Dalit killings in Nepal spark outrage over caste discrimination

Ancient biases against Dalits make it harder for them to access education, jobs and homes

In a U.S. first, California city set to ban predictive policing

Cities around the United States are coming under pressure to scrutinise policing technology


INTERVIEW-From refugee to Olympian: Film celebrates S.Sudan's marathon man

Guor Makar made history at the Rio Games as the flag-bearer for South Sudan’s first Olympic team


ANALYSIS-Calls for cooperation as online child sex abuse soars in Europe

Children's rights advocates say social networks also need stricter regulation and better reporting tools to protect young users


Top women's rights group probes claims of racism by staff

Complaints over 'toxic' racism at Women Deliver have drawn scrutiny over the sector


Laid off due to virus, Cambodian garment workers compete for factory shifts

Workers are being forced to accept worse conditions as jobs are cut, with factory bosses accused of using coronavirus staff culls to target union staff


On Twitter, indigenous Guatemalans share experiences of everyday racism

Sparked by the murder of healer Domingo Choc, the #GuateRacista movement is an attempt to bring discussions of race and identity into the open


A lifeline or a death trap? Jamaica's largest dump faces uncertain future

Future of a poor community living off Jamaica’s largest landfill hangs in the balance amid debate on environmental injustice


Workers' rights seen crumbling as coronavirus threatens further setbacks

Violations of labour rights at seven-year high, according to the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)


UN charts new territory with project to track all Myanmar's forests

Joint Myanmar-Finland project will venture into conflict zones to better protect Southeast Asian nation's forests


In U.S. race protests, Chile's indigenous youth see echoes of their own land struggle

To many among Chile's indigenous Mapuche, the demonstrations sparked by the death of George Floyd recall their own confrontations with police over land rights


Opinion

OPINION: Britain steps back from helping the world’s poor

Subsuming the UK’s hugely respected aid agency into the foreign office will slam the country’s image abroad and hurt millions



This email was sent to you by Thomson Reuters Foundation located at 5 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London, E14 5AQ - a registered charity in the United Kingdom and the United States.

If you are not the intended recipient, be advised that you have received this email in error and that any use, dissemination, forwarding, printing or copying of this email is strictly prohibited. If you do not wish to receive this type of correspondence in the future, contact us at [email protected] so that we can remove you from this list.

Thomson Reuters Foundation's terms and conditions and privacy statement can be found online at www.trust.org. Photos courtesy of Reuters or Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Manage your subscriptions | Unsubscribe from all TRF communications