Fellows

Brian Gerardo Awarded $60k Grant for Work with City Youth

Brian Gerardo, Class One Fellow and Carey Business School Alum, earned this write-up for his work as Executive Director of the Baltimore Dance Crews Project. Brian received the grant as part of the Open Society Institute 2015 Community Fellowship program. Read the full story here: 

http://carey.jhu.edu/about/news/carey-graduate-awarded-60k-grant-for-work-with-city-youth

The 'Cure' to Ending Violence in Baltimore

"In essence, violence has been fundamentally misdiagnosed and therefore the response across all sectors has not been sufficient to heal communities." -- Matan Zeimer

In this featured post on the The Aspen Institute Idea Blog, Matan examines how health-informed approaches are yielding some of the most effective strategies in curbing violence. 

http://www.aspeninstitute.org/about/blog/cure-ending-violence-baltimore

Meryam Bouadjemi and Brian Gerardo Named OSI-Baltimore 2015 Community Fellows

Congratulations to two Baltimore Corps pioneers: Brian Gerardo (Class One Fellow) and Meryam Boudjemi (our Brand Manager) were both named 2015 Open Society Institute-BaltimoreCommunity Fellows. Read about the entire 2015 class here: announcement. Meryam and Brian are in good company, joining Class One Baltimore Corps Fellow and 2011 Baltimore Community Fellow, Jill Pardini.

For more on their specific projects, you can visit the OSI profile pages for both Meryam and Brian.

Fellow Post: Legal Observers Help Monitor Police

"Legal observers are not going to curtail police brutality. They can, however, weaken the smoke-screening that deters revolutionary progress against it."

Sarah MacFadden, Class Two Fellow, explains why, in the age of smartphone videos, legal observers remain vital players in holding law enforcement accountable. Read the full piece on the Huffington Post: 

Legal Observers Help Monitor Police