As Dr. Linabary shared, “U.S. college students experience high rates of food insecurity, impacting their learning and well-being. To help students go from surviving to thriving, we need to cultivate critical consciousness among students and others. As educators, we have an important role to play.”
Posts by Dr. Jasmine Linabary
It’s hard to learn when you are hungry. Check out our new article in @jacr-official.bsky.social exploring how U.S. college students demonstrate resilience while facing food insecurity and the need to move beyond short-term survival tactics and toward collective action and change.
Cover Image for: Risky Research: An AoIR Guide to Researcher Protection and Safety AoIR Risky Research Working Group Contributors: Alice Marwick, Dafna Kaufman, Jacob Smith, Patricia Aufderheide, Jessica Beyer, Emma L. Briant, Coppélie Cocq, Laura Dilley, Sam DiBella, Radhika Gajjala, Kamile Grusauskaite, Alex D. Ketchum, Zelly Martin, Janice Metzger, Erin McInerney, Rachel Moran, John McNutt, Suay Melisa Oezkula, Victoria O’Meara, Riccardo Nanni, Carolina Parreiras, Katy Pearce, Ryan Payne, Meredith Pruden, Christian Sandvig, Caighlan Smith, Sam Srauy, Zeerak Talat, Leonie Tanczer, Robert Tynes, Antonia Vaughan, Shenja van der Graaf, Courtney Vowles, Michele White.
We are delighted to share the publication of Risky Research: An AoIR Guide to Researcher Protection and Safety, the culmination of over two years of collaborative effort by the AoIR Risky Research Working Group.
aoir.org/riskyresearc...
What if Meta stops factchecking in Africa?
With Community Notes privileging influential actors with greater resources, in several African countries these dangers are amplified "given state-backed disinformation networks and persistent structural inequalities".
www.techpolicy.press/meta-discard...
Check out our new #ShiftThePower report with WorldPulse.org & the Co-Design Collaborative at UA to learn what shifting power means to women across the globe and to find their recommendations for institutions, funders, and others looking to join this movement impact.worldpulse.org/newsroom/New...
Don’t be afraid to introduce yourself to the scholars you’ve been reading and whose work you are interested in. They/we are people too. Also, at least for me, it can be meaningful to know someone read and is engaging your work!
Excited to reconnect with my academic community both online here and in person at #NCA24. After pulling back from Twitter, I’ve missed you all!