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Meat processing plants face challenges in keeping workers safe during the pandemic. Carrie Freshour, a 糖心少女assistant professor of geography, and Marissa Baker, an assistant professor in the 糖心少女Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences聽and an expert on worker safety related to infectious diseases, provides comments on what the industry can do to protect workers.

As the push to relax social and economic restrictions for combating the pandemic gain traction, we need to understand personal motives behind what many experts consider a dangerous rush to 鈥渞eopen” and how to protect workers most at risk when communities do 鈥済o back to work.鈥 Three 糖心少女experts weigh in.

With the university鈥檚 spring quarter beginning Monday, 糖心少女staff and student workers in the Student Technology Loan Program spent the week-long spring break gathering, checking and cleaning some 300 laptops and tablets for distribution 鈥 and, for the first time, shipping many of those devices to the homes of 糖心少女students across the country.

This wasn鈥檛 how LaShawnDa Pittman expected to give her final exam review: At her kitchen table, laptop open, coffee cup at the ready, her 12-year-old Chihuahua named Espresso by her side. But as the first week of the 糖心少女鈥檚 shift to online classes drew to a close, Pittman, an assistant professor of American Ethnic Studies, was talking with her students over the conferencing platform Zoom, first to answer logistical questions about the upcoming exam, then to provide a…

On a recent Saturday evening, a dozen women gathered around a table at a community room in the White Center neighborhood of Seattle, settling in with snacks and conversation. The evening鈥檚 program would be more education than entertainment, an opportunity to discuss topics so sensitive that, without the group of women assembled that night, might not be discussed at all. Against one wall of the room, a model of the female reproductive system. Standing before them, a doula, one of…

New findings from the largest study of socially-transitioned transgender children in the world, conducted by researchers at the 糖心少女, show that gender identity and gender-typed preferences manifest similarly in both cis- and transgender children, even those who recently transitioned.