The Office of the Vice-Chancellor -The University of Guyana
presents ……… Click here to read Renaissance
Magazine: “Renaissance” – Vol. 4 No. 1, January – March 2019
The VC Speaks ……………… 3
Editor’s Note …………………. 5
Renaissance Scorecard I, II & III ………….7
Let’s preserve Mother Languages ……… 9
Visit by Dr Gillian Smith, new FAO Representative in Guyana …….. 10
UG team in Aishalton for the Guyana launch of the International Year Of Indigenous Languages in January 2019 …….12
Quality Assurance workshop for academic and administrative staff held in January 2019……13
Assessment critical to teaching & learning outcomes ………. 14
Visit by Dr Awil Mohamoud, Director of the African Diaspora Policy Centre in The Netherlands ……… 15
Second Diaspora and Entrepreneurship Conference ………………….. 15
Periodic meeting with UGSS student leaders to clarify issues and resolve problems ……. 16
READ MORE: Click here to read Renaissance
U.S. — Implications of abortion debate range far beyond a woman’s control of her body – By Mohamed Hamaludin
Amid the noise surrounding tough anti-abortion laws enacted around the South, in particular, a few comments are especially worthy of attention.
Emma Brockes’ commentary in The Guardian on May 16 carried the headline, “Alabama’s abortion ban is about keeping poor women down.” The sub-head read, “For the 25 white, male senators voting for it, this is not about the fetus but about maintaining the social order.”
The Huffington Post reported on May 17: “A recent CDC study found that black women are 3.3 times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women.”
The Associated Press, reporting on the May 16 execution of a man in Alabama, quoted his attorney Steven Sears as saying he had hoped for clemency from Republican Gov. Kay Ivey, who signed a tough anti-abortion bill into law. Ivey had said the measure “stands as a powerful testament to Alabamians’ deeply held belief that every life is precious and that every life is a sacred gift from God,” The Washington Post reported on May 15, 2019. Continue reading →
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