Podcasts about jri

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Best podcasts about jri

Latest podcast episodes about jri

Big Think
What is trauma? The author of “The Body Keeps the Score” explains | Bessel van der Kolk | Big Think

Big Think

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 8:48


Contrary to popular belief, trauma is extremely common. We all have jobs, life events, and unpleasant situations causing us daily stress. But when your body continues to re-live that stress for days, weeks, months, or even years, that stress changes your brain, creating trauma inside your mind, and that trauma can eventually manifest in your physical body. As you can see, trauma isn't what happens to you, but how you respond to the traumatic situation. Something that is traumatic to one person may be no big deal to the next. Whether something becomes traumatic or not has a great deal to do with who's around you while you experience this event. Were you alone and scared, were you comforted by friends and family? The problem with trauma is that it starts when something happens to us, but that's not where it stops - it changes your brain. Once your brain changes and you're in constant fight or flight mode, it can be hard to stay focused, feel joy, or experience pleasure until this trauma is healed. Luckily, modern psychological practices are developing innovative ways to heal from trauma that actually work. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- About Bessel van der Kolk: Bessel van der Kolk is a psychiatrist noted for his research in the area of post-traumatic stress since the 1970s. His work focuses on the interaction of attachment, neurobiology, and developmental aspects of trauma's effects on people. His major publication, Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society, talks about how the role of trauma in psychiatric illness has changed over the past 20 years. Dr. van der Kolk is past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Professor of Psychiatry at Boston University Medical School, and Medical Director of the Trauma Center at JRI in Brookline, Massachusetts. He has taught at universities and hospitals across the United States and around the world, including Europe, Africa, Russia, Australia, Israel, and China. Check out Bessel van der Kolk's latest book, “The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma” at https://www.amazon.com/Body-Keeps-Sco... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Big Think
How do you help kids traumatized by violence? | Bessel van der Kolk | Great Question

Big Think

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2024 6:24


People usually think about the military when they talk about trauma. But for every soldier who gets PTSD in a war zone, there's at least 30 children who get traumatized at home. The big question continues to be how do you help kids who have been exposed to enormous amounts of violence? How do you help these kids get a sense of self, a sense of agency, so they can make a life for themselves where they can learn, acquire skills, acquire competencies, and become full-fledged human beings? Bessel van der Kolk's greatest dream is that in grades K through 12, kids get taught weekly about self-regulation - what kinds can do to calm themselves down and orient themselves. To aid in healing childhood trauma, every school in America would ideally be taught the following: reading, writing, arithmetic, and self-regulation. ------------------------------------------------------------- About Bessel van der Kolk: Bessel van der Kolk is a psychiatrist noted for his research in the area of post-traumatic stress since the 1970s. His work focuses on the interaction of attachment, neurobiology, and developmental aspects of trauma's effects on people. His major publication, Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society, talks about how the role of trauma in psychiatric illness has changed over the past 20 years. Dr. van der Kolk is past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Professor of Psychiatry at Boston University Medical School, and Medical Director of the Trauma Center at JRI in Brookline, Massachusetts. He has taught at universities and hospitals across the United States and around the world, including Europe, Africa, Russia, Australia, Israel, and China. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

CNA Talks
The Future of Corrections

CNA Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2024 33:09


One of the most prominent challenges organizations face when planning for the future is grappling with how unknown external factors will impact their organization. STEEP analysis allows planners to examine future Social, technical, economic, ecological, and political factors and plan for the opportunities and threats these factors will create.  In this episode, CNA's Melissa Gutierrez and Heleana Melendez, Captain Jose Gurule from the Denver Sheriff's Department, and Danielle Rubes from Sam Houston State University join the show to discuss applying this framework to corrections.  Guest Biographies Melissa Gutierrez is a Senior Research Specialist with CNA's Center for Justice Research and Innovation. She is an expert in criminal justice research with a focus on gang networks and gun violence, including gun markets. At CNA, her work includes providing training and technical assistance on violent crime reduction programs and researching technology in law enforcement. Before joining CNA, Gutierrez worked at the Center for Violence Prevention and Community Safety, where she participated in projects related to program evaluation, violent death surveillance, and unintentional overdose death surveillance. Heleana Melendez is an associate research analyst with CNA's Center for Justice Research and Innovation. JRI works throughout the justice system, providing training and technical assistance (TTA), conducting research, and supporting nationwide organizational reform in agencies and jurisdictions. Ms. Melendez supports projects at CNA focused on violence prevention, system improvement, and use of force. Danielle Rudes is a Professor of Criminal Justice & Criminology at Sam Houston State University in Texas. She is also Deputy Director of the Center for Advancing Correctional Excellence (ACE!). She is a Fellow with the Bureau of Justice Assistance, focusing on Enhancing Correctional Spaces and Cultures. Dr. Rudes is an expert qualitative researcher with over 20 years of experience working with corrections agencies. She is recognized for her work examining how social control organizations understand, negotiate, and at times, resist change.  Captain Jose Gurule started his career in 2009 with the Conejos County Sheriff's Office. Rising to the rank of Division Commander for the Detention Division. In 2015, he began his tenure with the Denver Sheriff's Department. He has been assigned to direct supervision, intake unit, the field training program, ADA Liaison, LGBTQ+ liaison, and the Peer Support Team. Currently, he is the medical/classification/receiving unit commander. Overseeing the inmate classification/housing of two facilities with a combined housing capacity of 2693 inmates Future Reading Register for the Virtual Symposium Futurescape of Justice: Improving Public Safety 

Crushing Classical
Nancy Green: The Evolution of a Portfolio Career

Crushing Classical

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 42:20


I have wondered, in my darker days, whether this portfolio career I love is truly sustainable. Whether I can really keep tweaking and evolving all the way until I stop. This interview gave me an inspiring YES!   Hailed by Fanfare Magazine as "one of the great cellists of our time", Nancy Green is an internationally recognized recording artist, known for her highly acclaimed CDs of previously unrecorded works as well as staples of the cello repertoire.  Her numerous CDs, which include many premieres, are broadcast worldwide and her performances have earned rave reviews internationally.  Her CD recordings on the US label, JRI, and the British labels, Cello Classics and Biddulph Recordings, have received special notice in many major publications, among them Strings Magazine (Editor's Choice), MusicWeb International (CD of the Month), Fanfare Magazine (Want List), and Classical Music Magazine (CD of the Fortnight). Her recording of the Brahms sonatas with duo partner Frederick Moyer was named by Fanfare Magazine as the "hands-down pick" for these standard works which have been recorded, sometimes multiple times, by the most acclaimed cellists in history.  Green has performed as soloist in venues such as the Kennedy Center, Alice Tully Hall, Carnegie Recital Hall, as well as London's Wigmore Hall, St. Martin-in-the-Fields, and Windsor Castle.  She has also performed in major concert halls in Holland, Belgium, and the Far East. International press reviews have likened her to great cellists such as Rostropovich, Yo-Yo Ma, and Jacqueline du Pré.  Since 2015 Ms. Green no longer performs live and is exclusively a recording artist. Follow Nancy's YouTube, Spotify, Apple music, Instagram, or Facebook   Thanks for joining me on Crushing Classical!  Theme music and audio editing by DreamVance. You can join my email list HERE, so you never miss an episode! I help people to lean into their creative careers and start or grow their income streams.You can read more or hop onto a short discovery call from my website. I'm your host, Jennet Ingle. I love you all. Stay safe out there!    

Au comptoir de l'info
Clap de fin pour le "Comptoir de l'info"

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 2:52


Premier podcast natif de France Télévisions lancé en 2019, le "Comptoir de l'info" baisse le rideau. Son auteur, François Beaudonnet, livre ici un message d'au revoir à destination des auditeurs et des invités de cette "baladodiffusion" " Et au comptoir de l'info aujourd'hui, ce n'est pas un épisode, Non, je me suis accoudé à ce zinc qui nous accueille depuis 5 ans maintenant pour vous dire que le comptoir de l'info baisse le rideau après presque 50 épisodes Devant ce micro et à mes côtés, sont venus des reporters de guerre – attention, ils ne veulent pas qu'on les appelle comme ça – leur titre exact, c'est grand reporter ! des présentateurs, des présentatrices, des cameramen, on dit JRI, des correspondants à l'étranger, tous journalistes de France Télévisions mais aussi de Radio France Et vous, chers auditeurs, vous qui nous suivez depuis longtemps, vous savez qu'ils se sont tous véritablement livrés : ils ont raconté comment ils fabriquent leurs reportages bien sûr – c'était l'objectif de ce podcast, pour vous montrer que nous n'avons rien à cacher et que le journalisme c'est une forme d'artisanat, mais ils ont été beaucoup plus loin : ils ont dit leurs peurs parfois, leurs doutes souvent, leur immense exigence de vérité, toujours ! Et je vais vous faire une confidence : alors que je pensais presque tous bien les connaître, puisque souvent il s'agit de voisins de bureau, des collègues, des confrères que je côtoie au quotidien, eh bien «au comptoir de l'info », ils m'ont surpris …. Par leur exigence, par leur professionnalisme, par leur humilité et aussi parce que certains d'entre eux m'ont ému, presque aux larmes …ceux-là se reconnaitront en m'écoutant… Je tiens en tout cas à les remercier tous pour tout ce qu'ils nous ont apporté – je dis nous - parce que j'ai eu énormément de retours enthousiastes de vous, auditeurs – Et puisqu'avant de tirer sa révérence, on remercie : je voudrais dire ma gratitude d'abord à vous auditeurs, mais aussi aux opérateurs de prise de son de France Télévisions qui m'ont accompagné et soutenu depuis le début de cette aventure ! Je ne peux pas citer tout le monde, mais je pense en particulier à Timothée Le Hec qui a fait les enregistrements et les montages de la plupart des épisodes du Comptoir de l'info…. Merci Timothée. Voilà, c'est donc la fin de cette belle « baladodiffusion » j'adore ce terme qu'utilisent les Québécois pour désigner les podcasts Je continuerai bien sûr à vous retrouver sur France 2, sur France Info la radio et sur France Info la télé…et je vous dis donc : « salut et à bientôt ! » Enfin, si vous voulez me joindre à propos du « Comptoir de l'info », vous pouvez m'envoyer un mail à prenom.nom@francetv.fr (mon prénom sans cédille) Cordialement François Beaudonnet" Vous pouvez vous abonner à cette série sur l'application Radio France, Spotify, Deezer, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts et AudioNow. A propos du podcast : "Au comptoir de l'info" est le premier podcast natif (audio) de France Télévisions. Sous forme d'interview journalistique, un acteur qui fabrique l'information télévisée du service public — un grand reporter, un cameraman, un présentateur — vient se livrer, raconter, dévoiler la manière dont il travaille. Dans une ambiance sonore de comptoir de café, il confie ses doutes, ses joies, mais aussi ses peurs lorsqu'il est sur le terrain ou en studio. Depuis le mois de mai 2021, le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" reçoit également à son micro des journalistes de Radio France (France Inter, France Info, France Culture). La série est réalisée par François Beaudonnet, éditorialiste sur franceinfo (canal 27), grand reporter à France 2 et chroniqueur dans l'émission "Nous, les Européens" sur France 3. Ancien correspondant à Rome et Bruxelles, il a débuté en radio où il présentait le journal de 13 heures sur France Inter. Cet épisode a été réalisé par Timothée Le Hec

Transforming Trauma
Trauma-Informed Weight Lifting for Strength, Confidence and Healing with Mariah Rooney

Transforming Trauma

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 44:17


There's a growing body of evidence suggesting that practices like weight lifting can support trauma-affected individuals on their healing journeys. On this episode of Transforming Trauma, Emily is joined by Mariah Rooney, LCSW, co-founder of Trauma-Informed Weight Lifting, the one-of-a-kind non-profit program dedicated to the training and education of trauma-informed movement practitioners as well as research on the healing potential of weight lifting. The pair discuss the program's structure, the neuroscience behind it, and how Mariah's extensive participation in social justice practices led to its creation. Mariah also shares some case studies that highlight the positive impact that weight lifting has on a trauma-impacted individual's resilience, sense of agency, and interoceptive awareness. About Mariah Rooney: Mariah Rooney, MSW, LCSW (she/they) is the co-founder and co-director of Trauma Informed Weight Lifting, a program of the Center for Trauma and Embodiment. She is a licensed clinical social worker who specializes in treating the complex challenges that arise as a result of traumatic stress, attachment trauma, intergenerational trauma, and dissociation in children and adults. She is also an adjunct professor in the graduate School of Social Work at Winona State University, and a trauma-informed care consultant who supports systems change and capacity building efforts in systems of all sizes and types. As a previous Fellow at the Trauma Center at JRI she received extensive training in trauma and supported various project and research efforts. Additionally, Mariah is a movement practitioner and somatic coach with extensive training in trauma-sensitive and culturally-informed yoga and meditation practices through Warriors at Ease, Prison Yoga Project, Insight Prison Project, Mind Body Solutions, and Trauma Sensitive Yoga. Her writing and research has explored trauma-informed considerations for personal trainers and fitness spaces, posttraumatic outcomes among combat veterans with histories of interpersonal violence, trauma-sensitive education, and inclusive practices for LGBTQIA+ clients in fitness and weight lifting. Learn More: Trauma Informed Weight Lifting Instagram Website To read the full show notes and discover more resources, visit https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com/transformingtrauma *** Are you a mental health professional looking to deepen your clinical expertise in healing complex trauma? We are thrilled to announce our 2025 NARM Therapist Trainings designed to provide you with transformative training in the NeuroAffective Relational Model. Visit the website to learn more about upcoming trainings and to register  The Complex Trauma Training Center: https://complextraumatrainingcenter.com The Complex Trauma Training Center (CTTC) is a professional organization providing clinical training, education, consultation, and mentorship for psychotherapists and mental health professionals working with individuals and communities impacted by Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Complex Trauma (C-PTSD). CTTC provides NARM® Therapist and NARM® Master Therapist Training programs, as well as ongoing monthly groups in support of those learning NARM. CTTC offers a depth-oriented professional community for those seeking a supportive network of therapists focused on three levels of shared human experience: personal, interpersonal & transpersonal.  The Transforming Trauma podcast embodies the spirit of CTTC – best described by its three keywords: depth, connection, and heart - and offers guidance to those interested in effective, transformational trauma-informed care. We want to connect with you! Facebook @complextraumatrainingcenter YouTube Instagram @complextraumatrainingcenter  

Beyond Trauma
46 | Scientific Foundations of Trauma-Informed Yoga | David Emerson

Beyond Trauma

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2024 65:31


In this detailed and important conversation with Dave Emerson, the man who coined the term trauma-sensitive yoga, we get insights into Dave's extensive research on the impacts of trauma-informed yoga for survivors including his most recent paper comparing trauma-sensitive yoga and cognitive processing therapy. We explore the difference between Complex Trauma and PTSD and the implications of those differences on survivor validation and services. We discuss the harmful power dynamics that occur within abusive relationships and the importance of healthy interpersonal encounters in yoga spaces which propose to heal trauma adaptations. Dave shares why yoga is one of, if not the strongest embodied practice for healing the impacts of trauma and just how much of this style of practice is needed as well as other deep insights from his work and what he's learned about research and forming research studies for yoga claims.  Dave Emerson (he/him/his) is the founder of Trauma Center Trauma Sensitive Yoga (TCTSY) for the Justice Resource Institute in Massachusetts, where he coined the term “trauma-sensitive yoga”. from 2009-2011 he was responsible for curriculum development, supervision, and oversight of the yoga intervention component of the first-of-its-kind, NIH-funded study to assess the utility of yoga for survivors of trauma. Dave has developed, conducted, and supervised TCTSY groups for rape crisis centers, domestic violence programs, residential programs for youth, active duty military personnel, survivors of terrorism, and Veterans Administration centers and clinics, and more. He is the co-author of Overcoming Trauma through Yoga, released in 2011 by North Atlantic Books, and Author of, Trauma-Sensitive Yoga in Therapy (Norton, 2015). In 2018, Dave Emerson co-founded the Center for Trauma and Embodiment at JRI. Instagram: @tctsy & @centerfortraumaandembodiment Web: https://www.traumasensitiveyoga.com/ & https://www.healwithcfte.org/ Yoga vs Cognitive Processing Therapy for Military Sexual Trauma-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Your support is deeply appreciated! Find me, Lara, on my Website / Instagram You can support this podcast with any level of donation here. Order The Essential Guide to Trauma Sensitive Yoga: How to Create Safer Spaces for All

Big Think
6 ways to heal trauma without medication | Bessel van der Kolk | Big Think

Big Think

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2024 9:52


6 ways to heal trauma without medication, from the author of “The Body Keeps the Score,” Bessel van der Kolk Conventional psychiatric practices tell us that if we feel bad, take this drug and it will go away. But after years of research with some of the top psychiatric practitioners in the world, we've found that drugs simply don't work that well for many, and our conventional ways of healing trauma need to change. In recent years, experts in the study of trauma have been experimenting with ‘new age' healing mechanisms that are making massive waves for trauma patients. Some of these new healing methods include EDMR, yoga, theater and movement, neural feedback, and even psychedelics. Many of these methods have proven to be more effective than conventional pharmaceuticals. But just like any other health regimen, what works for you might not work for your friend or neighbor. New age trauma therapy is all an experiment, and after enough experimenting, something can eventually work, healing your trauma in a unique and effective way. About Bessel van der Kolk: Bessel van der Kolk is a psychiatrist noted for his research in the area of post-traumatic stress since the 1970s. His work focuses on the interaction of attachment, neurobiology, and developmental aspects of trauma's effects on people. His major publication, Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society, talks about how the role of trauma in psychiatric illness has changed over the past 20 years. Dr. van der Kolk is past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Professor of Psychiatry at Boston University Medical School, and Medical Director of the Trauma Center at JRI in Brookline, Massachusetts. He has taught at universities and hospitals across the United States and around the world, including Europe, Africa, Russia, Australia, Israel, and China. Check out Bessel van der Kolk's latest book, “The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma” About Big Think | Smarter Faster™ ► Big Think The leading source of expert-driven, educational content. With thousands of videos, featuring experts ranging from Bill Clinton to Bill Nye, Big Think helps you get smarter, faster by exploring the big ideas and core skills that define knowledge in the 21st century. Get Smarter Faster, With Daily Episodes From The Worlds Biggest Thinkers. Follow Big Think Leave A 5 Star Review --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bigthink/message Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tuned In
Field Report: This Is rEVolting...

Tuned In

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2023 9:39 Transcription Available


Love them or hate them, Electric Vehicles (EVs) are here, so why not hammer the s%&t out of them on a race track just like we've been doing the old internal combustion engine (ICE) for years and years!Use ‘PODCAST75' for $75 off your first HPA course here: https://hpcdmy.co/hpa-tuned-inBattery degradation & performance, $600 'Bonus Module' for 2 seconds a lap improvement, trackside sharing and more with Jordan Priestley of ReVolting Performance as he runs us through this 2021 Model 3 Performance Tesla while competing at the Optima Batteries street car challenge.The car runs a number of Unplugged Performance suspension components and 4 point roll bar with JRi double adjustable shocks,  AP Racing brake package & square (same size front to rear) 19x11 Forgeline wheels wrapped in 305/30R19 Falkens.Interestingly the battery level does operate within certain 'sweet spots' in relation to charge, with Jordan noting a 40mph loss of speed climbing up the hill at Laguna Seca at lesser charges. He also touches on his trackside generator charging setup, a common question from those interested in how EV guys manage battery charge during track/race days.There is a long way to go with EVs to get them anywhere close to being the same when it comes to how a race weekend looks compared to someone just tipping E85 or similar in the tank, but racing is racing, and it's great to see some earlier adopters keen for some new challenges.

Le service reportage
Maroc : nos reporters dans les villages dévastés

Le service reportage

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 16:30


Le Maroc endeuillé après le tremblement de terre qui vendredi soir à 23h11 locales a frappé le pays et en particulier la région de Marrakech. Depuis les premières heures samedi, l'antenne de BFMTV est quasi exclusivement consacrée à cette catastrophe, et à ses conséquences. Et nos équipes sont sur le terrain, au plus près de la population. La grande reporter Clémence Dibout, accompagnée de la JRI (journaliste reporter d'images) Camille Fournier sont les premières à être arrivées dans la zone de l'épicentre, dans des villages de montagne complétement détruits. Leurs images et leurs récits sont terribles. Dans cet épisode, elles racontent ce qu'elles voient depuis samedi, ainsi que leurs conditions de travail. 

Le service reportage
Couronnement de Charles III : nos reporters aux premières loges

Le service reportage

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2023 23:55


Le roi est couronné, vive le roi ! Sans doute avez-vous vécu à distance ce moment historique : le couronnement ce samedi de Charles III et de la reine Camilla en l'abbaye de Westminster à Londres. Jean-Baptiste Boursier et de nombreuses équipes de BFMTV étaient en direct de la capitale britannique pour vous raconter et vous faire vivre cet événement. Comment nos reporters ont-ils travaillé sur place, au milieu de cette foule immense ? Comment ont-ils préparé cette couverture ? On en parle avec Sonia Carneiro et le JRI (journaliste reporter d'images) David Couloume. Tous les deux sont à Londres depuis mercredi dernier. 

LLA Reports Podcast
Justice Reinvestment Initiative

LLA Reports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 4:06


Justice Reinvestment Initiative: Performance Audit Services Senior Auditor Kristen Jacobs recaps a new LLA report that evaluates the Justice Reinvestment Initiative to determine whether the Department of Corrections correctly calculated the savings from the initiative and how DOC, the Louisiana Commission on Law Enforcement, and the Office of Juvenile Justice spent their JRI funds. | https://LLA.La.gov/go/podcast

LLA Reports Podcast
Justice Reinvestment Initiative

LLA Reports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 4:06


Justice Reinvestment Initiative: Performance Audit Services Senior Auditor Kristen Jacobs recaps a new LLA report that evaluates the Justice Reinvestment Initiative to determine whether the Department of Corrections correctly calculated the savings from the initiative and how DOC, the Louisiana Commission on Law Enforcement, and the Office of Juvenile Justice spent their JRI funds. | https://LLA.La.gov/go/podcast

The Empty Chair
E47 - Steve and Dani

The Empty Chair

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2023 59:25


Cole Welch-Caffrey hosts this edition of "The Empty Chair" podcast on both MVPASAP Facebook and the Empty Chair Podcast on YouTube. Joining Cole in this episode are 2 Amazing Guests: Dani Sinclair & Steve Heald. Dani a local police officer for over 20 years and currently assigned to the detective unit for last 4 years at Newburyport PD specializing in sexual assaults. Recently received Master's Degree in CJ from UMass Lowell. Founder of Essex County Outreach in 2019 when awarded a grant through the BJA. The premise is for all 34 law enforcement agencies in Essex County, as well as the sheriff's department, to work together with our respective community and social service partners to provide assistance to individuals and families in need of support for substance use disorders and behavioral health matters. When not busy at work, enjoy quality family time with her husband, two kids, and two crazier dogs. Steve has been working as a recovery coach for over seven years, with PAARI (Police Assisted Addiction and Recovery Initiative), Methuen Police Department, Lawrence Police Department, and most recently Mass General Brigham Hospital at Salem. He graduated from Norwich University with a BA in Criminal Justice in 1990. He started his career in Juvenile Corrections working with Boston's most violent offenders. He later worked with JRI as a Residential Director at Centerpoint (Intensive Residential Treatment Program). Following his tenure at JRI he became a Warrant Apprehension Officer with the Department of Youth Services Gang Unit. He was assigned to the Youth Violence Strike Force with Boston Police and later worked with the Lynn Gang Unit. Steve retired in 2006 due to a serious on-duty injury. Steve entered into treatment in 2004 for alcoholism and recently celebrated 20 years of sobriety. He comes to Essex County Outreach with a wealth of experience and a passion to help folks struggling with addiction and alcoholism. Steve will share his road to recovery and how to overcome obstacles, and Dani will discuss how she initiated the Essex County Outreach and the positive impact it has in our community

Au comptoir de l'info
Roger Motte, journaliste reporter d'images (JRI)

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2023 22:42


Pendant 40 ans, caméra à l'épaule, Roger Motte a parcouru le monde, pour Antenne 2 puis France 2. Il a effectué des reportages au Liban, en Yougoslavie, au Zaïre. Il a filmé la chute du mur de Berlin, le siège de Sarajevo. Par la qualité et la sensibilité de ses images, ce reporter spécialiste des terrains de guerre a marqué plusieurs générations de journalistes. Au moment de tourner une page, Roger Motte est venu "au comptoir de l'info" confier ses joies, ses doutes mais aussi ses remords. La curiosité et le doute. Ce sont les deux moteurs qui poussé Roger Motte à se rendre - pour témoigner- sur tous les grands conflits de la planète au cours de ces quatre dernières décennies. "On se demande tout le temps si on sert à quelque chose" dit-il, si "nos images vont permettre d'arrêter la guerre". Et il avoue : "je ne crois pas avoir répondu par l'affirmative". Avant d'ajouter : "Mais si nous n'y allons pas, ce sera pire". "J'ai filmé en pleurant, filmé en riant, filmé en ayant peur" Pour les journaux télévisés de France 2, pour les émissions "Envoyé Spécial" et "13 h 15", le journaliste reporter d'images (JRI) ne s'est jamais considéré comme un simple observateur, qui, froidement, filmerait la souffrance des autres. Au contraire, Roger Motte a toujours vécu profondément l'évènement. Au micro de François Beaudonnet, il raconte ces moments de bascule où, parfois, il a décidé de délaisser le reportage, de poser sa caméra et d'intervenir. "Au comptoir de l'info" est le premier podcast natif (audio) de France Télévisions. Sous forme d'interview journalistique, un acteur qui fabrique l'information télévisée du service public — un grand reporter, un cameraman, un présentateur — vient se livrer, raconter, dévoiler la manière dont il travaille. Dans une ambiance sonore de comptoir de café, il confie ses doutes, ses joies, mais aussi ses peurs lorsqu'il est sur le terrain ou en studio. Depuis le mois de mai 2021, le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" reçoit également à son micro des journalistes de Radio France (France Inter, France Info, France Culture). La série est réalisée par François Beaudonnet, rédacteur en chef Europe, éditorialiste sur franceinfo (canal 27), grand reporter à France 2 et chroniqueur dans l'émission "Nous, les Européens" sur France 3. Ancien correspondant à Rome et Bruxelles, il a débuté en radio où il présentait le journal de 13 heures sur France Inter. Nous suivre sur Twitter : @Comptoirinfo Nous envoyer un courriel : comptoirinfo@francetv.fr Cet épisode a été réalisé par Marion Gualandi

SATIS EXPO - PODCAST
Studio XR et VFX : comment former la nouvelle génération de scénaristes ?

SATIS EXPO - PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 65:31


[PLATEAU D'EXPERTS] L'évolution des technologies permet d'élargir les possibilités créatrices notamment avec les studios XR et les nouvelles générations d'outils Vfx. Il est important que la nouvelle génération de scénaristes connaisse ces nouveaux dispositifs à disposition afin qu'elle puisse les mettre au service de la narration !Modératrice : Alexia De Mari - DoctoranteIntervenants : Mathias Chelebourg - Immersive Creator chez Atelier Durama, Samuel Lepoil - Creative director, Co-fondateur de Tamanoir, Olivier Rousseaux - Référent pédagogique, Montage, RAV et JRI chez 3iS et Tom Weil - Responsable pédagogique chez École 24 Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Vivre ailleurs
Sixième édition de la Semaine des lycées français du monde (SLFM)

Vivre ailleurs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2022 5:53


La Semaine des lycées français du monde avait pour thème cette année : « S'informer dans un monde connecté pour former des citoyennes et citoyens éclairés ». Diverses activités ont eu lieu dans ces établissements à l'étranger autour de cette thématique, qui s'inscrit dans le cadre de l'Année de l'éducation aux médias et à l'information, décrétée par le ministère de l'Éducation nationale. Focus sur les JRI, les Jeunes reporters internationaux, très actifs tout au long de cette Semaine. 

Au comptoir de l'info
Ecoutez le Podcast : "Au Comptoir de l'info" avec Stéphanie Perez, de retour de Kherson (Ukraine)

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2022 24:20


Elle a passé plus de trois semaines dans la région de Kherson en Ukraine. C'est la quatrième fois que la journaliste Stéphanie Perez se rend dans le pays, pour France France Télévisions, depuis le début de l'invasion russe. Avec la JRI (journaliste reporter d'images) Chloe Cormery, elles ont vu la joie des habitants de Kherson après la libération de leur ville se transformer en angoisse lorsque les bombardements russes ont repris. La journaliste Stéphanie Perez est arrivée à Kherson au moment les forces russes qui l'occupaient depuis le mois de mars, ont été obligées de quitter cette ville de prés de 300 000 habitants. Pour France 2, elle a assisté à la joie de la foule réunie sur la place centrale lorsque le président Volodymyr Zelensky est venu célébrer cette victoire. Mais très rapidement, l'ambiance a changé : les bombardements ont commencé et toute une partie des habitants n'ont alors eu qu'une seule envie : s'enfuir. "Ils lâchaient des chiens qui leur mangeaient les jambes" Dans Kherson libérée, Stéphanie Perez a recueilli des témoignages terribles : ceux d'Ukrainiens que l'armée russe avait torturés, à l'électricité ou à l'aide de chiens qui leur "mangeaient les jambes". Dans cet épisode du podcast "Au comptoir de l'info", la journaliste explique aussi au micro de François Beaudonnet les difficultés pour une équipe de télévision de continuer à travailler sans électricité et sans internet. C'est à dire vivre et travailler comme les Ukrainiens eux-mêmes. "Au comptoir de l'info" est le premier podcast natif (audio) de France Télévisions. Sous forme d'interview journalistique, un acteur qui fabrique l'information télévisée du service public — un grand reporter, un cameraman, un présentateur — vient se livrer, raconter, dévoiler la manière dont il travaille. Dans une ambiance sonore de comptoir de café, il confie ses doutes, ses joies, mais aussi ses peurs lorsqu'il est sur le terrain ou en studio. Depuis le mois de mai 2021, le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" reçoit également à son micro des journalistes de Radio France (France Inter, France Info, France Culture). La série est réalisée par François Beaudonnet, rédacteur en chef Europe, éditorialiste sur franceinfo (canal 27), grand reporter à France 2 et chroniqueur dans l'émission "Nous, les Européens" sur France 3. Ancien correspondant à Rome et Bruxelles, il a débuté en radio où il présentait le journal de 13 heures sur France Inter. Nous suivre sur Twitter : @Comptoirinfo Nous envoyer un courriel : comptoirinfo@francetv.fr Cet épisode a été réalisé par Timothée Le Hec

Le service reportage
Dans les coulisses des midterms aux Etats-Unis

Le service reportage

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 21:17


Tous les regards étaient portés vers les Etats-Unis pour les élections de mi-mandat, les midterms, cruciales pour Joe Biden. Ce scrutin (dont on attend encore les résultats définitifs) dira si le 46ème Président américain aura les mains libres ou non pour les deux dernières années de son mandat. Au dessus de ces élections a plané aussi l'ombre de Donald Trump. Pour comprendre les enjeux de ces midterms, et aussi savoir comment les journalistes de BFMTV ont couvert cette élection, deux témoins : Philippe Corbé, actuel chef du service politique de BFMTV et ancien correspondant aux Etats-Unis. Et la JRI (journaliste reporter d'image) Audrey Alos. 

Au comptoir de l'info
Podcast : Ecoutez "Au comptoir de l'info" avec Jean-Baptiste Marteau, présentateur sur France 2 (Télématin, 13 heures, 20 heures, émissions spéciales)

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 24:49


Depuis 2016, Jean-Baptiste Marteau est présentateur "joker" des journaux de 13 heures et de 20 heures de France 2. Depuis la rentrée 2022, il présente Télématin en remplacement de Thomas Sotto. Pour le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" et au micro de François Beaudonnet, le journaliste de 39 ans revient sur son parcours professionnel ainsi que sur son engagement dans la lutte contre l'homophobie. Il ne veut plus "laisser passer". Jean-Baptiste Marteau a porté plainte auprés des services de police, aprés avoir reçu, au siège de France Télévisions, une lettre de menaces concernant sa fille. "On sait où elle va à l'école" disait la missive anonyme. Le journaliste se dit malheureusement habitué à recevoir des messages d'insultes depuis qu'il a révélé publiquement son homosexualité. Mais lorsque cela concerne sa famille, il estime que toute menace aura dorénavant une suite judiciaire. "Je ne comprenais pas cette haine" Au zinc du "Comptoir de l'info", Jean-Baptiste Marteau se remémore également un incident dont il avait été victime lors d'une manifestation en 2010 qu'il couvrait en tant que reporter. Avec la JRI (journaliste reporter d'images) qui l'accompagnait, ils avaient été poussés dans la Seine par des manifestants. Le service d'ordre du cortége avait dû les aider à sortir de l'eau. Le journaliste avoue qu'il n'a pas compris cette haine à son encontre, alors qu'il était venu donner la parole à ceux qui venaient dire leur mécontentement. L'hostilité contre les journalistes, souvent accompagnée de violences, n'a cessé de croître depuis l'épisode des gilets jaunes. "Au comptoir de l'info" est le premier podcast natif (audio) de France Télévisions. Sous forme d'interview journalistique, un acteur qui fabrique l'information télévisée du service public — un grand reporter, un cameraman, un présentateur — vient se livrer, raconter, dévoiler la manière dont il travaille. Dans une ambiance sonore de comptoir de café, il confie ses doutes, ses joies, mais aussi ses peurs lorsqu'il est sur le terrain ou en studio. Depuis le mois de mai 2021, le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" reçoit également à son micro des journalistes de Radio France (France Inter, France Info, France Culture). La série est réalisée par François Beaudonnet, rédacteur en chef Europe, éditorialiste sur franceinfo (canal 27), grand reporter à France 2 et chroniqueur dans l'émission "Nous, les Européens" sur France 3. Ancien correspondant à Rome et Bruxelles, il a débuté en radio où il présentait le journal de 13 heures sur France Inter. Nous suivre sur Twitter : @Comptoirinfo Nous envoyer un courriel : comptoirinfo@francetv.fr Cet épisode a été réalisé par Marion Gualandi

Justice In Action
Ep. 17: Substance Abuse Recovery

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 49:16


Guiding our clients toward recovery from substance use disorder The opioid epidemic has increased the demand for effective recovery services, and Justice Resource Institute's Mary Chao is leading the organization's training program for clinicians and other staff members to aid them in helping clients recover. Chao has been with JRI for nine years and works with the agency's health, training and community-based services divisions, developing and coordinating substance use programming throughout the agency. She works closely with clients ages 12 to 24 and the JRI clinicians who help them to address problematic substance use. Problematic use of substances, including opioids, cannabis and alcohol, often accompanies other problems, including homelessness, sexual abuse and violence that JRI programs also address. Chao and JRI use ACRA (Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach), an evidence-based treatment model that focuses on developing relationships with clients to help them understand what motivates them to use drugs or alcohol and looks to increase opportunities for clients to do “social, fun things” with the goal of helping them reduce or eliminate substance use. But recovery doesn't necessarily mean lifelong abstinence from drugs or alcohol. “Abstinence is definitely not the only way to be in recovery,” she said. “Someone with substance use disorder can struggle for years, even decades….It's important to recognize that relapse doesn't mean failure.” In addition, while substance use by youth and young adults can be frightening for friends and family,  “Not every person who uses a substance needs treatment.” The need for treatment becomes clearer when substance use has a serious effect on their life or the lives of others. And it is important that treatment for substance use disorder be integrated into a client's overall care plan. “Recovery is possible for everyone, and every family, and every community,” Chao said. Listen here to our conversation with Mary Chao about substance use disorder, treatment and recovery.

The After Hours Entrepreneur Social Media, Podcasting, and YouTube Show
Charlie Parrino - Turn your Business into a Show - JRI Cards

The After Hours Entrepreneur Social Media, Podcasting, and YouTube Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 39:05


The Covid-19 pandemic was an incredibly difficult time, and difficult times kill many businesses. BUT difficult times also bear massive opportunities to those that innovate.Charlie Parrino, founder of JRI cards is just that. He's an innovator.Charlie is passionate about sports cards and memorabilia. He decided to start a live YouTube show opening expensive, rare packs of cards. The show took off, and now he and his sons run an incredibly profitable business.The key takeaways from this episode?Start your side hustle while still working your primary jobCreate a show to build buzz around your productCreate multiple streams of incomeIf you can execute these at a high level, the sky is the limit!https://jricards.com/https://www.facebook.com/JRIcardsofficial/https://www.instagram.com/jricardsofficial/https://www.youtube.com/c/JustRipItPodcasting doesn't need to be complicated. Get simple, actionable steps + community support starting at $25 a month: https://podcast-savants.mn.co/

Les dessous de l'infox, la chronique
La désinformation russe autour de la mort du journaliste Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff

Les dessous de l'infox, la chronique

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 3:54


Un nouveau nom s'est ajouté cette semaine à la liste des journalistes morts sur le terrain en Ukraine. Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff est décédé le lundi 30 mai, alors qu'il couvrait une opération d'évacuation de civils pour la chaîne de télévision française BFM Tv dans le Donbass. Le véhicule humanitaire dans lequel il se trouvait a été touché par des éclats d'obus. Le parquet national antiterroriste a ouvert une enquête pour « crime de guerre ». Côté russe, on désinforme en s'attaquant à la victime. Le traitement de la mort de Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff par l'agence de presse officielle Tass est un parfait exemple de la stratégie de désinformation russe, misant sur la « désorientation » du public. Une demi-heure après avoir relaté de façon factuelle la confirmation de sa mort par Emmanuel Macron, l'agence russe commence à faire circuler l'information selon laquelle il pourrait s'agir, non pas d'un journaliste, mais d'un « mercenaire ». Dans sa dépêche du 30 mai, l'agence d'État va jusqu'à écrire qu'il était « peu probable qu'il soit journaliste », et l'accuse de façon à peine voilée, d'avoir tenté de livrer des munitions aux soldats ukrainiens.  Un journaliste reconnu par la profession Or, aucun doute n'est permis sur l'activité de Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff et sa façon d'exercer son métier de journaliste reporter d'images (JRI). Il était diplômé de l'Institut de journalisme Bordeaux Aquitaine, et était bien un journaliste reconnu par la profession. Depuis 2015, il était en possession de la carte d'identité des journalistes professionnels, plus simplement appelée carte de presse. Son travail avec plusieurs médias est toujours accessible en ligne.  Lors de sa mort, il était en tournage dans le Donbass, en équipe avec d'autres journalistes, dont une Ukrainienne, Oksana Leuta. Elle a témoigné sur la façon dont ils ont monté cette mission qui les a conduits à embarquer dans un véhicule siglé « aide humanitaire », ce que l'on voit très bien sur les clichés diffusés depuis. Il n'y a absolument aucune preuve tangible attestant que ce journaliste ait eu d'autres activités que la couverture de l'actualité. Il s'agit là d'accusations gratuites et fallacieuses.  Les séparatistes à la source de l'infox L'agence de presse Tass s'appuie sur les propos d'Andrey Marochko, un membre des forces armées de la République populaire de Louhansk, des séparatistes pro-russes. C'est lui qui qualifie le journaliste français de « mercenaire » et affirme qu'il « était un complice de l'Ukraine et des forces radicales d'extrême droite ». Le même Andrey Marochko relaie sur son compte Telegram, des théories complotistes du média pro-russe NashDonbass, selon lesquelles la mort de Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff serait un coup monté par les forces ukrainiennes afin de discréditer l'armée russe.  L'autre argument avancé par l'agence Tass pour semer le doute, c'est que Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff était accrédité par l'armée ukrainienne au moment des faits. Ce qui est vrai, mais ne prouve absolument rien, puisque tous les journalistes présents en Ukraine doivent être accrédités, soit par les forces armées ukrainiennes côté ukrainien, soit par les forces armées russes de l'autre côté du front. Ce qui est une pratique courante sur la plupart des terrains de guerre, en particulier pour les journalistes qui prévoient de s'approcher du front. Manipulation par les Russes pour les Russes  Cette infox n'est pas relayée côté français, où il n'y a aucun doute sur ce que faisait ce journaliste en Ukraine. À l'inverse, elle a été reprise par de nombreux médias russes et se destine plutôt aux russophones et notamment aux habitants du Donbass. L'objectif, c'est de faire passer la mort du journaliste, non pas pour un crime de guerre, mais pour une manipulation visant « à agiter la communauté internationale », selon Andrey Marochko.  Stratégie de désorientation Pour Maxime Audinet, docteur en Science politique et en études slaves de l'Université Paris Nanterre et chercheur à l'Irsem, spécialiste de l'influence russe, la stratégie du Kremlin, illustrée par les dépêches de Tass, consiste à désorienter le public en diluant un peu de vérité factuelle avec des contenus trompeurs. La réaction officielle des autorités russes, mercredi 1er juin, dans la bouche du porte-parole du Kremlin, Dmitry Peskov, ne permet pas de dissiper ce brouillard informationnel : « Pour tirer des conclusions, déclare-t-il à la presse, vous avez besoin d'informations détaillées à propos de ce qui s'est passé, où et dans quelles circonstances, ce qui est vrai, ce qui ne l'est pas. Nous n'avons pas ces informations ».  Des propos qui ne sont pas de nature à faire cesser la désinformation relayée par les médias d'État sur la personne du journaliste français tué dans l'exercice de son métier. Le Kremlin laisse circuler les accusations les plus ignominieuses. Pour une fois, dans sa pratique de désinformation, la Russie n'est pas dans le déni du bombardement. Sa ligne de défense, c'est d'abord de s'en prendre à la réputation de la victime. 

C dans l'air
L'EUROPE SANCTIONNE, MOSCOU PILONNE... – 31/05/22

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 66:14


L'EUROPE SANCTIONNE, MOSCOU PILONNE... – 31/05/22 Invités FRANÇOIS CLEMENCEAU Rédacteur en chef international - « Le Journal du Dimanche » RYM MOMTAZ Correspondante à Paris, spécialiste des politiques européennes « Politico Europe » ANNE NIVAT Grand reporter NABIL WAKIM Journaliste - « Le Monde » L'appel de Volodymyr Zelensky a donc été entendu. Les chefs d'État et de gouvernement de l'Union européenne, réunis lundi à Bruxelles, ont réussi à s'entendre au sujet de l'embargo sur le pétrole vendu dans l'UE par Moscou, proposé il y a près d'un mois par la Commission européenne. Ainsi d'ici la fin de l'année, les Européens vont se passer de 90 % du pétrole russe afin de tarir le financement de la guerre menée par Moscou en Ukraine. Une exemption temporaire a néanmoins été prévue pour le pétrole acheminé par oléoduc, afin de ne pas pénaliser la Hongrie très dépendante de Moscou et d'éviter le véto brandi depuis plusieurs jours par Viktor Orbán. « La Russie fait le choix de poursuivre sa guerre en Ukraine. En Européens, unis et solidaires du peuple ukrainien, nous prenons ce soir de nouvelles sanctions », a réagi sur Twitter Emmanuel Macron, dont la France exerce la présidence du Conseil de l'UE. « Cela va couper une énorme source de financement de la machine de guerre » russe et exercer « une pression maximum » sur Moscou pour l'inciter à mettre fin à la guerre, a tweeté de son côté le président du Conseil européen, Charles Michel. Depuis le début de l'invasion russe en Ukraine, la Russie a engrangé plusieurs dizaines de milliards d'euros de la part de l'UE en échange des livraisons de pétrole. Cet accord devrait représenter à terme un manque à gagner de 250 millions d'euros par jour pour Moscou. Un peu plus tôt dans la journée le président ukrainien avait interpellé les Vingt-Sept pour leur demander des sanctions au plus vite. « Les querelles en Europe doivent cesser […], l'Europe doit montrer sa force. Car la Russie ne comprend que l'argument de la force », avait déclaré Volodymyr Zelensky par visioconférence. Il avait également rappelé que le pays a subi de nombreuses pertes humaines depuis l'adoption du cinquième paquet de sanctions et que de violents combats font toujours rage dans la région du Donbass, où les forces russes progressent et contrôlent à présent « une partie » de la ville de Severodonetsk. Le dirigeant ukrainien a également rendu hommage ce mardi à Frédéric Leclerc-Imhoff, journaliste reporter d'images (JRI) de BFM TV mortellement touché par un éclat d'obus russe, lundi, alors qu'il filmait une évacuation de civils sur la route de Lyssytchansk, près de Severodonetsk. Du côté Russe, les représailles aux sanctions européennes n'ont pas tardé. Après la Pologne et la Bulgarie, c'est au tour des Pays-Bas de voir leurs approvisionnements en gaz russe coupés ce mardi. Parallèlement, la Russie qui utilise la matière première comme une arme diplomatique, poursuit son chantage sur les céréales. Ainsi, alors que des millions de tonnes de blés et de maïs sont coincées dans des entrepôts ukrainiens et attendent d'être exportées, Vladimir Poutine s'est dit prêt à exporter plus de blé sous réserve de la levée des sanctions et de l'arrêt des livraisons d'armes à l'Ukraine. https://www.france.tv/france-5/c-dans-l-air/ DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45 FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/

Justice In Action
Ep. 16: Mental Heath Treatment for Clients with Developmental Differences

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 37:26


Mental health clinicians are often reluctant to treat people who have intellectual and developmental differences (IDDs) for fear of doing something that could worsen rather than improve the client's condition. In this episode  of Justice in Action, two JRI clinicians, Dr. Jacquelyn Kraps, Metrowest Area Director and Clinical Director of Outpatient Services, and Bailey McCombs, Licensed Metal Health Counselor and Expressive Arts Therapist, talk about the rewards and challenges of working with children with a range of differences, from autism spectrum disorder to chromosomal differences, cognitive challenges, and traumatic brain injury. Dr. Kraps and McCombs have helped establish the Developmental Differences Specialty Team to assist other JRI therapists to work effectively with clients with both IDDs and mental health needs, including complex trauma. Services for those individuals have long been siloed because they have been seen as separate and distinct. JRI is breaking new ground by having a single provider address the entirety of the client's service needs. Treating clients with both complex trauma and IDDs draw heavily on a therapist's creativity, flexibility, and powers of observation, Dr. Kraps and McComb say. Sometimes it requires teasing out which problems are caused by trauma and which are part of the individual's developmental difference. They advise other clinicians to be curious, open, and willing to say the wrong thing. If an approach doesn't work, they can always shift course.  Sometimes a client — especially a non-verbal client — can communicate most successfully by writing, drawing, or moving their body. Individuals with IDDs deserve effective treatment for mental health needs, which they are at least as likely to experience as the rest of the community, and they can enjoy positive, healthier outcomes with the right therapeutic approach. For more information, visit jri.org. A note about language: IDD often stands for intellectual and development disabilities. JRI choses to use the word differences instead of disabilities to be as inclusive as possible, and honors that each individual and family get to decide how they identify.

Insight Mind Body Talk
Ep 31 Trauma-informed Weight Lifting with Mariah Rooney

Insight Mind Body Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2022 36:29 Transcription Available


Do you like to pick stuff up and set it down? Have you noticed the emotional benefits of moving your body in new and challenging ways?  In Trauma-informed Weight Lifting, Jess (she/her) and her guest Mariah Rooney (she/her), talk weight lifting and how building strength not only builds resilience but helps resolve past trauma.  Trauma-informed weight lifting is asking each of us to be curious, to be mindful, and to be open to new ways of healing old wounds. Mariah, MSW, LICSW, RYT, is the co-founder of Trauma-informed Weight Lifting. Trauma-informed Weight Lifting is a program of the Center for Trauma and Embodiment at JRI. They work to make weightlifting fitness spaces and fitness and health professionals, trauma informed, inclusive, and responsive to all bodies, experiences and identities. They do this through their training program, conducting innovative research.  And developing weightlifting programs to support healing and resilience building.Continue LearningTrauma-informed Weight LiftingwebsiteresearchinstagramCenter for Trauma and Embodiment at JRIwebsiteProduced by Jessica Warpula SchultzMusic by Jason A. SchultzEdited by Jessica Warpula Schultz

French Expat Le Podcast
Guillaume Ptak : je suis correspondant en Ukraine

French Expat Le Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 39:52


Aujourd'hui je vous livre un témoignage important. Celui de Guillaume Ptak, français d'origine polonaise et correspondant pour Les Echos, Guillaume vient de recevoir son diplôme de journaliste. Lors d'un voyage dans les pays de l'Est pour renouer avec des membres de sa famille, il tombe amoureux de l'Ukraine, et décide de s'y installer pour devenir correspondant de presse. C'était en septembre 2021. Depuis son quotidien a changé du tout au tout, mais son amour du pays et de ses habitants est resté intact. Et c'est cette histoire que je vous propose de découvrir. Direction Kyev, Ukraine.Merci à Alexis Lopez qui est photographe et JRI aux côtés de Guillaume pour les photos et les extraits vidéos que nous avons utilisé pour habillé cet épisode. Plus d'infos sur sa chaine Youtube Si vous avez aimé l'épisode, rendez-vous sur Apple Podcast, Tumult ou Castbox pour lui donner 5 étoiles et un commentaire. Retrouvez tous les épisodes, découvrez l'équipe et la mission du podcast, ainsi que tous les liens pour nous retrouver sur toutes les plateformes sur le site www.frenchexpatpodcast.com/Suivez les coulisses de French Expat Le Podcast sur les réseaux sociaux :

Au comptoir de l'info
PODCAST : Ecoutez "Au comptoir de l'info" avec Christophe Kenck, reporter de guerre, de retour d'Ukraine

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 30:02


Il est arrivé en Ukraine le 3 février, trois semaines avant le début de l'invasion du pays par l'armée russe. C'est donc sur place, avec les Ukrainiens, que Christophe Kenck, journaliste reporter d'images (cameraman) pour France Télévisions, a vécu la "bascule" du pays dans le guerre et dans le chaos. Au cours de ces trente dernières années, Christophe Kenck a couvert les guerres en Afghanistan, en Syrie, en Irak, en Libye, au Liban, en Côte d'Ivoire, ou encore en Sierra Leone. Mais les quarante quatre jours qu'il vient de passer en Ukraine ne ressemblent à rien de ce qu'il a connu auparavant dans sa carrière de journaliste reporter d'images (JRI) : d'abord parce que cette guerre se déroule sur le sol européen, à moins de 2 500 kilomètres de Paris, mais aussi parce qu'il s'agit d'une guerre "conventionnelle" avec deux armées qui s'affrontent avec des chars et des missiles. Ce qui a frappé le reporter de guerre, c'est l'exode des populations qui fuient en train ou en voiture vers l'ouest. Des scènes qui lui rappellentcelles de la seconde guerre mondiale en France, vécues par ses grands-parents. Christophe Kenck raconte aussi qu'il se trouvait à Irpin (nord-ouest de Kiev) le 13 mars dernier, et qu'il est passé à l'endroit exact où vingt minutes plus tard, le documentariste américain Brent Renaud a été tué. Le JRI de France Télévisions a aidé à mettre à l'abri et à évacuer le caméraman blessé par balles, membre de l'équipe du journaliste américain décédé. "Mon meilleur ami est mort devant moi " "Au comptoir de l'info", Christophe Kenck se remémore enfin avec douleur la mort de son collègue et ami Gilles Jacquier. Le 11 janvier 2012, ils se trouvaient ensemble à Homs en Syrie lorsque quatre missiles se sont abattus sur eux. Gilles Jacquier est mort, Christophe Kenck a été blessé : légèrement dans sa chair mais profondément dans son âme. Pendant plusieurs années, victime du stress post-traumatique, le reporter se demande sans cesse : "pourquoi ai-je survécu et pas Gilles ?". Finalement, aprés deux années de pause, Christophe Kenck repart sur les terrains de guerre, pour dit-il "ne pas laisser tranquilles les dictateurs". A propos du podcast : "Au comptoir de l'info" est le premier podcast natif (audio) de France Télévisions. Sous forme d'interview journalistique, un acteur qui fabrique l'information télévisée du service public — un grand reporter, un cameraman, un présentateur — vient se livrer, raconter, dévoiler la manière dont il travaille. Dans une ambiance sonore de comptoir de café, il confie ses doutes, ses joies, mais aussi ses peurs lorsqu'il est sur le terrain ou en studio. Depuis le mois de mai 2021, le podcast "Au comptoir de l'info" reçoit également à son micro des journalistes de Radio France (France Inter, France Info, France Culture). La série est réalisée par François Beaudonnet, éditorialiste sur franceinfo (canal 27), grand reporter à France 2 et chroniqueur dans l'émission "Nous, les Européens" sur France 3. Ancien correspondant à Rome et Bruxelles, il a débuté en radio où il présentait le journal de 13 heures sur France Inter. Nous suivre sur Twitter : @Comptoirinfo Nous envoyer un courriel : comptoirinfo@francetv.fr Cet épisode a été réalisé par Timothée Le Hec

How To Love Forever
LOVE & TRAUMA - How To Cope With Overwhelming Anguish & How It Affects Relationships

How To Love Forever

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 53:36


IN THIS EPISODE we dive in to the deep dark waters of experiencing trauma. We break down the many ways trauma can affect not only our own lives, but the lives of those around us, and our most important relationships. We share methods and resources for working through different kinds of trauma. & We share some modern techniques & treatments, some of which might surprise you. ––––––◊◊◊◊◊–––––– #traumahealing #lovetips #relationhips #couplestherapy #couples Some links & references for ya:  Books (click on the affiliate links below to buy from Amazon and help our channel at no extra cost to you!): The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel Van Der Kolk, M.D. https://www.amazon.com/Body-Keeps-Score-Healing-Trauma/dp/0143127748/ref=sr_1_1?crid=259CKICJ3L8J4&keywords=the+body+keeps+the+score&qid=1647293987&s=books&sprefix=body+keeps%252Cstripbooks%252C363&sr=1-1&_encoding=UTF8&tag=howtolovefore-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=a74405be115787b82e9c7a4cdcf2e633&camp=1789&creative=9325 Atlas of the Heart: Mapping Meaningful Connection and the Language of Human Experience - Dr. Brené Brown: https://www.amazon.com/Atlas-Heart-Meaningful-Connection-Experience/dp/0399592555/ref=pd_sbs_28/141-3629085-5543902?pd_rd_w=hrLr9&pf_rd_p=dfec2022-428d-4b18-a6d4-8f791333a139&pf_rd_r=AFR3TRBBHDEGHP97ZTWW&pd_rd_r=a89aec35-6cc8-4e4a-ab1c-94922872b219&pd_rd_wg=cNfTD&pd_rd_i=0399592555&psc=1&_encoding=UTF8&tag=howtolovefore-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=a2a8d31ad0582e5c531baacc099123d7&camp=1789&creative=9325 Healing Secondary Trauma: Proven Strategies for Caregivers and Professionals to Manage Stress, Anxiety, and Compassion Fatigue - Trudy Gilbert-Eliot, PhD:  https://www.amazon.com/dp/1641527560/ref=sspa_dk_detail_2?psc=1&pd_rd_i=1641527560&pd_rd_w=a2JRz&pf_rd_p=0c758152-61cd-452f-97a6-17f070f654b8&pd_rd_wg=rK04Q&pf_rd_r=MMH5MJVGWPFDWVC01B8C&pd_rd_r=a31e2223-d5b7-4356-8a1c-201a35f8349b&s=books&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzUFAzRkdWSE05TVk4JmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwMTM5NzQwM081QVA5S0Q5QU9BUSZlbmNyeXB0ZWRBZElkPUEwNDE0NzMyMVA4RldVQjRHTkdWSCZ3aWRnZXROYW1lPXNwX2RldGFpbCZhY3Rpb249Y2xpY2tSZWRpcmVjdCZkb05vdExvZ0NsaWNrPXRydWU=&_encoding=UTF8&tag=howtolovefore-20&linkCode=ur2&linkId=4fbaa8b3612119b268a6535a59d52666&camp=1789&creative=9325 Links "The Love After War" screening at CSU: https://facebook.com/events/s/alvs-presents-love-after-war-s/3258654744357885/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-etY_-8ZIUw https://www.goodtherapy.org/blog/when-it-all-falls-apart-traumas-impact-on-intimate-relationships-0211145 https://www.goodtherapy.org/blog/coping-secondary-trauma-loved-ones-guide-0605137 https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-mindful-self-express/201908/how-traumas-create-negative-patterns-in-relationships https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233329449_Broken_hearts_and_mending_bodies_The_impact_of_trauma_on_intimacy “I'm just so lucky to walk through this hell with her”. Tommy Vietor https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Glb2LEFHX_A&list=PLOOwEPgFWm_NHcQd9aCi5JXWASHO_n5uR&index=4 https://peaceaftertrauma.com/about-carolyn/ https://www.loveafterwar.org/ References  Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (US). Trauma-Informed Care in Behavioral Health Services. Rockville (MD): Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (US); 2014. (Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series, No. 57.) Chapter 3, Understanding the Impact of Trauma.  Millán K. “Signs and Symptoms of PTSD”. Black Bear Lodge. Black Bear Rehab. N.d.  Nielsen B. “How Unhealed Trauma Affects Highly Sensitive People”. Highly Sensitive Refuge. 10 February 2020. “Past trauma may haunt your future health”. Harvard Women's Health Watch. Harvard Health Publishing: Harvard Medical School. February 2019.  Yoder C. “Unaddressed trauma & how it impacts us”. Peace After Trauma. 2018. Effective psychotherapy is good for trauma patients, not to fix people, to paraphrase  Dr Van Dr Kolk, but to be able to acknowledge the terrible scary things that happened and to find ways the patient can fix themselves. About Bessel van der Kolk:  Bessel van der Kolk is a psychiatrist noted for his research in the area of post-traumatic stress since the 1970s. His work focuses on the interaction of attachment, neurobiology, and developmental aspects of trauma's effects on people. His major publication, Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society, talks about how the role of trauma in psychiatric illness has changed over the past 20 years.  Dr. van der Kolk is past President of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Professor of Psychiatry at Boston University Medical School, and Medical Director of the Trauma Center at JRI in Brookline, Massachusetts. He has taught at universities and hospitals across the United States and around the world, including Europe, Africa, Russia, Australia, Israel, and China.  Check out Bessel van der Kolk's latest book, “The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma” at https://www.amazon.com/Body-Keeps-Sco... ––––––◊◊◊◊◊–––––– What is trauma? First, comes tragedy, right out of the blue, walloping our hearts, minds & bodies, sending our lives reeling with typically no warning. It could be a terrible car accident, or something that hits us square in the emotions, like being subjected to or even just witnessing cruelties. When we are victims of tragedy, trauma ensues. To be more specific, trauma can be defined as a response that results from exposure to an incident or a series of events that are so emotionally disturbing or perceived to be so life-threatening that it has lasting effects on one's mental, physical, social, emotional, and/or spiritual balance.  In other words, something happens that threatens the very fabric of our lives, and we then get to deal with the very understandable emotional fall-out, potentially for the rest of our lives. We know this is heavy stuff, but considering that over 2/3 of our population has experienced a traumatic event at one point in their lives, and over 8 million people in the US alone suffer from PTSD, we feel the need to talk about it. And not just talk about what it is and how it can affect us, but also to share some techniques and strategies for dealing with trauma that have been scientifically researched and proven to be effective. We have to remind our listeners that we are not therapists, we are not licensed health professionals in any sense. We are just two more people who have survived traumas, had some pretty intense life experiences and are fortunate to be alive and well enough to speak of it.  We speak of it from personal experience not from clinical expertise, and we urge you to not take anything we say in this podcast as legal or medical advice, but rather as personal observations.   Sharing is the first step to healing, but if you or a loved one are suffering the effects of trauma, we strongly encourage you to seek out real qualified help, from a professional who will understand your needs and provide you with the tools & guidance to work on healing all of those unseen wounds.  And if this episode gives you a better idea of what it is you're going through and why, and that there is hope for healing with an array of techniques, then we will consider ourselves fortunate to have been able to help someone.  To that end, we have included a wealth of resources in the notes of this episode; from books and videos to celebrated practitioners, we urge you to check out the links and begin to map your path to healing. Ok, so there are many kinds of trauma that can occur. Ranging from some kind of accident, to natural catastrophes, to being subjected to interpersonal violence. It can be a one-time event (like an accident), a prolonged event (such as war), or a series of events ( like being subjected to long-term abuse).  Trauma that affects a community or a country is called collective trauma, and being close to someone who has been traumatized can cause it's own trauma, called secondary trauma. It's all very real and as you have probably seen in your own lives it can have incredibly long lasting consequences, sometimes generational.  In fact, so much of our human history can be defined as a litany of inherited generational trauma.   However, since there are so very permutations of trauma, and this is a podcast focused primarily on relationship health, we are going to narrow our focus to what happens when traumatic experiences threaten our romantic relationships, and what we can do to strengthen our connections & heal from the pain we've experienced. In relationships, there are two 2 categories of trauma that will most commonly affect us; life trauma and unhealed relationship trauma. Life trauma refers to those out-of-the-blue occurrences, whereas unhealed relationship trauma refers to when we have not yet fully processed and moved on from trauma occurring within a relationship, often a previous one. So what are the ways we can be affected by these different kinds of traumas? (How does it affect us?) * physically drained from constant stress responses     * fight/flight/freeze response is an automatic state now     * toxic relationships are stressful for mind & body alike     * constant stress can cause inflammation, heart attack, chronic pain, arthritis, weakened immune system * dissociation: disconnected from the world or your life     * head-in-the-clouds, non-presence     * feeling your life is a movie you're watching on a screen (simulation)     * disrupted perception memory processing & emotions     * like the traumatic event is still happening. * mental exhaustion at a chemical level     * adrenaline & cortisol are supposed to be short-term     * chemical overload:  can't concentrate, can't remember, can't sort out feelings     * frustration can be a constant * trust problems     * doubting people, even ones you know & love     * walls, non-belief, paranoia, doubting people's motives * risk junkie, taking chances to evade the bad feels     * sensations (rush) you can finally feel     * self-destructive rushed like sex & drug addiction     * any way to clear your mind of the nagging problems you can't address * a constant feeling of shame     * GUILT: feel bad about something you did     * SHAME: feel bad about who or what you are     * much self-blame about things not working out better     * living in regret & “if only” thoughts     * guilt/shame overload can worsen physical/psych effects of trauma * physical reaction to emotional triggers     * trauma “nostalgia”     * some small stimulus bring an outsized reaction     * amygdala produces neurotransmitter Acetylcholine      * shortness breath, sweating, anxiety, sickness when smell, shaking in a topic of conversation, nervous convulsing     * potential for violence * risk overeating, overproduction of adrenaline, anxiety etc can be further risk factors that make matters worse How does it affect those around us? * it can be generational,      * meaning the effects of trauma can be passed on from parents, grandparents, etc, through dysfunctional interactions & training children to view life through a lens that the world around them is not safe and may never be safe. * potential substance abuse & other abuses can cause havoc in family, work, friends * partner can experience secondary trauma     * also known as vicarious trauma      * experience many of the same effects as the person who was injured: fear, exhaustion, helplessness, hopelessness, anger, anxiety, etc. * it can generate its own ptsd * untreated ptsd, the effects get worse over time How can we process & manage it? There are two schools of thought about trauma;   1) it can be cured (removed)  2) it cannot be cured, only treated & the mind/body rewired to circumvent it. The key is to find something that allow the sense of deceptiveness & self-loathing to be controlled * notice the incongruence between the stimulus (situation) & the response (your whack-ass flipout) * Always remember that healing doesn't work in a straight line * be kind to yourself.  healing, self-love, self compassion, patience * try a therapy like EMDR (eye movement desensitization & reprocessing)     * patient recalls traumatic event, therapist makes them follow fingers with eyes     * seems like b.s. but the results speak for themselves     * changes the brain circuitry to interpret your currently reality from different POV     * allows people to let go of long-ago events, no longer in the now * try things like Yoga     * deepen your mind-body connection, raise awareness     * greater relationship with your internal sensory system     * allows us to minimize the focus on our round and round thought process, while feeling more connected to what our bodies are actually feeling. and if our body feels safe in the moment, that can help train our brains to be less “on guard”.     * According to Dr. Bessel van der Kolk it's proven more effective for ptsd than any of the studied drugs (prozac, zoloft, many others) * try things like Theater & Movement     * playing different roles in your body can help your relationship to yourself     * “playback theater” is a movement that uses this premise     * but all theater can be ecstatic and cathartic         * We did the John Gilkey “Idiot Workshop”, where he pushed us to dig deeper for expressions of ourselves we typically aren't comfortable portraying. I had a breakthrough when I burst out that I didn't want to be “cute” any more. After letting that sit with me for a few days & weeks, I realized that I had been filling a de facto “cute” role all my life, largely due to how it helped keep me safe. But now that I'm stronger & more confident, I don't need to keep that as my primary identity. There are so many facets to who I am, and I no longer need to limit myself to what used to keep me safe.     * Aristotle argued that tragedy cleansed the heart through pity and terror, purging us of our petty concerns and worries by making us aware that there can be nobility in suffering. He called this experience 'catharsis'. * try things like Neural Feedback (no really!)      * electrical/photon impulses into the brain can be like a neurochemical hard-reset     * shaping the brain to have a different configuration, open to new input * try things like Psychedelic therapy (guided MDMA sessions for trauma)     * legal grey area     * gaining traction     * gotta be legit, psych-guided, not just trippin' at a friend's house     * (ok maybe there's some benefit to the friend's house trip but come on)     * a meta-view can be achieved, a removal from the traumatic experience     *     * (we have friends)     *  BOTTOM LINE: DIFFERENT PEOPLE REQUIRE DIFFERENT APPROACHES. If you are working through trauma, you may find yourself drawn to one of these methods, or you might benefit from incorporating several of them. And it can change, both as you make progress and also as you move through different phases of your life. the main goal is to recognize what you're struggling with, accept that needing help is nothing to be ashamed of, and start finding ways to heal your wounds. Speaking of healing wounds, we had the pleasure of speaking with Mark Cunningham, a military veteran and therapist based in Fort Collins CO. We will be sharing the full interview with you all later in the season, but we wanted to do a public service announcement in this episode because Mark is helping to promote a documentary called “Love After War”, produced & directed by sexologist Dr. Mitchell Tepper. “Love After War” introduces the viewer to veterans and their partners who have had to fight the battle to save their relationships after suffering catastrophic injuries dealt in combat. It's heart-wrenching, candid, and inspiring, so we hope you get a chance to support the film. Mark is hosting a special screening at Colorado State University on March 29, 2022. If you're listening to the podcast right after it came out, that means you have two weeks to make plans! And if you aren't able to pop over to Fort Collins the day of, you can sign up to get notifications of screenings in your area, or even sign up to host one yourself!  The website is loveafterwar.org, and we'll leave a link directly in the description. So please check it out and support this film any way you can.

Justice In Action
Ep. 15: Data and research improve treatment of complex trauma

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 42:08


Few social service agencies are as committed as JRI to improving treatment through research and data. In today's episode of Justice in Action, we talk to Hilary Hodgdon, Research Director at Justice Resource Institute, and Lia Martin, Senior Associate Director of Quality Management. Together, they are part of a data and research division that is unusual among social service agencies for its size and scope. JRI clients suffer from complex trauma. On average, a child or adolescent seeing a JRI therapist has experienced three different types of trauma, such as neglect, physical abuse or psychological abuse. That number rises to five or six for clients in residential programs. In addition, these young people may face racism or other types of bias  These traumas can affect children's attachment to their parents or other caregiver, as well as how they think of themselves in the world and whether they see the world as a safe or dangerous place. The data that Hilary and Lia gather and analyze help guide, assess and improve treatments for these young victims of complex trauma. JRI also uses the data to evaluate the effectiveness of its programs. The heart of the data and research work is the Client Assessment Tracking System, or CATS, a tool developed by JRI to gather and analyze information about clients and families. Hilary and Lia use the data not only to support the work of JRI clinicians and programs, but also to examine specific research questions, such as how gender, race and an individual's personal history with trauma affect treatment outcomes. They learned, for instance, that while females tend to present with more and stronger symptoms than males, both genders benefit equally from trauma-informed care. Smaller agencies that lack a complete research department of their own also benefit from JRI's research program. Clinicians from those agencies can feed their clients' data into CATS and benefit from the analysis in the treatment of their clients. In addition, Hilary and Lia are having a nationwide impact on trauma-informed care through training, presentations and the peer-reviewed articles they write and publish. For more information on JRI's data and research work, visit jri.org

Justice In Action
Ep. 14: Courageous Conversations

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2022 42:21


Staff of Justice Resource Institute don't shy away from talking about tough issues like racial justice, immigration policy or vaccine hesitancy. They lead the way. JRI's “Courageous Conversations” initiative brings together groups of employees and managers —usually about 50 attend each virtual meeting — to discuss the most difficult topics that come to them, either from fellow employees or from the clients and communities they serve throughout the region. The initiative grew out of Listen, Learn, Lift, a program started in Lynn to have frank conversations with local youth about racial justice and other tough topics. The conversations and the actions taken as a result were so successful that JRI staff decided to spread the word — and the work — throughout the organization. Staff set the agendas for the bi-monthly Zoom meetings, invite guest speakers and run the meetings. JRI executives give their full support to the initiative, which is in line with the agency's core value of furthering social justice. To keep the discussions civil and productive, the group uses a Unity Agreement that outlines principles everyone agrees to uphold at the meetings and that ensure that people are listened to respectfully and feel safe to express themselves honestly. Employees say it builds trust for the entire organization because people feel they are being respected, listened to, and encouraged. JRI, with over 2,500 employees in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, runs programs helping individuals and families experiencing trauma. It is one of the largest social service agencies in New England. JRI is happy to share what “Courageous Conversations” has taught them and how the program works. In this Justice In Action podcast, listen here to JRI staff members Dalene Basden, Director of Family and Community Engagement; Matthew Peiken, Northeast Regional Director; and Amanda Marte, Director of the Young Parent Support Program and an outpatient therapist in the Lawrence and Lowell region, as they discuss “Courageous Conversations.” Visit jri.org to learn more about Justice Resource Institute and its programs.  

Justice In Action
Ep. 13: Covid-19 pandemic boosts need for foster homes

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 44:23


More than 8,400 Massachusetts children are in foster care, and the need is growing as the financial and emotional strain of the Covid-19 pandemic and the state's opioid crisis continue to take a toll on children and families. Listen to Bob Costa, program director for JRI's Intensive Foster Care program, and Courtney Edge-Mattos, who is the senior home finder for the program, talk about Justice Resource Institute's foster care program. The program oversees foster families who provide care for children whom the state's Department of Children and Families and the state's court system have found are in imminent danger because of challenges in their permanent homes. That trouble may range from domestic violence to sexual abuse to drug addiction; and the foster care program provides a temporary stay with foster families while troubles are addressed in their permanent homes. The goal in each case is to reunite children with their birth parents or relatives, and foster parents often maintain close contact with children and their families after they are reunited. That is because children need a permanent relationship with at least one trusted adult, says Costa. Often that permanent relationship is with foster parents who “stand in the gap” for traumatized children in need of temporary care, said Edge-Mattos. Those children undergo state-required training, plus JRI's specialized training in working with traumatized children. JRI provides support for their foster parents, providing money for school clothing and holiday gifts, in addition to the state's daily stipend. In addition, a group called the Foster Friends of JRI, which has a Facebook page, often provides additional support for children and foster parents. The JRI Intensive Foster Care program has foster homes available for LGBTQ+ children, and Costa says the Intensive Foster Care program is seeking foster parents to help serve the growing need for foster care. If you are interested in learning more about the program or if you are interested in learning more about becoming a foster parent, visit jri.org/fostercare

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale de 19h // Edition spéciale : journalisme et insertion

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021


Une spéciale journalisme ce soir. Douria Irris et Léo Lefrançois de la rédaction de RCP viennent nous parler de leurs études, de leurs expériences et de leur insertion professionnelle. Tous les deux sont diplômés d'écoles de journalisme durant le Covid-19. Dounia a passé 1 an en alternance au sein de la rédaction de TF1 comme JRI (journaliste reporter d'image). Léo, lui, vient de passer 2 ans au CELSA et a fait des stages à l'Humanité et à France Inter. Avec eux pendant 30 min, on parle de journalisme, d'information et de médias. On partage entre bénévoles notre perception du métier pour démystifie les voies d'accès.  [caption id="attachment_106177" align="aligncenter" width="928"] ©Léo Lefrançois[/caption] En deuxième partie d'émission, on continue cette soirée spéciale conseil de carrière. Françoise Belmont, informatrice jeunesse pour le Kiosque des Lilas - qui accompagne les étudiants dans leur recherche professionnelle - viendra nous partager ses conseils. Enfin Pierre Poulain nous rapporte une interview d'Emilien Chesnot, poète contemporain.  Bonne écoute. Informations pratiques Kiosque des Lilas - espace ressource mis à disposition par la mairie des Lilas (service municipal) Du lundi au jeudi / 167 rue de Paris 93260 Les Lilas /  lekiosque@leslilas.fr Infos sur le site web de la ville et page facebook POUR ALLER PLUS LOIN Entretien d'Emilien Chesnot pour Unidivers, 2016  Présentation : Nadia Noumri / Réalisation: Elsa Gavinet  / Bénévoles : Léo Lefrancois, Dounia Sirri  / Reportage : Pierre Poulain/ / Coordination : Hugo Leroi / Web : Hugo Leroi et Elsa Gavinet

Justice In Action
Ep. 12: Permanent Connections are Vital for a Child’s Success

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 33:20


We all need the people in our lives who know us and care about us, who celebrate our successes and comfort us in hard times. These are the people we call when we get a new job, lock our keys in the car or are facing a big decision. Permanent, supportive connections are especially important in childhood, when parents, coaches, mentors and teachers help children develop their identity and values, help them know who they are, develop their strengths and set goals in their life. For a long time, however, social services didn’t recognize the importance of permanency for the children in their care. In this podcast, Meredith Rapoza, division director of permanency and latency services for JRI, and Rachel Arruda, JRI division director of Family Networks and JRI’s service navigator, talk about how social service professionals have come to recognize the importance of permanency in the development and ultimate success of children. They discuss how JRI is ensuring that all the children in its care develop at least one permanent connection. We’re also joined by Jason Galli, who entered the social services system from birth, and found permanency for himself despite being moved from foster home to foster home and facility to facility. Now a husband, father and someone dedicated to helping children and youth as a partner with JRI, he offers his story of incredible resilience. For more information about permanency and how you can become a permanent connection to a child, please visit jri.org/lifelongconnections.

De vive(s) voix
De vive(s) voix - Semaine de la presse à l'école - S’informer pour comprendre le monde en 2021

De vive(s) voix

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 29:00


Pour cette 32ème édition de la Semaine de la Presse à l’École, l’accent sera mis sur les pièges de l’infodémie. Comment vérifier ses sources et comprendre le discours et le système des médias ? Lidwien Van Dixhoorn, cheffe du service Langue française   Gérard Colavecchio, responsable de la Stratégie numérique et du réseau JRI au sein du Service Communication de l’Agence pour l'Enseignement du Français à l'Étranger (AEFE) Tous les deux sont co-auteurs de Les médias en classe, kit pédagogique pour la classe de langue (Éditions PUG).  Quelques sites de références : Le site du CLEMI  Des articles sur TV5MONDE et sur RFI Savoirs demain   Et la chronique «La puce à l’oreille» de Lucie Bouteloup. Aujourd'hui : «Dégraisser le mammouth».  

Gang Of Witches - Le Podcast
#14 L’EXIL : SUR LE TERRAIN

Gang Of Witches - Le Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 68:19


GANG OF WITCHES - Le Podcast - Épisode #14 L’EXIL : SUR LE TERRAIN Invitées : Sabrine Kasbaoui, JRI, réalisatrice de films et de documentaires et membre du gang reçoit Juliana et Madeleine Thesiger, pour échanger sur la condition des migrant.e.s en France. Résumé de l'épisode : Gang Of Witches confie les manettes de son podcast à Sabrine Kasbaoui, JRI, réalisatrice de films et de documentaires. Membre de Gang Of Witches depuis 2018, elle présentait ces derniers mois sa chronique Carnet de Rébellions. Pour cette pleine lune, elle reçoit Juliana* et Madeleine Thesiger, pour échanger sur la condition des migrant.e.s en France. Juliana a fui l’Angola en 2017 pour sauver sa vie, elle raconte son parcours. Madeleine est travailleuse sociale au sein de l’association Utopia 56, qui vient en aide aux migrant.e.s en France. Elle témoigne de la réalité du terrain, pointe du doigt l'inaction et l’hypocrisie de l’État, ainsi que les violences policières régulières dont sont victimes les migrant.e.s. Nous tenons à remercier Rebecca Pandé pour son travail d'interprète qui nous a permis de recueillir le témoignage inestimable de Juliana. *Pour des raisons de sécurité, nous ne dévoilerons pas le nom de famille de Juliana. Crédits : Invitées : Juliana et Madeleine Thesiger Interprète : Rebecca Pandé Animation : Sabrine Kasbaoui Production : Gang Of Witches Conception : Gang Of Witches, Sabrine Kasbaoui Montage : L’Arrière Boutique Création sonore : Gang Of Witches Musique : Gang Of Witches Mixage : Thibault Delage, Adrien Beccaria, L’Arrière Boutique Photographie : Laura Rigaud Identité visuelle : Vivien Bertin #Sorcière #Artgang #Witches #Féminisme

La 1ère chaine académique  de podcasts sur l’entrepreneuriat
Saison 1 – Episode 53 – Jean-Raoul Ismaël – JRI Associés

La 1ère chaine académique de podcasts sur l’entrepreneuriat

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 13:11


Aujourd'hui à la tête de JRI associés, Jean Raoul Ismaël, nous raconte son parcours atypique au sein du secteur immobilier. Entrepreneur dans l'âme, après avoir débuté en conseil en gestion à la Banque de l'Union Immobilière (BUI), il démissionne au bout de 18 mois et achète son premier immeuble à 27 ans en tant que... L'article Saison 1 – Episode 53 – Jean-Raoul Ismaël – JRI Associés est apparu en premier sur La 1ère chaine académique de podcasts sur l'entrepreneuriat.

Au comptoir de l'info
Stéphane Guillemot

Au comptoir de l'info

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2020 26:59


PODCAST "Au comptoir de l’info", Stéphane Guillemot, journaliste reporter d’images (JRI). Lauréat en 2016 du prix Bayeux des correspondants de guerre.SAISON 2 EPISODE 2 : Le journaliste, spécialiste de la couverture de conflits armés (Haut-Karabakh, Irak, Syrie) livre ses méthodes de travail sur les terrains dangereux. Il explique pourquoi il a choisi la caméra plutôt que le micro et ce faisant, en quoi le rôle « d’invisible » lui convient parfaitement."J’ai voulu devenir caméraman parce que j’ai toujours voulu être une petite souris qui va ensuite surprendre par ce qu’elle a vu". Stéphane Guillemot revendique son choix d’être derrière la caméra, en tant que journaliste reporter d’images (JRI). Il estime ainsi être un "témoin professionnel" qui s’interdit de donner son avis, en donnant la priorité absolue à l’image et à la force qu’elle dégage. "Dans ce moment de panique, je laisse tourner la caméra"Au cours de ses 15 années de carrière, le grand reporter s’est rendu dans de nombreux pays en guerre. Récemment, il a réalisé avec Maryse Burgot un reportage à Stepanakert (Haut-Karabakh) qui a marqué les esprits. Ils sont en train d’interviewer un habitant, lorsqu’un obus s’abat à quelques centaines de mètres d’eux. "Dans ce moment de panique, je laisse tourner la caméra" dit-il, et ils partent se réfugier dans une cave où ils vont rester quatre heures. Ce reportage est pour Stéphane Guillemot le reflet fidèle de ce qu’il a vécu et surtout du quotidien dramatique des habitants de la capitale du Haut-Karabakh.Avec une famille qui tente de fuir DaechLe reportage dont le cameraman garde le souvenir le plus fort est celui qu’il a tourné aux portes de Mossoul en 2006 et qui, avec Arnaud Comte, leur a valu le prix Bayeux des correspondants de guerre. Les deux journalistes racontent la fuite éperdue d’une famille dont le père et un fils ont été grièvement blessés par une mine déposée par les djihadistes de Daech. Là encore, Stéphane Guillemot n’avait pas prévu ce qui allait se passer devant l’objectif de sa caméra et dont il se rappelle avec émotion car cette famille aurait pu être "vous ou moi". Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Justice In Action
Ep. 9: The Wounded Healer

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2020 30:32


Helping the healer when their work unearths old symptoms of trauma Adam Edwards cares about the caregivers. As Justice Resource Institute’s Training and Instructional Design Specialist, he supports JRI staff as they care for some of the over 10,000 children and adults who are clients of the more than 120 programs JRI operates in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. Edwards notes that about 85 percent of all people in helping professions — including health and human service workers, first responders, health care workers and educators — report experiencing symptoms of vicarious trauma. That means they are impacted by the work and often times also share some of the physical, mental and emotional symptoms experienced by the clients with whom they work. It’s a type of burnout that can occur when our physiological systems become overwhelmed. It might take the form of sleeplessness, depression, anger or melancholy in a helping professional’s career, the result of years of caring for clients and communities who have been impacted by trauma. But what about those helping professionals who not only hear about the trauma of other people but who themselves suffered sexual abuse, domestic violence or neglect, or who experienced the effects of homelessness or drug or alcohol addiction in their own lives or within their families? Those are the people who Edwards, himself a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, says have had a “first-person encounter with trauma and carry that experience into their work helping other people.” Edwards’s goal is to help create a space where they can recognize, prepare for and manage the associated physical, mental and emotional impact of their own trauma that might be unearthed while helping others.  There is a perceived risk for some of these staffers in stepping forward that they may experience stigma, personal and professional scrutiny, uncertainty and fear. Edwards describes what he does as helping those “wounded healers” when they need support and assistance to be able to continue their work with JRI’s clients, while taking care of themselves and building their own resilience.  Listen to the conversation with Adam Edwards about his work with these “wounded healers” in our Justice In Action podcast here. To learn more about JRI’s work or to explore employment opportunities, visit them at jri.org.

Justice In Action
Episode 8: Caroline Dunlap and the Harm Reduction Team

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 47:28


It’s easy to find Caroline Dunlap and the Harm Reduction team at JRI’s Program RISE. They’re the ones wearing backpacks while meeting people in downtown Framingham, dispensing care and concern, along with vital supplies, to the region’s active drug users.  "We are trying to fill in the gap” for services to people who are part of a “stigmatized population” who inject, smoke or snort opioids or other drugs and run the risk of dying from drug overdose, becoming homeless, or contracting HIV or Hepatitis C or infection from sharing used needles, Dunlap says. The team’s services range from giving out socks and winter clothing, teaching drug users how to use Narcan, also known as naloxone, to reverse the effects of an overdose, helping people sign up for the SNAP program (Food Stamps) or deciding to enter a detox or treatment program. “Our main goal is to provide compassionate care” — without pressure — to people who often live on the margins because they use drugs, Dunlap says.  Harm reduction originated in the 1980s in response to the AIDS epidemic. Many of AIDS’ early victims lived on the streets, injected drugs, were gay or transgender or were sex workers largely ignored or even scorned by others. Because government offices and policy usually did not provide for their needs (needle exchange programs were illegal) people found ways to care for one another. “We are all that we have and it’s up to us to protect each other,” she says. Needle exchange programs have sharply reduced the number of new AIDS cases: between 2000 and 2014, HIV infection rates fell 91 percent among Massachusetts intravenous drug users, Dunlap says. Dunlap went to college to study environmental science in order to become a park ranger, but she moved from Massachusetts to the San Francisco Bay Area and was drawn to harm reduction work, in part because of her own struggles with depression. Dunlap’s team of three or four meet 15 to 30 clients a week at their offices, but they also walk around downtown Framingham with backpacks and wearing shirts and jackets that read “Harm Reduction Staff” with the program’s phone numbers and talking to people on the street. They give out essentials to help the people they meet: hygiene supplies, kits for safer drug use, wound care kits.  Program RISE is also introducing a mobile van that will allow drug users to exchange syringes, get Narcan training or get tested for HIV and sexually transmitted infections. “Harm reduction is more than just needles,” Dunlap says.  The trauma associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, related unemployment and family strains are a factor in the rising overdose rates, she believes. Yet people have a hard time talking about it. “Drugs provide an out for people in traumatic circumstance,’ Dunlap says. “There’s so much stigma around drugs that people often are hesitant to ask for help…Anyone can suffer from addiction” but often people don’t recognize the cost of habitual drug use until it affects a child, husband, coworker, parent or friend.  “It’s hard to be empathetic until it’s your kid (but) you never know who around you is in trouble,” she says. “We are here to look out for each other. I’m definitely alive because someone looked out for me.”  You can find Program RISE on Instagram at metrowest_harmreduction, on Facebook at Program RISE or on the website at www.jri.org/rise.

Justice In Action
Ep. 7: William James College

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2020 55:12


Justice Resource Institute (JRI) has teamed up with William James College, New England’s largest school of psychology, to create an innovative degree completion program for JRI staff. Marc Abelard, director of the Behavioral Health Service Corps, director of the Bachelor in Psychology & Human Services Completion Program and co-director of the Child & Adolescent Mental Health Initiative at William James; Ed Powell, JRI vice president of community engagement and executive director at STRIVE Boston, and Tonya Morris, a survivor mentor and training specialist with JRI’s  My Life My Choice and a recent graduate of William James College, talk about the program and the unusual level of support it provides for students. Morris, who works with young victims of abuse, sex trafficking and other traumas, was one of four JRI employees to earn a bachelor’s degree in May as part of the program’s first graduating class. A single mother who works full time, Morris said she was thrilled at the opportunity to complete her education, but uneasy about entering the classroom again after decades away. Support from JRI and William James College was key to achieving her goal and becoming effective in working with her clients. “If I didn’t get what I got from William James College I would have not been able to handle the cases I’m handling now,” she said. She plans to tackle her master’s degree next. Money and time are the main barriers for many when returning to school. Abelard says the program addresses both. Generous reimbursements from JRI and William James scholarships mean JRI employees can earn a degree at no cost to them. In addition, JRI provides employees the flexibility they need to fit classes and studying into lives filled with work and family obligations, while William James College offers the hands-on academic support to ensure they succeed. Powell said the program encourages entry level staff members to see their work at JRI as a career, not just a job. Because entry level workers are often people of color, the program also helps address issues of racial equity and structural racism, while ensuring that the JRI staff reflect the diversity of the clients they serve. Training this workforce has become more critical as baby boomers retire and leave Massachusetts with a severe shortage of social service professionals. The William James College program enables JRI to train and retain employees of the future.  In fact, through the Boston STRIVE program that Powell directs, someone without a high school degree could earn a GED, get hired by JRI, use a tuition reimbursement program to earn an associate’s degree at a community college and then go onto William James for a bachelor’s and master’s. “By giving folks the education they need, it gives us a chance to elevate people who otherwise might not have had this opportunity,” he said.

Justice In Action
Ep 6: Equine Therapy with Meredith Norton

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2020 30:45


For a child who has suffered long-term trauma from abuse or neglect, the world doesn’t feel like a safe place. And children who suffer from such complex trauma often face challenges when it comes to forming relationships with others, acting out with anger or suffering silently from depression. Enter Meredith Norton, a licensed social worker in Massachusetts, an equine-assisted therapist and riding instructor and lifelong horse lover. She is the director of JRI’s Trot On, an equine-assisted therapy program at Furnace Brook Farm in Marshfield, MA. Trot On matches young clients suffering from complex trauma with well-trained, tranquil horses to form relationships that teach those clients emotional regulation and self-control, empathy and communication skills. “The human/animal bond is so important because it naturally supports (emotional) regulation and naturally supports helping calm stress levels,” Norton says. “Animals naturally reduce (people’s) stress hormones when they are interacting with humans. Children suffering from complex trauma sometimes benefit from non-traditional forms of therapy — like equine-assisted therapy. “Horses are living biofeedback machines,” Norton says. “If you’re calm and relaxed, your horse is going to reflect that in their energy….Horses are herd animals seeking that connection” with people. Trot On is not only about riding. Clients learn to care for their horses, communicate with them verbally and non-verbally, and learn to read their horse’s cues and respond appropriately. Those skills can help heal a wounded child. “Think of a young child learning development tasks — learning to walk, learning to read, learning to feed themselves — and all of the brain’s energy is going into forming those developmental skills,” Norton says. “But if they’re impacted by chronic stress, the brain is going to focus on safety responses, so the brain is going to develop differently in response to all that.” Trauma can affect a child’s ability to form and maintain relationships, succeed in school, manage her emotional state and behavior toward others. Treating that trauma is essential to healing that child. Riding is about movement and synchronization between horse and rider. That movement can help a child better understand the cues from her own body and her horse. “Horses are living biofeedback machines,” Norton says. “If you’re calm and relaxed, your horse is going to reflect that in their energy….Being able to form a relationship with a horse who is non-judgmental, as all animals are, can be a lovely precursor to (forming) human relationships,” Norton says.   Learn about Trot On, JRI’s equine-assisted therapy program, by visiting them at https://jri.org /trot-on

Justice In Action
Ep 5: Cultural Health and Black Mental Health

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2020 52:12


The COVID-19 pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests sweeping across the United States have especially affected black and Hispanic populations, adding emotional trauma to individuals and families. Dr. Kerry-Ann Williams, a psychiatrist who is the medical director for the children’s residential programs operated by Justice Resource Institute (JRI), was interviewed on “Justice In Action,” a podcast series by JRI. She often works with children who have been traumatized by physical, sexual and emotional abuse. She says that clients of color can be resistant to help because they are mistrustful of medical professionals due to a long history of unequal treatment. Black Americans in the last century sometimes were the victims of medical experiments and denied treatment for illness as part of medical studies. Williams also hosts a Sunday morning radio show, “Black Mental Health Matter,” on 98.1, The Urban Heat, in Boston. She takes calls and interviews experts to provide information and counsel for people needing help. Topics include depression, anxiety, attention deficit disorder and other issues of special significance to black people and people of color. Williams, who was born in Jamaica and moved to Texas as a college freshman at Baylor University, discusses systemic racism, cultural literacy and making the medical profession more responsive to the needs of people of color. To learn more about JRI, one of New England’s largest social service agencies serving children and their families in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, visit them at JRI.org

Justice In Action
Ep. 4: Understanding the Spectrum of Sexualized Behavior in Clinical Work

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2020 40:38


Most would agree that we live in a sex-saturated culture. So why do we find it so hard to talk about sex? Deborah Jackson, Clinical Training and Developmental Specialist for JRI, trains clinicians and staff to handle sexualized behavior that young clients are exhibiting (or thinking about exhibiting). “We come with our own personal beliefs. We come with our own morals. We come with our own personal histories,” she says. Jackson was a featured guest on Justice in Action, a podcast series hosted by JRI, (Justice Resource Institute) the leading social service agency in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. She says that how effective clinicians or staff are often depends on their own attitudes about sex and about “sexualized behaviors that are normative for every stage of development.”  For example, 4-year-olds who feel overwhelmed or overtired sometimes will stroke their genitals to calm themselves. “For a little kid it doesn’t feel any different than stroking their arm or their hair (or carrying around) a blanket or teddy bear,” she says. “(But) we don’t want them doing it in the mall when they’re tired and mommy’s made them shop too much.”  For older children in their early to mid-teens, sending nude or partially nude photos is normative behavior — that is, something that a “great number of people are doing.” Jackson recommends that adults try not to overreact to such behavior, but seek to make it comfortable for children to talk about, if only to listen and then remind them, “These are not our values. There are some safety risks” that come from sending out nude photos that could end up on the internet or in the hands of adults looking to exploit children for sex.  “The conversation needs to be more than ‘Just stop it,’” she says. Adults’ discomfort means most children never get to have “frank, honest conversations with their parents about sex.”  And sex education in most public schools is inadequate, Jackson says, noting that only 24 states require that the schools teach even the basics.  So for many children, what they learn about sex comes from their friends — or the internet. The average age of a child’s first exposure to explicit online photos or videos is 11, Jackson says. Jackson will conduct training about handling sexualized behavior on April 10, and we invite you to visit the JRI website at www.jri.org/events to learn more.

Justice In Action
Ep. 3: Protect children from sexual exploitation online

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2020 37:55


At least one in five teen-agers will get a sexually explicit photo this year — most of those images sent to them via texts, emails and smart phone applications. Many of those images will come from people they know, but some will be from people they meet online through social networking applications that make it easy for users to share photos and videos. And while that sexualized content might be normal behavior among teens curious about their emerging sexuality, increasing numbers of social media applications and online gaming features can expose children to sexual predators who used the internet to identify potential victims, form online relationships within them and sometimes extort sexual favors from them. That was the message from JRI professionals who work with children who have been victims of online sexual exploitation or who are at risk of becoming victims. Meredith Rapoza, Division Director of Permanency and Latency Services at JRI; Katryn Haley-Little, Clinical Director at My Life My Choice, a program of JRI helping children who have been exploited or who are deemed to be at risk; and Michelle Loranger, Executive Director of the Children's Advocacy Center of Bristol County, were guests on JRI’s weekly podcast series, “Justice in Action: Making a Difference as Leaders in Social Justice.” And while the victims of sexual exploitation are “disproportionately female…(the problem) crosses all genders and identities,” says Loranger. The explosion of online applications make it imperative that parents and legal guardians monitor their children’s use of the internet, engage them in honest discussions about both the positive impact of the internet and social media that allow people to find information almost immediately and connect with others online and the potential harm that affects thousands of children and teens each year. More than half of U.S. children own a smart phone by age 11, and about 84 percent of teens own one. That gives them access to a world of useful information. It also gives them access to sites that can pose danger. “More than half of those (children) exploited sexually met their assailant online,” says Haley-Little. That means parents must stay alert and model appropriate use of online tools and games. “If you’re going to allow your child to have access to some kind of electronic device, you’ve got to start thinking about ‘Is this device safe,’” says Rapoza. Advice to parents and guardians? Keep the communications line open, look for changes in children’s behavior and encourage children to speak up if they are asked to share contact information, photographs or videos with strangers.

Justice In Action
Ep 2: COVID-19 outbreak, racial protests are part of ‘same frame’ for JRI

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2020 48:52


Justice Resource Institute President and CEO Andy Pond discusses his organization’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the Black Lives Matter protests sweeping the nation as part of JRI’s podcast series “Justice In Action.” The novel coronavirus outbreak and the nationwide protests over the killing of black Americans by police are part of the “same frame” — that is, problems related to systemic racism that leaves people of color more likely to get sick and to die from the COVID-19 epidemic that has already killed more than 117,000 Americans as of this writing, and more likely to be victims of police brutality. “I have an obligation to talk about it and it’s an opportunity to show what side we’re on,” says Pond. People of color are three times more likely to die from COVID-19, he says, and it’s not because they are biologically more vulnerable. “It’s a difference in history and the systematic inequities that exist in our health care system,” along with other cultural and economic factors, Pond says. “While we have done, I think, a lot, we have not done enough,” he says. “The answer can never be we’ve done enough.” Throughout the course of the COVID-19 outbreak, JRI staff have gone above and beyond for their clients, many of whom have suffered trauma and need the help and support of JRI’s more than 120 programs serving children and families in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. “They’re here because they care about the kids and adults they are working with,” Pond says. “There is a lesson in persistence and perseverance in the face of adversity.” Even though the challenges are enormous, Pond is hopeful about the future and about the lasting effects of the pandemic and the broadly based protests sweeping the country to demand an end to systemic racism. “Real change doesn’t happen overnight, but it does happen,” he says.

Color Country Politics
Color Country Politics Podcast – Episode 46: Restitution, Not Retribution

Color Country Politics

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2020 53:43


Time for an update from our county attorney! Chad Dotson and Chief Deputy Criminal Attorney Shane Klenk join us to talk about the Brian Head fire case, mental health courts, JRI, and so much more. Music by Amoebacrew licensed under Creative Commons: https://soundcloud.com/free-cc-music/background-indie-rock Original image for the logo by The Greater Southwestern Exploration Company licensed under Creative Commons: https://www.flickr.com/photos/gsec/40582095822/in/photostream/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ColorCountryPol Facebook: https://fb.me/ColorCountryPolitics YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjwFph4yuEORlHk5VCR-vEQ

Justice In Action
Ep. 1: Our mission: ’Reduce the quotient of misery’

Justice In Action

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2020 33:29


JRI is one of the largest social justice/human services agencies in New England, serving between 20,000 and 25,000 people each year in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. Nearly 70 percent of those served by JRI (Justice Resource Institute) are children and families in need of shelter, full-time residential services, mental health care, help for HIV/AIDS, support for transgendered youth, and a myriad of other challenges. Here is some of what JRI’s chief executive officer, Andy Pond, and chief operating officer, Mia DeMarco, said about trying to make a difference in the lives of some of our most vulnerable and traumatized citizens. You can listen to the entire podcast here. The beginning The Medicare and Medicaid Act of 1965 encouraged states to begin “deinstitutionalizing” mentally ill and developmentally delayed citizens from big state hospitals where tens of thousands of patients were kept locked away and, in many cases, neglected and mistreated. “‘Warehouse’ would be a kind word [for the conditions inside those state hospitals]. Treatment wasn’t part of the process,” said Pond. Enter JRI and many other non-profit agencies to pick up the slack. They ensured that there were treatment options for people being released to receive care in less restrictive, community-based settings. The mission  CEO Pond describes the expanding JRI mission as attempting to reduce the “quotient of human misery….everyone has a right to the pursuit of happiness.” That means helping foster families care for traumatized children who have often known abuse and neglect, moms and kids who have been forced from their homes, youths referred by the juvenile justice system and many others. “If you can think of a social issue or need, we probably provide a service for that family or individual,” says DeMarco. She was drawn to the field when she was assaulted by a teen-aged girl while working as a direct care counselor when she was in nursing school. “I realized the pain so many people carry around that we just can’t see,” she said. Pond added, “The history and mission have pretty much stayed the same since the beginning. What’s expanded is the scope….We don’t have a good elevator pitch because you can’t stay on an elevator that long.” “Incredibly caring and compassionate” People who work for human service agencies like JRI are people who care about others and about making a difference in the lives of their neighbors. DeMarco said, “People who do this work are just incredibly caring and compassionate.” For the past decade, JRI has been named one of the best employers in Massachusetts (and recently in Connecticut) because of the financial support it provides for employees’ education and opportunities for professional advancement. But it’s more than just financial support and a career boost. It is the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of other people, the chance for personal growth alongside others who share a passion for the JRI mission. JRI invites people interested in exploring a career in social justice to visit the JRI website, https://jri.org.

Dans la Poche
MoJo : Le Journalisme Mobile - Dans La Poche de Guillaume Kuster

Dans la Poche

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2020 40:16


Avez-vous déjà entendu parler du MoJo, le journalisme mobile ? Depuis l'arrivée des smartphones sur le marché à la fin des années 2000, le métier de journaliste reporter d'images (JRI) subit une transformation. Les médias qui font des sujets d'actu, tels que BFMTV ou iTélé, s'emparent de ces nouveaux outils pour filmer et rapporter des images afin de relater les infos les plus chaudes. Plus petit et plus connecté que des caméras de reportages, ce sont des appareils qui ont trouvé leur place dans les rédactions de ces chaînes TV. Dans cet épisode, je discute avec Guillaume Kuster, ancien journaliste, aujourd'hui formateur spécialisé dans le journalisme mobile. Nous allons voir ensemble comment est utilisé le smartphone pour créer des vidéos, les applis indispensables et les accessoires qui le transforment en véritable caméra. Les liens utiles de ce podcast : - Filmic Pro iOS : https://apps.apple.com/us/app/filmic-pro-video-camera/id436577167 - Filmic Pro Android : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.filmic.filmicpro&hl=fr - LumaFusion iOS : https://apps.apple.com/us/app/lumafusion/id1062022008 - Kinemaster Android : https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nexstreaming.app.kinemasterfree&hl=fr - Double Take iOS : https://apps.apple.com/us/app/doubletake-by-filmic-pro/id1478041592 Marc Settle sur twitter : https://twitter.com/marcsettle videonline.info Formation : www.tarkka-media.fi www.samsa.fr www.milledix.fr Si le podcast vous a plu, n'hésitez pas à le dire en commentaire et à vous abonner pour écouter les prochains épisodes. N'hésitez pas à partager ce podcast sur vos réseaux sociaux pour le faire découvrir à vos amis. ----- Abonne-toi (Youtube) : http://bit.ly/2HGWhFS Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/florian_beaufreton Twitter : https://twitter.com/flobeaufreton

Deux Soeurs Un Agenda Podcast
#21 Mon job de rêve chez Disney Channel (partie 2)

Deux Soeurs Un Agenda Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2019 34:37


Iris partage son expérience en tant que journaliste pour Disney Channel pendant 3 ans ! Dans cet épisode, elle partage des anecdotes et histoires drôles vécues avec les célébrités interviewées par elle!

Appetite for Discussion
Jeff Ryan of JRi Shocks

Appetite for Discussion

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2019 62:43


    Who is Jeff Ryan? Learn how Jeff Ryan a college drop out went on to work for Penske and created one of the most popular shocks in auto sports that's still sought after today! His shocks have help win 24 Championships in Formula One, Open Wheel and NASCAR along with an additional 6 Indianapolis 500 victories. A horrific leg injury from a motorcycle accident inspired Jeff to use his experience with shocks and motor sports to create biomedical technology applications that are is being used in the medical field, the military, commercial applications, Hollywood films and consulting with NASA and SpaceX. www.app4discussion.wixsite.com/podcast Supporters: www.hunkajunkhauling.com http://squareup.com/store/statesvegas... kasey.tate@ncfbins.com https://mccrarylaw.com/

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale - La crise des médias & LGBT Talents // 22.01

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019


Au cours des derniers mois de mobilisation du mouvement des Gilets Jaunes, la presse, son indépendance, ses pratiques et son objectivité  sont remises en cause. Les journalistes, qu'ils soient JRI ou animateurs sur des grandes chaînes d'informations sont montrés du doigt, discrédités et parfois même physiquement agressés. Comment expliquer cette crise de confiance dans les médias ? Comment regagner la confiance des citoyens et citoyennes ? Autant de questions auxquelles tentent de répondre nos invités. Maxime Vaudano, journaliste au Monde et co-auteur d'un article qui a particulièrement attiré notre attention: "Rémunération, privilèges, choix de sujets… Les idées reçues sur les journalistes" ainsi que Jean-Marie Charon, sociologue spécialiste des médias et auteur d'un ouvrage intitulé "Rédactions en inventions" nous livrent leurs analyses de cette crise des médias. Et puis, on s'intéresse à l'événement LGBT Talents organisé par une association LGBT appelée ESCAPE, qui a pour but de réunir les personnes qui s'intéressent à ce sujet - qu'elles soient LGBT ou non, étudiant.e.s, managers, RH, politiques, activistes... le tout dans le cadre d'une journée complète où alternent conférences, ateliers thématiques, networking et sessions de recrutement. Alexandre Toureh, responsable école et speakers nous en dit plus en deuxième partie d'émission.  Présentation, Coordination et Web: Bettina Lioret / Co-interview: Sylvain Pinot / Chronique: Olivia Lioret/ Reportage: RadioParleur / Réalisation : Simon Marry

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale – La crise des médias et LGBT Talents // 22.01

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019


Au cours des derniers mois de mobilisation du mouvement des Gilets Jaunes, la presse, son indépendance, ses pratiques et son objectivité  sont remises en cause. Les journalistes, qu'ils soient JRI ou animateurs sur des grandes chaînes d'informations sont montrés du doigt, discrédités et parfois même physiquement agressés. Comment expliquer cette crise de confiance dans les médias ? Comment regagner la confiance des citoyens et citoyennes ? Autant de questions auxquelles tentent de répondre nos invités. Maxime Vaudano, journaliste au Monde et co-auteur d'un article qui a particulièrement attiré notre attention: "Rémunération, privilèges, choix de sujets… Les idées reçues sur les journalistes" ainsi que Jean-Marie Charon, sociologue spécialiste des médias et auteur d'un ouvrage intitulé "Rédactions en inventions" nous livrent leurs analyses de cette crise des médias. Et puis, on s'intéresse à l'événement LGBT Talents organisé par une association LGBT appelée ESCAPE, qui a pour but de réunir les personnes qui s'intéressent à ce sujet - qu'elles soient LGBT ou non, étudiant.e.s, managers, RH, politiques, activistes... le tout dans le cadre d'une journée complète où alternent conférences, ateliers thématiques, networking et sessions de recrutement. Alexandre Toureh, responsable école et speakers nous en dit plus en deuxième partie d'émission.  Présentation, Coordination et Web: Bettina Lioret / Co-interview: Sylvain Pinot / Chronique: Olivia Lioret/ Reportage: RadioParleur / Réalisation : Simon Marry

The Lubetkin Media Companies
JSA2017-22: Rabbi David Levin, Jewish Relationships Initiative

The Lubetkin Media Companies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 24:04


Rabbi David Levin visits this episode of the Jewish Sacred Aging Podcast to discuss his new Jewish Relationships Initiative. The Jewish Relationships Initiative is a nonprofit organization formed to provide outreach focusing on the unaffiliated Jewish population of Greater Philadelphia.  JRI seeks to create relationships through meaningful connection to Jewish wisdom, ritual and community.  We do this through lifecycle events, study and learning, conversation and connection to others. [spp-player] About Rabbi Levin [caption id="" align="alignleft" width="154"] Rabbi David Levin[/caption] David Levin is a Reform rabbi ordained from the Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion (NY).  David serves the community of Greater Philadelphia. He also devotes his time to special projects including Jewish Sacred Aging, teaching and free speech issues on the college campus. David worked with the Union for Reform Judaism in the Congregational Network as a Rabbinical Director serving the East Coast congregations.  He also had the honor of working at Main Line Reform Temple in Wynnewood, PA. David Levin is a Fellow with Rabbis Without Borders, an interdenominational rabbinic group affiliated with CLAL. David Levin proudly claims to be one of Rabbi Louis Frishman's (z”l) “Temple Kids”, from Temple Beth El in Spring Valley, NY.  David attended the University of Chicago earning an AB in Economics. He went on to the New York University Graduate School of Business where he earned an MBA in Finance.  Before becoming a rabbi, David enjoyed a career centered in banking and real estate finance, and he also worked in the family garment business.

Therapy Chat
57: How Children Are Like Horses

Therapy Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2016 14:01


How Children Are Like Horses (And Why You Should Care)   If you have been listening to Therapy Chat podcast lately, you know that I have been talking about using equine assisted psychotherapy and education methods to get in touch with our emotional experiences. In Episode 55 I described my own experience of making a deep soul connection in a barn when I spent a Saturday morning at an equine learning workshop with four other women and two horses. That changed me and I am still feeling it, weeks later. I can’t wait to do more – and I will in a couple weeks when I trek to the Hudson Valley for a beautiful Equine Retreat for Therapists and Healers offered by my friends and colleagues Rebecca Wong and Marisa Goudy.   Then in Episode 56 I interviewed Charlotte Hiler Easley, an LCSW and Equine Specialist in Lexington, Kentucky who developed a model called Equine Assisted Survivors of Trauma Therapy that is being used with survivors of sexual assault to experientially teach safety in our bodies, to see what it feels like to set and hold boundaries, and to take care of ourselves in relationship – as well as allowing ourselves to be vulnerable and risk trusting another who may hurt us. This experiential work with survivors of trauma sounds very powerful to me, as someone who has worked for years with trauma survivors; and as someone who has recently had a life-changing experience with horses.   In hearing about Charlotte’s work and after my own experience I realized there are some similarities between children and horses which are very relevant to the therapy work I do with my clients. It might seem like a strange connection, but stay with me. I’m going to tell you about three ways that children are like horses and why you should care.   As I explained in episode 55 and the blog post that went with it – this information comes from the EAGALA website - equine-assisted psychotherapy and learning works for these reasons:   “Because horses are prey animals, they rely on non-verbal cues to stay alive. Their lives depend on accurately reading these cues.” Horses learn from their interactions with us whether or not we are safe, which lets them know if they are safe. Children do the same thing. They read our body language more than our words.   “Like humans, horses are social creatures who live in herds.”We humans are wired for connection, as Brené Brown frequently says. It goes back to attachment. Children need protection and care from the adults they depend on for survival. When a baby is born that child is completely helpless and dependent upon their caregivers for protection. Safety to a newborn baby means being given food, sheltered from the elements and being held and soothed. Physical safety is being protected from harm; emotional safety is “will you be there when I need you? Do you care about what I need?”   “Horses know when what we are saying and doing don't match what we are feeling and sensing, even though we might not know. They reflect back to us what we are feeling and sensing, or the incongruence between our feelings, sensations, words and actions, even (especially) when it's outside of our conscious awareness." Children also notice incongruence between our words and our non-verbal cues. Children know when a parent says they are not mad but they really are. They know when a parent is crying, but says nothing is wrong, that it isn’t true. Why do they pay attention to this? It’s part of how they make sure they are safe. If their primary caregiver isn’t okay, then they aren’t okay, because who will take care of them if something happens to the primary caregiver?   Okay, so I’ve made my case for children being like horses in three ways, but why should you care? Well, you should care if you are a parent because it’s important to understand what your children need in order to thrive. (Click here to listen to Episode 21 on raising well-adjusted children). And you should care even if you aren’t a parent because you were once a child! Yeah, but that was in the past, right? Not so fast! Attachment affects us throughout the lifespan. It shows up in our peer relationships, intimate partner relationships, in our interactions with our coworkers, supervisors and supervisees and it affects how we feel about ourselves in general.   The attachment that develops between a child and their primary caregiver begins immediately at birth. It continues to develop, with the most intense period of attachment development happening between birth and age 3. As I mentioned, children depend upon the attachment with their primary caregivers for survival.   However, attachment repair can happen throughout the lifespan, so even if there was a disruption to secure attachment between the child and the primary caregiver, in most cases it is not too late to change this. In the worst cases of child neglect, in which children are deprived of touch and verbal interaction with their primary caregivers, brain development can be severely impacted. Studies have found a connection between severe child neglect and reduced brain size and changes to structures of the brain using brain scans for side-by-side comparison. You can learn more about this at Dr. Bruce Perry’s Child Trauma Academy, which is found at www.childtrauma.org.   In Episode 46 of Therapy Chat I talked with Julie Hanks about how assertiveness is influenced by attachment. In future episodes you’re going to hear a lot more about attachment and trauma. Our next episode will kick off the series on attachment and trauma with an interview with Amy Sugeno, LCSW. Amy is in private practice in Texas, where she specializes in helping people who have experienced childhood trauma, including adoption. Later in the series you’ll hear from Stuart Fensterheim, LCSW; Rebecca Wong, LCSW-R; Brittainy Wagner, LPC; Katie K. May, NCC; David Emerson of the Trauma Center at JRI; David Shannahoff-Khalsa of the UCSD Center for Integrative Medicine; Robert Cox, PLPC and many others. I hope you’ll enjoy this series on a subject which I personally find fascinating. The more I learn, the more I realize the way we show up in our lives is all about attachment.   I can’t wait to share these episodes with you over the coming months. Thank you for listening to Therapy Chat today! I hope you have heard something useful. I’d love to hear your feedback! What do you like, what do you not like? Is there a topic you would like to hear discussed on Therapy Chat? Get in touch with me! Visit http://therapychatpodcast.com and leave a message for me using the green button you’ll see there. And please visit iTunes to leave a rating and review and subscribe to receive all the latest episodes of Therapy Chat! You can find all episodes on the website, and Therapy Chat is also on iHeartRadio, Google Play, Stitcher and YouTube.

Grand Angle - RTS Un
Grand Angle - 01.10.2016

Grand Angle - RTS Un

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2016 11:31


Geopolitis change de look et de formule avec l’arrivée de Marcel Mione comme présentateur et producteur de l’émission. Notre caméra a filmé les coulisses du premier enregistrement et Sébastien Rey a reçu le principal intéressé en entretient. Une journée avec Cecilia Mendoza ,journaliste de la rédaction de Genève-Région. Une jeune femme qui bouge et qui nous explique son métier de JRI avec passion.