
Caroline Levine
Articles
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Jan 7, 2025 |
forbes.com.au | Tom Spiggle |Mark Travers |Caroline Levine |May Samali
Skip to content Leadership Published on January 8, 2025 While Hollywood is far removed from the average workplace, the underlying legal principles apply universally. Cases like Lively’s serve as stark reminders of the challenges employees face when speaking up against harassment or asserting their rights. Cultural Pressure: Employees often fear retaliation for reporting misconduct whether through legal actions or workplace ostracism. Legal Recourse: Many workers are unaware of their rights...
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Mar 19, 2024 |
thenation.com | Caroline Levine
Thank you for reading The Nation!We hope you enjoyed the story you just read. It takes a dedicated team to publish timely, deeply researched pieces like this one. For over 150 years, The Nation has stood for truth, justice, and democracy. Today, in a time of media austerity, articles like the one you just read are vital ways to speak truth to power and cover issues that are often overlooked by the mainstream media.
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Oct 27, 2023 |
chronicle.com | Caroline Levine
Scholars of the arts and culture return, again and again, to the value of open-endedness. We celebrate pauses: suspension, undecidability, illegibility, opacity, complexity. We valorize ruptures: revolution, resistance, fragmentation, shock, break, unsettling, dismantling, disorder. And we privilege dissolution: fluidity, process, liminality, hybridity, boundary-crossing, flow. These moves often overlap. Sometimes they are indistinguishable. Hybridity can rupture a system dependent on binaries.
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Aug 28, 2023 |
marinij.com | Caroline Levine
Maui faces devastating economic costs beyond its intolerable human loss and suffering from recent wildfires. Scorched homes and businesses reduced to rubble won’t be rebuilt quickly; cleaning up their remnants, some of them toxic, won’t be cheap. Rebuilding costs have been estimated at $5.5 billion. Who will pay for this? Most of us will, to varying degrees, but some of those most responsible — the fossil fuel companies that play a key role in such climate-related disasters — won’t.
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Aug 27, 2023 |
pressherald.com | Caroline Levine
Maui faces devastating economic costs beyond its intolerable human loss and suffering from recent wildfires. Scorched homes and businesses reduced to rubble won’t be rebuilt quickly; cleaning up their remnants, some of them toxic, won’t be cheap. Rebuilding costs have been estimated at $5.5 billion. Who will pay for this? Most of us will, to varying degrees, but some of those most responsible – the fossil fuel companies that play a key role in such climate-related disasters – won’t.
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