HOW OUR AAUP CHAPTER RESPONDED to POSTELECTION VIOLENCE

Eighteen-year-old Nasro Hassan, a new first-year student at the University of Washington, walked out of her class at Mary Gates Hall at about 5:45 PM. on Nov 15, 2016. It was dark and, this being Seattle in the fall, raining. It was also a week after the startling US presidential election. Like lots...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academe 2017-11, Vol.103 (6), p.15-17
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description Eighteen-year-old Nasro Hassan, a new first-year student at the University of Washington, walked out of her class at Mary Gates Hall at about 5:45 PM. on Nov 15, 2016. It was dark and, this being Seattle in the fall, raining. It was also a week after the startling US presidential election. Like lots of people on American campuses, Hassan was looking down at her phone as she walked to the light-rail station. Unlike many others, however, she was wearing a hijab. As she walked, a man in a black hooded sweatshirt and dark jeans ran up to her with what might have been a glass bottle and slammed the object into the right side of her face, near her eye. He laughed as he ran off. Within a couple of days of the incident, Hassan went to the Seattle office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) for support.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Education Source; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Assaults
Campuses
College campuses
College Environment
College faculty
Colleges & universities
Community Relations
Conferences (Gatherings)
Criminal investigations
Criminal statistics
Educational Environment
Elections
Federal Aid
Females
Hate crimes
Medical Services
Meetings
Police
Politics of Education
Presidents
School environment
School Safety
Sex crimes
Universities
Victims of Crime
Violence
White supremacy
Yiannopoulos, Milo
title HOW OUR AAUP CHAPTER RESPONDED to POSTELECTION VIOLENCE
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