Item

Incarcerated people are humans, with human rights

Title (Dublin Core)

Incarcerated people are humans, with human rights

Description (Dublin Core)

This series of Tweets illustrates the number of Covid cases inside of prisons that go largely unnoticed by the general public. It also points to a larger problem of seeing "inmates", those who should be referred to in people first language as incarcerated persons, as fully human.

Date (Dublin Core)

September 29, 2020

Creator (Dublin Core)

Adnan Khan

Contributor (Dublin Core)

Chris Twing

Event Identifier (Dublin Core)

HSE

Partner (Dublin Core)

Arizona State University

Type (Dublin Core)

images

Link (Bibliographic Ontology)

http://web.archive.org/web/20201001190059/https://twitter.com/akhan1437/status/1310982700539326464

Publisher (Dublin Core)

Twitter

Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)

English Community & Community Organizations
English Social Issues

Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)

unnoticed
prison
inmate
Twitter
human
testing

Contributor's Tags (a true folksonomy) (Friend of a Friend)

incarceration
prison
Twitter
inmate
language
outrage
cases
testing

Collection (Dublin Core)

Incarceration

Linked Data (Dublin Core)

Date Submitted (Dublin Core)

09/30/2020

Date Modified (Dublin Core)

10/01/2020

Date Created (Dublin Core)

09/29/2020

Item sets

Linked resources

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Relation
Title Alternate label Class
Navajo County suspends jail visitations Linked Data Interactive Resource

This item was submitted on September 30, 2020 by Chris Twing using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: http://covid-19archive.org/s/archive

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