to combatting the trend is reaching teens through different media.“If the music is all death culture, is negative, how do we expect for these young kids to act?” he said, adding that many “bouls” — Philly slang for young boys or young men — “want to be street dudes.”He and a few other organizers recently teamed up with the University of Pennsylvania to launch Creators for Community Safety, which trains social media influencers on anti-violence messaging. A similar project in Chicago taps into social media to emphasize that guns are dangerous, not cool. “I feel like it’s up to content creators to get involved, in how they push out content to young people that can also ease their mind in a way,” Brown said. “When we talk about the arts, we got to figure out a way where we’re not just re-traumatizing young people.”City faces grim reality: ‘Guns are plentiful’Two children have been killed by gunfire in Philadelphia in 2026. A 13-year-old was fatally shot in the city’s West Oak Lane section Tuesday night. And in January, a 16-year-old Imhotep Institute Charter High School student, Khyon Smith-Tate, was fatally shot in North Philadelphia.During the height of the gun-violence crisis after the pandemic, Philadelphia’s students were shot while walking to school, at bus stops, and at football games. At the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, ICU physician Dr. Anireddy Reddy treats traumatic brain injuries, abdomen wounds, and other complex physical trauma caused by bullets.It’s part of why she and her colleague’s in the hospital’s Center for Violence Prevention now counsel families about safe firearm storage and provide gun locks.“We know that access to a firearm significantly increases a child or a teen’s risk of either accidental injury, death by suicide, or other injury within the home,” she said.Victoria Wylie, who started working to prevent gun violence after her 20-year-old brother was killed in 2008, said easy access to guns is especially dangerous in Philadelphia’s lowest-income communities.“Guns are plentiful, and we’re dealing with a more traumatized society,” said Wylie, who cofounded the Donte Wylie Foundation support group for adults with long-term gunshot injuries, like people who use wheelchairs. “There’s more PTSD, there’s more anger in communities. And problems result in violence because of it.”Even though gun violence in Philadelphia has declined recently, each shooting sends a ripple of grief and fear through entire school communities, said Nora Gross, an assistant professor of education at Barnard College.In 2020, Gross spent significant time at a Philadelphia high school and collaborated with several young men on a short film, “Our Philadelphia,” about losing classmates to gun violence. She argues schools should give students more grace and space to process their feelings after a student is shot. That might mean easing up on discipline and providing extra counselors after such incidents.When gun violence happens, teachers and other adults step up, often without getting formal training beforehand, Gross said.“There’s a lot of adults in school buildings who are doing this hidden emotional labor,” she said. “People like the secretaries in the main office, the security guards, the janitors, the lunch people.”The School District of Philadelphia contracts with multiple violence prevention nonprofits to provide grief and trauma services. However, pending budget cuts could mean fewer adults are available to help kids affected by gun violence.This story is part of a collaboration between Chalkbeat Philadelphia and The New York Times’s Headway Initiative, supported by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF) via the Local Media Foundation.Sammy Caiola covers solutions to gun violence in and around Philadelphia schools. Have ideas for her? Get in touch at scaiola@chalkbeat.org.

8 minutes

Daily Yonder
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This year, my part of rural northern Wisconsin got hit with a March blizzard that dropped 30-plus inches of fresh snow. That’s a lot of weight on a roof. So as soon as the wind calmed down, we got out the roof rake – a long-handled tool used from ground level to scrape away snow […] The post 45 Degrees North: Just Asking Questions appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

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Daily Yonder
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This year, my part of rural northern Wisconsin got hit with a March blizzard that dropped 30-plus inches of fresh snow. That’s a lot of weight on a roof. So as soon as the wind calmed down, we got out the roof rake – a long-handled tool used from ground level to scrape away snow […] The post 45 Degrees North: Just Asking Questions appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

8 minutes

BridgeDetroit
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The city of Detroit has identified dozens of multi-unit apartments with ongoing maintenance and compliance issues that have gone unaddressed.

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BridgeDetroit
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The city of Detroit has identified dozens of multi-unit apartments with ongoing maintenance and compliance issues that have gone unaddressed.

8 minutes

Outlier Media
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As federal aid expired, “incompetence” put the city’s workforce development system under financial pressure. Outlier Media · Koby Levin and Detroit Documenters · Detroit job training agency faces deficit, layoffs, leadership shakeup

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Outlier Media
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As federal aid expired, “incompetence” put the city’s workforce development system under financial pressure. Outlier Media · Koby Levin and Detroit Documenters · Detroit job training agency faces deficit, layoffs, leadership shakeup

8 minutes

Flatwater Free Press
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Eastern Nebraska’s geology means it’s not likely to see massive, neighborhood-swallowing sinkholes. But a Flatwater analysis found Omaha still sees more ‘cave-ins’ than several Midwestern peers.

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Flatwater Free Press
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Eastern Nebraska’s geology means it’s not likely to see massive, neighborhood-swallowing sinkholes. But a Flatwater analysis found Omaha still sees more ‘cave-ins’ than several Midwestern peers.

Activists and film industry professionals partner to spotlight the River Parishes' unique role in Louisiana’s film industry.

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Verite
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Activists and film industry professionals partner to spotlight the River Parishes' unique role in Louisiana’s film industry.

Au sud de la Vendée, un couple d'enseignants est victime depuis plus d'un an et demi d'inquiétantes menaces homophobes. Louant la réactivité « exemplaire » de l'Éducation nationale, les deux hommes déplorent un manque de soutien politique sur ce territoire dominé par le Rassemblement national. - Société / Discriminations, Droites extrêmes

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Basta!
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Au sud de la Vendée, un couple d'enseignants est victime depuis plus d'un an et demi d'inquiétantes menaces homophobes. Louant la réactivité « exemplaire » de l'Éducation nationale, les deux hommes déplorent un manque de soutien politique sur ce territoire dominé par le Rassemblement national. - Société / Discriminations, Droites extrêmes

An Oklahoma bill that would add alpha-gal syndrome to the state’s list of tick-borne illnesses is advancing, a move advocates say is needed to tackle a growing public health concern.

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KOSU
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An Oklahoma bill that would add alpha-gal syndrome to the state’s list of tick-borne illnesses is advancing, a move advocates say is needed to tackle a growing public health concern.

The Choctaw Nation and Texas Historical Commission unveiled a historical marker in Fort Worth last week to honor the tribe’s World War I code talkers.

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The Choctaw Nation and Texas Historical Commission unveiled a historical marker in Fort Worth last week to honor the tribe’s World War I code talkers.

8 minutes

Centro de Periodismo Investigativo
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Esta es la segunda demanda contra la agencia este año por no entregar información al Centro de Periodismo Investigativo.

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Centro de Periodismo Investigativo
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Esta es la segunda demanda contra la agencia este año por no entregar información al Centro de Periodismo Investigativo.

De jaren 2020 en 2021 behoorden tot de meest succesvolle jaren van mijn leven, omdat ik mijn weg had gevonden en op het punt stond al mijn doelen te bereiken.

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Global Voices
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De jaren 2020 en 2021 behoorden tot de meest succesvolle jaren van mijn leven, omdat ik mijn weg had gevonden en op het punt stond al mijn doelen te bereiken.

Israel condena con dureza la reapertura de la Embajada española en Teherán, calificando la decisión de Madrid como “una desgracia eterna”.

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Mundiario
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Israel condena con dureza la reapertura de la Embajada española en Teherán, calificando la decisión de Madrid como “una desgracia eterna”.

11 minutes

Maryland Matters
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There may be just five days left in the 2026 Maryland General Assembly session, but immigrant rights supporters aren’t giving up on a bill that would further limit the ability of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to operate within the state.

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Maryland Matters
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There may be just five days left in the 2026 Maryland General Assembly session, but immigrant rights supporters aren’t giving up on a bill that would further limit the ability of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to operate within the state.

Lệnh hưu chiến được tổng thống Mỹ ban hành liệu có sẽ sớm tan vỡ ? Vài giờ sau khi thông báo tạm ngưng không kích trong 15 ngày, tối qua, 08/04/2026,tổng thống Donald Trump cho biết quân đội Mỹ vẫn được duy trì gần Iran cho đến khi đạt một « thỏa thuận thực sự », đồng thời khẳng định thỏa thuận ngừng bắn với Iran « không bao gồm Liban », trong khi Teheran xem hưu chiến ở nước này là một trong số « các điều kiện thiết yếu » cho đàm phán.

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Radio France Internationale
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Lệnh hưu chiến được tổng thống Mỹ ban hành liệu có sẽ sớm tan vỡ ? Vài giờ sau khi thông báo tạm ngưng không kích trong 15 ngày, tối qua, 08/04/2026,tổng thống Donald Trump cho biết quân đội Mỹ vẫn được duy trì gần Iran cho đến khi đạt một « thỏa thuận thực sự », đồng thời khẳng định thỏa thuận ngừng bắn với Iran « không bao gồm Liban », trong khi Teheran xem hưu chiến ở nước này là một trong số « các điều kiện thiết yếu » cho đàm phán.