Daily Archives: May 11, 2017

Old And Young Populations Need Automation, But for Different Reasons – Motherboard

Posted: May 11, 2017 at 12:46 pm

Workplace automation is a source of uncertainty in contemporary politics and economics, looming large in the future while we shakily chart a path towards it in the present. It's safe to say this uncertainty comes with more than a pinch of anxiety: Over the 38 percent of US jobs that will be "lost to automation" as a PwC report claimed, or the driving jobs that will be "all but obsolete" within decades.

That's why it's surprisingin a very welcome wayto hear Michael Chui, partner at the McKinsey Global Institute, argue that automation is not a threat, but rather a necessity in order for countries around the world to meet their growth and development goals.

Over the past two years, Chui and his co-authors have been collecting data from government agencies across the world about workforce demographics, wage rates, and technological adoption, as well as surveying a wealth of academic literature and other McKinsey studies. The resulting analysis was compiled into a report titled A Future That Works, published earlier this year, and has been expanded into a series of articles across various platforms, including a recent feature in Harvard Business Review on the countries most and least likely to be affected by automation.

One of the findings of the research is that regardless of whether countries have fat or lean economies and youthful or aging populations, automation is far more likely to bring net benefits than losses, albeit for different reasons.

"As countries age they have a lower ratio of workers to people who need to be supported, and as a result we simply need more productivity per hour worked. For countries lower on the GDP per capita scale with aging populations this still holds," Chui said in a phone call.

Initially, Chui and his co-authors had believed that for countries with younger populations such as India or Mexico, widespread automation would occur just as large numbers of humans were joining the workforce, leading to competition and suboptimal outcomesbut in fact, they concluded this was not the case.

"What we actually found was, those countries are lower on the GDP per capita scale, so their aspirations for economic growth are still high," said Chui. "So even for young countries, with all those young people working plus the robots, you still need more productivity for them to reach their growth aspirations."

An upshot of this is that while much of the discussion around automation has focused on the idea of an ensuing labor surplus, in reality a labor deficit is more likely, which should be reflected by our policy responses in the present.

"Rather than aiming to manage for mass unemployment, we really need to make decisions that allow for mass redeployment of labor, so that all the people can be working with all the machines to give us economic growth," Chui said.

He also stresses that we can see this kind of redeployment historically in the transition from agriculture to industry, where the technology that displaced jobs also created new ones, and investment from both the public and private sectors helped workers retrain.

"People think this is unprecedented, but it's precedented!" Chui said. "Having a double digit percentage of jobs in the economy change in a few decades did happen, and we don't have 35 percent unemployment from the early 1900s 'til now."

Even if, from a personal standpoint, aspects of our working lives seem to be changing fast, Chui also points out that macro level societal changes move far more slowly.

"It will take quite a while for all this to happen, so there will be time to adapt as we adopt," he said.

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Old And Young Populations Need Automation, But for Different Reasons - Motherboard

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French President-elect Emmanuel Macron in Paris, on May 10, 2017. (Christophe Ena / AP) – CTV News

Posted: at 12:45 pm

PARIS -- The disintegration of France's political landscape following the presidential election victory of Emmanuel Macron is picking up speed by the day.

Marion Marechal-Le Pen, the niece of defeated far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, is quitting politics, depriving their National Front party of one its few real stars. Marine Le Pen tweeted Wednesday her regret at the decision but added that, "as a mother, I understand it."

Marechal-Le Pen, 27, cited "personal and political reasons" in announcing that she won't seek re-election in June. She held one of the National Front's two seats in the National Assembly.

On the other extreme on the far left, the Communist Party and the party of defeated presidential candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon are messily divorcing. They campaigned together for Melenchon's presidential run that saw him surge late in the campaign and get nearly 20 per cent of the first-round vote, narrowly missing a runoff against either Macron or Le Pen. But the parties appear increasingly likely to separately field candidates who will compete against each other in the June legislative elections.

From holding power through outgoing President Francois Hollande and his majority in the outgoing parliament, the Socialist Party is tumbling ever deeper into disarray. Meanwhile the mainstream right is torn between wanting to work with Macron and wanting to clip the new president's wings.

Hollande presided Wednesday over his last Cabinet meeting. He and Macron then appeared together at a ceremony in Paris' Luxembourg Gardens to commemorate the abolition of slavery. The transfer of power is Sunday.

In what he said was his last official ceremony as president, Hollande allowed himself a joke, promising to turn over all his powers to Macron: "Don't worry!"

More seriously, Hollande said Macron's defeat of Le Pen showed voters' support for "tolerance, respect, dignity, democracy, openness." Without naming the National Front, Hollande's speech rang as a warning against the populist, nationalistic discourse of the party with a history of anti-Semitism, racism and homophobia.

Hollande addressed Macron as "Mr. President."

"The same France that can be glorious can, sometimes, also make mistakes," he said. "There are always more or less dark forces that try to drag France to places where it doesn't want to go."

"We must continue to fight against the divisions that tear people apart, including here; against discourse that sets people against each other," he added. "There is still a lot to do, Mr. President."

The upheavals in rival parties could strengthen Macron's fledgling "Republic on the Move" movement as it fights its first legislative election in June, aiming to deliver him the parliamentary majority he will need to govern effectively and implement his campaign pledges over the next five years.

Macron's presidential run and victory on a "neither left nor right" independent platform upended the decades-long left-right duopoly on power in France. In a first for modern France, the mainstream left and right parties failed to qualify for last Sunday's presidential runoff, which saw Macron handily beat Le Pen with 66 per cent of the vote.

In the new and uncertain political landscape, Manuel Valls personifies the struggle of some politicians to work out where they now fit. The former prime minister in Hollande's Socialist government is now belatedly trying to hitch his star to Macron's "Republic on the Move" party, but risks finding himself in no man's land: unwanted by either party in the legislative election.

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French President-elect Emmanuel Macron in Paris, on May 10, 2017. (Christophe Ena / AP) - CTV News

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From February to October – Jacobin magazine

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In her book Inside the Russian Revolution, Rheta Childe Dorr described her first impression in Russia:

About the first thing I saw on the morning of my arrival in Petrograd ... was a group of young men, about twenty in number, I should think, marching through the street in front of my hotel, carrying a scarlet banner with an inscription in large white letters.

What does that banner say? I asked the hotel commissionaire who stood beside me.

It says All the Power to the Soviet, was the answer.

What is the soviet? I asked, and he replied briefly:

It is the only government we have in Russia now.

Judging from this passage, most of us would assume that Dorr arrived in Russia after the October Revolution, since only then did the soviets overthrow the Provisional Government. But Dorr came to Russia in late May 1917 and left the country by the end of August. Her book was sent to press before the October Revolution and thus gives us an invaluable look at what was happening in 1917, free of hindsight.

Dorrs account brings home an essential fact: The soviets, or councils of soldiers and workmens delegates, which have spread like wildfire throughout the country, are the nearest thing to a government that Russia has known since the very early days of the revolution. Though a socialist herself, Dorr was fervently committed to the war against Germany and therefore intensely hostile to what she saw as tyrannical mob rule. She regarded soviet rule as no better and in some ways worse than the tsars. Take censorship of the press: Even if [the average American traveler] could read all the daily papers, however, he would not get very much information. The press censorship is as rigid and as tyrannical today as in the heyday of the autocracy, only a different kind of news is suppressed. In order to give her American readers an idea of the committee mania that had taken over Russia, she used this analogy:

Try to imagine how it would be in Washington, in the office of the secretary of the treasury, let us say, if a committee of the American Federation of Labor should walk in and say: We have come to control you. Produce your books and all your confidential papers. This is what happens to cabinet ministers in Russia, and will continue until they succeed in forming a government responsible only to the electorate, and not a slave to the Council of Workmens and Soldiers Delegates.

Dorrs account is one-sided: soviet power was strongly contested throughout 1917 and the Provisional Government had its own ambitious agenda. Nevertheless, she brings out realities that wont be surprising to most historians but that cast an unexpected light on the slogan All Power to the Soviets!. Its worth exploring this new perspective, first by demonstrating the continuity between February and October, then by asking what kind of revolution this was, and finally by looking at the leadership of the Bolsheviks and Lenin in particular.

All power to the Soviets! is one of the most famous slogans in revolutionary history. It is right up there with Egalit, libert, fraternit as a symbol of an entire revolutionary epoch. It consists of three words: , vsya vlast sovetam. Vsya = all, vlast = power, and sovetam = to the soviets. The Russian word sovet simply means advice, and, from that, council.

Another Russian word vlast presents more of a challenge. Power is not an entirely adequate translation for a variety of reasons. Vlast has a more specific reference than the English word power, namely, the sovereign authority in a particular country. In order to have the vlast, one has to have the right of making a final decision, to be capable of making the decisions and of seeing that they are carried out. Often, in English, in an attempt to catch these nuances, vlast is translated by the un-idiomatic phrase the power. I will use power and vlast interchangeably.

Basic to the usual understanding of 1917 is a contrast between February and October. The educated reading public is given a liberal version of this contrast: February is the good revolution of political freedom and democracy, and October is the bad, illegitimate revolution of tyranny and extremist utopianism. On the Left we find a similar contrast, but with the value-signs reversed: the bourgeois-democratic revolution versus the socialist revolution.

Overlooked is the strong continuity between February and October. Right from its beginnings in February, the upheaval in 1917 should be seen as an anti-bourgeois democratic revolution. Soviet power was actually proclaimed in February the role of October was to confirm that it would not leave the scene peaceably.

The basic force behind this new power or sovereign authority the soviet constituency was the people, the narod, the workers, soldiers, and peasants, the mob; as opposed to the elite, the tsenzoviki (census people, the propertied classes), educated society. The central aim of the soviet revolution was to carry out the vast program of reforms earlier denoted by the term democratic revolution first and foremost, land to the peasants and liquidation of the pomeshchiki (gentry landowners) as a class and also to end a murderous and pointless war.

At the same time, the revolution was intensely anti-bourgeois, even if this feeling did not translate into a programmatic demand to install socialism in the short or middle term. The surprising fact is not the social base of the revolution nor the anti-bourgeois values of this base, but rather the creation almost simultaneously after the fall of the tsar of a viable candidate for sovereign authority in the land that relied on this broad popular constituency.

In February, the longstanding Romanov dynasty often termed the historic vlast dissolved, leaving Russia essentially without a functioning vlast, that is, without a generally recognized sovereign authority. The fundamental lines of force for the whole year were set up almost immediately, indeed, during the revolutionary events of February 27. During this day, the following happened:

Thus the Petrograd Soviet took on the role of the ultimate source of the vlast, the sovereign authority though at this stage it was still careful not to take the name. The soviet was the elected representative of the workers and the soldiers: an essential difference from its 1905 incarnation. There were two fundamental moments in this assertion of authority: first, the Provisional Government was forced to commit itself to key parts of the Soviet program in order to gain elementary legitimacy, and indeed, in order to come into existence. Second, Order Number One allowed the soviet (almost without noticing it) to gain an essential attribute of any vlast, namely, control over the ultimate means of coercion, the army. These two facts government commitment to carrying out key parts of the soviet program and the ultimate loyalty of the armed forces to the soviet rather than the Provisional Government determined the course of politics for the rest of the year.

On the surface, the vicissitudes of soviet power during the course of 1917 found expression in a series of dramatic political crises. Underneath, a more molecular process was taking place that clothed the soviet with the essential attributes of a genuine vlast. Let us take a look at this deeper process.

According to some Bolshevik observers at the time, the Soviet in February was an embryonic vlast. This is an excellent metaphor, leading to the following question: what would it take for it to become a full-blooded, independent vlast that could fend for itself? An effective vlast needs at least the following:

These are the key features of a functioning vlast. The embryonic soviet vlast established in February started off with some of these features in virtual form, and then these and all the other features steadily acquired more substance, first in 1917 and then during the civil war. For example, the soviet gained a national institutional form, through an all-Russian conference in late March and two congresses of soviets (June and October). In contrast, the Provisional Government progressively lost even those essential features with which they started, so that it became more and more spectral. By the fall of 1917, it had lost the support of even moderate soviet leaders and was no more than a phantom vlast.

We turn now to the unbroken series of political crises that marked the relations of the soviets and the elite reformers in the Provisional Government. The political struggle in 1917 was conducted within an unwritten constitution that stated that the soviet majority has the final say on matters of program and personnel. Right at the beginning, Alexander Kerensky was inserted into the government as a soviet representative. For this and other reasons, the contrast often made between an initial period of dual power and a later coalition period is inessential.

In early May, the Provisional Government proposed but the soviet disposed it agreed to the governments request to send more representatives into the government. No matter how many individual representatives the soviets sent to the government, the fact remains that no major policy initiative was carried out against the explicit wishes of the soviet majority. Thus the various political crises that arose through the year all ended when the soviet authority made its will known, since it had ultimate control over coercive force. This was true in March, April, July, and August, as well as October.

Of course, soviet power was strongly contested from the beginning: the counterrevolution also had its origin in February. The key source of conflict was over what was called at the time the krizis vlasti, the crisis of power. The issue was often framed as follows: dvoevlastie, dual power, dual sovereignty, is a contradiction in terms if the buck stops here and over there, then who makes the ultimate decision, the one that really counts? Thus dual power is the equivalent of multiple power which is the equivalent of no vlast at all: a recipe for governmental dysfunction. Russia needs one undisputed, recognized, and tough-minded (tverdaia) vlast.

At this point, opinions began to differ. The liberal Kadet party, the first ones to bring up this line of thought, said that therefore the soviets must retire from the scene. The Bolsheviks, who quickly picked up on this argument for their own purposes, said that therefore all power must go to the soviets!

The existential question facing the soviet constituency was: could the soviet program be carried out by means of a good faith partnership with elite reformers or was the gap between elite and narod on such fundamental questions as the war, the land issue, and economic regulation too wide to be bridged? The Bolsheviks labeled the attempt at cross-class partnership as soglashatelstvo a term often misleadingly translated as conciliation, but which can be rendered in English in a more straightforward way as agreementism. So the question before the soviet constituency was: is agreementism viable? Yes, it may be convenient to work with the elite rather than against it, but not if it means giving up on the aims of the revolution.

From the point of view of the incipient counterrevolution, there were two possible strategies for eliminating the soviet system: a hard coup or a soft coup. An attempt at a hard coup was made by General Kornilov in late August but this was a misbegotten adventure from the beginning, one that quickly ran up against the hard fact of politics in 1917, namely, the ultimate loyalty of the armed forces to the soviets. The soft coup relied on a different strategy of creating by various means an alternative wide-ranging vlast with national support, all the while asking the soviets to voluntarily bow out. Under this category comes such experiments in the fall as the Democratic Conference and the Pre-Parliament. More and more, the Constituent Assembly became the centerpiece of attempts at a soft coup, that is, of inducing soviet power to bow out gracefully.

For the soviet constituency, the question was decided by early September, when new majorities in the soviets of Moscow and Petersburg showed their support for an all-soviet, anti-agreementist government. It became evident that the forthcoming Second Congress of Soviets in October would take the same line. So the question became: would the unwritten constitution hold? Would the new soviet majority be able to exercise the same ultimate control over the policies and personnel of the government that the old soviet majority did? In the usual telling, October was the time when the soviets overthrew the Provisional Government. From our perspective, it was the time the Provisional Government failed to overthrow the soviets.

At the same time, the soviets assigned political leadership to the Bolshevik Party. This choice was an inevitable implication of the more fundamental decision to keep soviet power in existence, since the Bolsheviks were the only organized political force willing and able to do this. (The Left Socialist-Revolutionaries [SRs] were willing enough, but barely even an organized political force.) The dissolution of the Constituent Assembly in early January ended the last chance to end soviet power peacefully, that is, through voluntary self-dissolution. Thereafter the question was settled on the fields of battle.

According to the unwritten constitution, a regularly elected Congress of Soviets representing soviets all across the country had the right and duty to determine both the personnel and the policies of the revolutionary government. The Second Congress that met on October 25 and 26 was just such a body. We often get so fascinated by the dramatic debates among the Bolsheviks, and by the armed uprising organized by the Petrograd Soviets Military Revolutionary Committee, that we tend to forget that the basic political fact in the autumn of 1917 was the new majority that had formed nationwide among the soviet constituency.

The uprising takes on a new meaning in light of this fact: we can imagine the Second Congress without the uprising, but we cannot imagine the uprising without the Second Congress. As Trotsky said at the congress: The political formula of this uprising: All power to the soviets by means of the Congress of Soviets. We are told: you didnt wait for the congress. We, as a party, considered it our task to create a genuine possibility for the Congress of Soviets to take the vlast into its own hands.

Accordingly, a look at the proceedings of the Second Congress will give us some idea of the meaning of October in October that is, what the Second Congress as a whole, including both its majority and minority, thought it was doing. According to the unwritten constitution, a properly constituted Congress of Soviets had the right to determine the governments personnel and policies. This was the heart of the matter, and no one at the Congress disputed it, not even the Bolsheviks most determined enemies.

Instead, they tried to undermine the Congresss legitimate status by various other means: First, by using walkouts to deprive the Congress of its necessary quorum and turn it into a private conference. Second, by claiming that armed conflict and civil war on the streets made the work of the Congress impossible. But note: the anti-Bolshevik socialists did not protest the arrest of the Provisional Government, but only the treatment of the socialist ministers and even here the outrage was not caused by their status as ministers, but rather because they were party comrades on a party mission. Finally, even while granting that the Congress had a right to create a new government and even a government that excluded any non-soviet parties, they insisted that this new soviet vlast represent all soviet parties and even all democratic forces thus the Martov wing of the Mensheviks and the Left SRs, though the creation of such a wide coalition was an unrealistic pipe dream. Thus no one at the Congress really contested the unwritten constitution.

What program did the Congress give to the new government? Three things were accomplished during the two-day session: an official government proposal for a democratic peace, land to the peasants and concomitant abolition of gentry property, and the creation of a worker-peasant government. All three of these measures were essentially democratic in the parlance of the time, and this democratic quality was given heavy emphasis by official rhetoric and Bolshevik spokesmen. A very famous statement by Lenin perhaps the first pronouncement of the new vlast runs as follows: The cause for which the narod fought the immediate proposal of a democratic peace, the abolition of gentry property in land, worker control over production, creation of a soviet government this cause is now secure.

In his original draft, Lenin had written Long live socialism! but he crossed this phrase out. This fact points to another feature of the debates at the Congress: the low profile of socialism, as either word or concept. True, mention can be found of socialism as the final goal. But the Bolsheviks never defended the actual program set out by the Congress as a socialist one nor, most revealingly, did those who attacked the Bolsheviks make any critique of unrealistic attempts to install socialism in Russia. Socialism was simply a non-issue at the Second Congress.

The historic meaning of the Second Congress, then, was that the previously unwritten constitution now openly affirmed itself as the ultimate law of the land. The embryonic vlast created in February a vlast based solidly on the workers and peasants, and dedicated to the program of the revolution announced to the world its firm intention to survive and thrive.

Our look at the Second Congress and its program makes unavoidable the question: what kind of revolution was the Russian Revolution of 1917? In some ways, of course, a worker-peasant revolution in Russia would inevitably be socialist, that is, it would be led by committed socialists whose ultimate aim was to establish a socialist society. Socialist parties had an absolute monopoly of political loyalty from the narod and none but socialist parties were ever represented in the soviet system. Furthermore, the Bolsheviks finally placed their project in the context of the Europe-wide socialist revolution that they believed was in the offing. On the other hand, when we look at the actual program for Russia adopted by soviet power in 1917, and also at the actual message sent out by the Bolsheviks day in and day out to the soviet constituency, we will find that democratic demands crowded out socialist ones almost completely.

The binary contrast between bourgeois-democratic revolution and socialist revolution goes a long way back in the Marxist tradition, but by the early twentieth century it was showing definite signs of strain. In 1906, Karl Kautsky wrote a seminal article entitled Driving Forces and Prospects of the Russian Revolution. This article delighted Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin, all of whom wrote commentaries on it. Even after the 1917 revolution, Kautskys article was endorsed by Lenin, Trotsky, and even Karl Radek as a classic exposition of the logic behind Bolshevik revolutionary strategy.

Here Kautsky made the argument that Russia was undergoing neither a bourgeois revolution in the traditional sense nor a socialist one but a quite unique process which is taking place on the borderline between bourgeois and socialist society. For Kautsky, the once and future Russian revolution was not bourgeois, because it was led by socialists, but it was also not socialist because the peasant allies of the proletariat were not ready for socialism. All Russian Social Democrats (including Trotsky) agreed that Russias peasant majority was a barrier to socialist transformation, absent a game-changing European revolution.

Given this, it seems all the more apt to understand the 1917 revolution as an anti-bourgeois democratic revolution. The revolution that created and defended soviet power was democratic both in terms of its class content and its program. The Petrograd Soviet was created by the workers and soldiers of the capital city that is, soviet power was a worker-peasant vlast from the very beginning and it never lost this character. By the rules of Marxist discourse accepted by everybody in 1917, a revolution that embodied the interests of the peasantry was thereby a democratic one.

As we have seen, the soviet revolution was also democratic in its program in 1917. There is an idea among many Marxists today that proclaiming the socialist character of the revolution was a logical necessity for the project of soviet power to make sense. This idea wilts under inspection and indeed it was forcefully refuted in 1917 by Lenin and Trotsky themselves. There is also perhaps a tendency among some Marxists today to look down on a merely democratic revolution as one restricted to paltry reforms and a measly minimum program. The Bolsheviks had a very different attitude. They saw the democratic transformation of Russia creation of a radical democracy, land to the peasants, liquidation of the landowning gentry as a class, and modernization of all spheres of life as a highly ambitious and rewarding mission. Furthermore, it was one that only committed socialists could carry out.

Which brings us to the second part of our definition: in contrast to the classical bourgeois-democratic revolutions, the Russian revolution was anti-bourgeois from the very start. First, for the reason noted by Kautsky: it was led by socialists and not by liberals or bourgeois of any stripe. Second, both wings of the soviet constituency workers and peasants were thoroughly hostile to the burzhui and to bourgeois values. Third, the Russian Revolution took place amid an accelerating breakdown of any workable market system.

From the beginning that is, from February the soviet constituency was hostile to the burzhui both in its narrow meaning of industrial owners and in its wider meaning of the tsenzoviki (an abusive word for the educated elite that derived from the property requirements or census that restricted the number of voters), the beloruchki (the ones with white hands), and other unfriendly terms for the educated elite. Even in the early days, when hopes were high for a real partnership, the burzhui were regarded with suspicion and, indeed, with an automatic assumption of insincerity. Commitment in a positive way to socialist institutions was much less powerful than a negative attitude toward the bourgeois as individuals as well as toward bourgeois values. The anti-bourgeois drive arises organically out of the very fact of soviet power, not just the dreams of socialist intellectuals.

Anything like a bourgeois class, market institutions, and middle-class values were destroyed by the Russian time of troubles starting in 1914, and there was no social or political will to reconstitute them. Thus, socialism in the Soviet Union acquired content by the drive to make a great modern country work without a bourgeoisie, or an autonomous market, or bourgeois pluralism. Both the short-term social dynamics and the long-term economic result of the revolution were determined in the first place by the anti-bourgeois drive of the soviet constituency.

To understand why it was the Bolsheviks and no other party that was given leadership by soviet power, we have to take a broader view and look at the so-called hegemony strategy that defined Bolshevism before 1917. Hegemony is a word with many meanings in many different contexts. When the Bolsheviks used it to sum up their view of class dynamics in Russia, they meant first and foremost that the socialist proletariat would act as leader (hegemon) for the peasants. In a fuller formulation: the socialist proletariat would carry out the revolution to the end by creating a revolutionary vlast based on the common interest of the workers and peasants, and by rejecting any bid by liberal reformers to halt or turn back the revolution.

The prewar hegemony strategy gave the Bolsheviks a head start a blueprint that led eventually to majority support at the Second Congress. The Bolsheviks in Petrograd did not need Lenin to size up the situation and to set their sights on winning over the soviet constituency both workers and peasant soldiers to the project of full soviet power and to persuade them to reject any agreementism with elite reformers. Bolshevik leaders such as Kamenev and Stalin were confident that the Provisional Government would be utterly unable to carry out the revolutionary program and indeed would quickly reveal its counterrevolutionary essence.

In all of this, the role of the peasant ally remained the heart of the matter. Most of the discussion among Bolsheviks in April after Lenins return was devoted to ensuring that everybody was on the same page about the crucial revolutionary role of the peasants. This is why some Bolsheviks insisted that the bourgeois-democratic revolution is not finished this was another way of saying the peasant is still a revolutionary ally. Lenin responded by underlining that any so-called steps toward socialism (for example, bank nationalization) could only be undertaken with peasant understanding and support.

This fundamental wager on socialist leadership of the peasantry explains not only Bolshevik victory in 1917, but Bolshevik victory in the civil war. In 1920 (prior to New Economic Policy), Evgenii Preobrazhensky described the middle peasant as the central figure of the revolution:

Over the whole course of the civil war, the middle peasantry did not go along with the proletariat with a firm tread. It wavered more than once, especially when faced with new conditions and new burdens; more than once it moved in the direction of its own class enemies. [But] the worker/peasant state, built on the foundation of an alliance of the proletariat with 80 percent of the peasantry, by this fact alone cannot have any competitors for the vlast inside the boundaries of Russia.

The Red Army was the embodiment of hegemony: peasant soldiers, political leadership by revolutionary socialists, officers providing expertise but shorn of political influence, all fighting together to defend the existence of the worker-peasant vlast. So much was recognized even by the Menshevik Fyodor Dan. Writing in 1922, Dan observed that the defeat of the peasant-based Red Army in Poland in 1920 was not just a military failure:

To defend the land he has seized against the possible return of the landlord, the peasant Red Army man will fight within the greatest heroism and the greatest enthusiasm. He will advance barehanded against cannons, tanks, and his revolutionary ardor will infect and disorganize even the most splendid and disciplined troops, as we saw with the Germans, the British and the French in equal measure

But the idea of Bolshevik communism is so alien and even hostile to the mindset of the peasant Red Army, that he can neither be infected by it himself, nor can he infect others with it. He cannot be attracted by the idea of war to convert capitalist society into communist society, and this is the limit of the Red Armys potential for the Bolsheviks.

Dan had a strange understanding of the idea of Bolshevik communism. Nevertheless, his remarks bring out two central points about the Russian Revolution. First, it was strong when it was compatible with peasant interests, and weak when it strayed beyond those limits. Second (a point obscured by Dan), the peasants could hardly have constituted an effective fighting force unless they had been given political leadership by a political party based on the urban branch of the narod.

The Bolsheviks were thoroughly committed to a worker-peasant alliance and ipso facto to an essentially democratic revolution. Only in his last articles did Lenin explicitly advance the idea that the proletariat could lead the peasant majority all the way to socialism. In some ways, this outlook was a break with the original version of hegemony, but more profoundly, it was just a further extension of the core idea of socialists leading peasants.

In October, the leadership of soviet power was entrusted to the Bolshevik Party. Looking at events from this point of view prompts a new look at Lenins leadership within the party, one that brings out some unexpected features. But we must start with the fact that Lenin was primarily responsible for elaborating and defending the hegemony strategy before and after the 1905 revolution. In October 1915, he sharpened his scenario by suggesting that a worker/peasant vlast would take power during the second stage of the revolution, replacing an anti-tsarist but defencist regime. He thus provided the party with its basic strategic orientation.

When Lenin returned in April after a decade in emigration, there was great potential for discord and demoralization. What is striking about Lenin in April after we look in detail at the give-and-take among the Bolsheviks is his ability to listen to his party comrades, sort out what was primary and what was secondary, and help clear up misunderstandings, both on his part and on the part of the Petrograd Bolsheviks. Let me give one small but revealing example of Lenins learning from the locals. In his Letter from Afar that he sent from Switzerland before returning, Lenin continually referred to the Soviet of Worker Deputies. When they printed his article in Pravda, the editors silently changed each occurrence of this phrase to the correct title Soviet of Worker and Soldier Deputies. In the original text of his April Theses, delivered immediately after his return, Lenin still used the inaccurate shorter title. Alerted by his comrades to the problem, he immediately switched over to a title that was an important symbol of the foundational peasant-worker alliance.

Lenin also deserves credit for the adoption of the famous three-word slogan All Power to the Soviets! but in an unexpected way. The slogan does not appear either in the April Theses or in the resolutions of the party conference that ended on April 29. Its first recorded use seems to be on a banner that was carried in the streets on April 21 during antigovernment demonstrations. Lenin noted its appearance and later quoted it in a Pravda article on May 2. The first use of the slogan, not just on an anonymous banner or in a signed article by an individual but in an authoritative party document, occurs in Pravda on May 7. Thus Lenin was perspicacious enough to observe the slogan and note its possibilities. On present evidence, it was indeed Lenin who lifted it out of anonymity and made it central to Bolshevik agitation.

After the July Days, Lenin thought that the unwritten constitution had been abrogated and that the current soviet system was no longer capable of exercising power. He therefore wanted to retract the slogan All Power to the Soviets! As he later admitted, this was a leftist deviation. Luckily, other party leaders managed to keep the slogan intact, and this served the Bolsheviks well in the fall when the soviet system took on new vigor. As this episode shows, Lenin was an effective leader because he was a member of a team that corrected individual misapprehensions.

Looking past the drama of Lenin haranguing his fellow Bolsheviks in October to carry out an uprising, we should focus on his central argument: the soviet constituency nationwide, peasants as well as workers, had rejected any sort of agreementism and therefore had de facto declared for full soviet power. The armed uprising was no doubt a good idea, but the uprising did not itself create soviet power instead, it protected the Second Congress and its capacity to turn the unwritten constitution into a written one.

Lenin was the strong leader of a united party. But the party was not united because he was a strong leader rather, he was a strong leader because the party was united around the basic strategy of socialist leadership in establishing a worker-peasant vlast.

Looking back on the course of events from February to October, one is struck by the improbability as well as the inevitability of soviet power. October was only possible because of the confluence of three highly unusual circumstances: the utter collapse of the former vlast, the creation of an institution based on workers and peasant soldiers that immediately won the effective loyalty of the army, and the existence of an underground party with a national structure and a ready-to-go program that responded to the first two circumstances.

All these features became evident within hours of the fall of the tsarist government. After that, October seems almost inevitable. Agreementism was a dead end, given the profound chasm between the aspirations of the Russian people and those of elite society. Once this became apparent, the Bolsheviks and their program of full soviet power were the only alternative left open for the soviet constituency. Even the counterrevolution was not a real alternative, since it was not yet ready to take power in order to repress the soviets.

1917 was thus a year of clarification about the stakes of the battle. The worker-peasant vlast created in 1917 survived the civil war that followed, but it paid a heavy price.

One casualty was the complete abolition of political freedom, even though this had been a central prewar goal of the Bolsheviks. Nevertheless, early Soviet Russia can accurately be described as a worker-peasant vlast in several crucial aspects. The whole stratum of landowners had been liquidated as a class, the former educated elite was completely barred from power, the new government institutions were increasingly staffed by workers and peasants, many of the policies of the new government were aimed at gaining support from these classes (for example, mass literacy campaigns), and the workers and peasants were celebrated continually in song and story. Even massive political intolerance was in some ways a democratic feature, insofar as it reflected widespread popular values.

The soviet power that was created in February 1917 and was preserved in October by accepting Bolshevik leadership established itself as a mighty force in the world, for good and for ill.

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From February to October - Jacobin magazine

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Opinion: Laughter, healing and personal empowerment – The Daily Progress

Posted: at 12:45 pm

Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.

Laughter has a long history in human culture. Ancient Greek physicians prescribed their patients visits to the hall of comedians and the theater as part of the healing process. Early Native Americans had clowns who worked in conjunction with witch doctors. The 14th century surgeon Henri de Mondeville told jokes to his patients in the recovery room. In the 16th century, Martin Luther used humor therapy as part of pastoral counseling of depressed people. President Abraham Lincoln was adept at using humor to ease his pain and stress.

Through the ages, laughter has been recognized for delivering joy as therapy. It speeds recovery from surgery. As therapy and counseling of the depressed it also relieves one of excess stress and tension. It is a vital factor in the treatment of the sick and dying. Laughter helps regain ones emotional equilibrium after trauma and crises.

The most significant recording of the benefits of laughter come from Norman Cousins in his book Anatomy of an Illness. In 1964, Cousins, Senior Editor of the Saturday Review, was diagnosed with a crippling and extremely painful inflammation of his body, Ankylosing Spondylitis. Doctors gave him little hope of survival. He refused to accept the diagnosis as a death sentence, checked himself out of the hospital, hired a full-time nurse and moved into a hotel suite. Along with mega doses of vitamin C, he watched Candid Camera, the Marx Brothers, Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin and laughed constantly. Soon observing, I made the joyous discovery that 10 minutes of belly laughter had an anesthetic effect and would give me at least two hours of pain-free sleep.

Digging deeper, Cousins discovered a surprising number of recorded incidents in which patients have laughed themselves back to health, or at least used laughter as a positive response to their illness. His anecdotal account of his self-styled healing became the bestselling book. He was hired by the University of California medical school where he taught and researched for twenty years the merits of laughter in healing.

In a study of mid-life wellness factors by Harvards eminent physician, George Valliant, laughter was singled out as a major stress-coping mechanism among healthy men. Laughter diffuses anxiety and anger, while acting as a blocking agent against the ravages of panic.

There is anesthetic effect of laughter lessening pain with the release of endorphins and easing anxiety and depression for those in chronic pain. Laughter charges our energy, provides relief from our problems and even helps us find solutions to them. Laughter radiates through us, helps us feel happy and provides us with a joyful illumination as we deal with the disharmonies of life.

World Laughter Day, this year, May 7, originated in 1998 with Madan Kataria, a physician in India, who founded the worldwide Laughter Yoga Movement now operating in 105 countries through over 6000 Laughter Clubs. The celebration of World Laughter Day is a positive manifestation for world peace and intended to build up a global consciousness of brother/sister hood and friendship through laughter.

How can you use the power you have been born with laughter to increase your quality of life? The first thing to do is get a laughter buddy. Typically, someone you already joke with and who also wants to have a better lifestyle incorporating the power of laughter. Then simply commit to meeting regularly to laugh.

Bill Baker is co-founder of the Roanoke Laughter Lab, which meets monthly at the South County Library.

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Baker: Laughter, healing and personal empowerment – Martinsville Bulletin

Posted: at 12:45 pm

By Bill Baker

Baker is co-founder of the Roanoke Laughter Lab, which meets monthly at the South County Library.

Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.

Mark Twain

Laughter has a long history in human culture. Ancient Greek physicians prescribed their patients visits to the hall of comedians and the theater as part of the healing process. Early Native Americans had clowns who worked in conjunction with witch doctors. The 14th century surgeon Henri de Mondeville told jokes to his patients in the recovery room. In the 16th century, Martin Luther used humor therapy as part of pastoral counseling of depressed people. President Abraham Lincoln was adept at using humor to ease his pain and stress.

Through the ages, laughter has been recognized for delivering joy as therapy. It speeds recovery from surgery. As therapy and counseling of the depressed it also relieves one of excess stress and tension. It is a vital factor in the treatment of the sick and dying. Laughter helps regain ones emotional equilibrium after trauma and crises.

The most significant recording of the benefits of laughter come from Norman Cousins in his book Anatomy of an Illness. In 1964, Cousins, Senior Editor of the Saturday Review, was diagnosed with a crippling and extremely painful inflammation of his body, Ankylosing Spondylitis. Doctors gave him little hope of survival. He refused to accept the diagnosis as a death sentence, checked himself out of the hospital, hired a full-time nurse and moved into a hotel suite. Along with mega doses of vitamin C, he watched Candid Camera, the Marx Brothers, Laurel and Hardy, Charlie Chaplin and laughed constantly. Soon observing, I made the joyous discovery that 10 minutes of belly laughter had an anesthetic effect and would give me at least two hours of pain-free sleep.

Digging deeper, Cousins discovered a surprising number of recorded incidents in which patients have laughed themselves back to health, or at least used laughter as a positive response to their illness. His anecdotal account of his self-styled healing became the bestselling book. He was hired by the University of California medical school where he taught and researched for twenty years the merits of laughter in healing.

In a study of mid-life wellness factors by Harvards eminent physician, George Valliant, laughter was singled out as a major stress-coping mechanism among healthy men. Laughter diffuses anxiety and anger, while acting as a blocking agent against the ravages of panic.

There is anesthetic effect of laughter lessening pain with the release of endorphins and easing anxiety and depression for those in chronic pain. Laughter charges our energy, provides relief from our problems and even helps us find solutions to them. Laughter radiates through us, helps us feel happy and provides us with a joyful illumination as we deal with the disharmonies of life.

World Laughter Day, this year, May 7, originated in 1998 with Madan Kataria, a physician in India, who founded the worldwide Laughter Yoga Movement now operating in 105 countries through over 6000 Laughter Clubs. The celebration of World Laughter Day is a positive manifestation for world peace and intended to build up a global consciousness of brother/sister hood and friendship through laughter.

How can you use the power you have been born with laughter to increase your quality of life? The first thing to do is get a laughter buddy. Typically, someone you already joke with and who also wants to have a better lifestyle incorporating the power of laughter. Then simply commit to meeting regularly to laugh.

Your first meeting could be in Roanokes Laughter Lab, held the first Monday of each month at 6:30 p.m. inside the South County Library on Merriman Road. Bring your laughter buddy for an evening of experimenting with laughter under the direction of two certified Laughter Yoga leaders who will give you tips on how make laughter a vital part of your lifestyle.

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The Single woman’s checklist: 8 essentials for the powerful woman – Michronicleonline

Posted: at 12:45 pm


Michronicleonline
The Single woman's checklist: 8 essentials for the powerful woman
Michronicleonline
Entrepreneurship, for Sh'Lene, is a major part of her personal empowerment. She received the Motor City Match Business Planning Award to launch the Single Woman's Power Network, to equip single women with the knowledge and resources that will ...

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The Single woman's checklist: 8 essentials for the powerful woman - Michronicleonline

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Loyola receives gifts from the Rizzo family – Loyola News

Posted: at 12:45 pm

May 9, 2017 | By Stephanie Weaver

Loyola University Maryland has received more than $800,000 from Daniel Rizzo and his wife, Kelly, to supplement their endowed Empowering Baltimore Youth Scholarship Fund. The gift comes in the form of equity in Inovalon, a cloud-based analytics and data-driven platforms company that Rizzo helped to found.

The scholarship preference is given to those who would contribute to the racial and ethnic diversity of the student body, who demonstrate financial need, and who have graduated from a high school in the greater Baltimore metropolitan area. The scholarship aligns with the Rizzo familys philanthropic missionto provide support to organizations that help in the education and growth of underprivileged or disadvantaged students.

Education is the vehicle to personal empowerment, Rizzo said. We want to support organizations that help students to grow and succeed, and in return, those students will give back to Baltimore.

In addition to his gift for the endowed scholarship, Rizzo has also given $75,000 to establish the Business Impact Fellow within the Sellinger School of Business and Management. The Business Impact Fellow will be held by a distinguished professor for three years to conduct research within their field. The funds will support fellows from the 2017-18 academic year through to the 2022-23 academic year.

Rizzo, 99, earned his degree in business with a concentration in finance and firmly believed he would go to Wall Street for a career in finance. Instead, he started Inovalon, a software startup, in Bowie, Md. He credits Loyola for preparing him to be flexible and nimble in his career plans, allowing him to pivot toward opportunities with growth and potential.

My Loyola education helped me grow as a learner and a member of the community. The liberal arts broadened my views of the world, which has helped me in my career, Rizzo said.

The experiences outside the classroom also stayed with Rizzo throughout his years post-graduation. He enjoys rolling up his sleeves and digging into problems, he said.

Dan and Kelly are a tremendous example of Loyola graduates who are living out the ideals they learned as students, said Terrence M. Sawyer, J.D., vice president for advancement. With their humility and thoughtfulness, they are choosing to give back so others can benefit from the Jesuit liberal arts education they receivedand go on to achieve personal and professional success.

Rizzo and his wife, Kelly Bryan Rizzo, 98, were married in Loyolas Alumni Memorial Chapel in 2000. Rizzo, his wife, and their 11-year-old son, live in Anne Arundel County. In addition to his consulting work, Rizzo is a trustee at Cristo Rey Jesuit School and serves on the Sellinger Board of Sponsors. Rizzo will be honored at Loyolas Commencement on May 20, where he will receive the Carroll Medal for his continuous support of the University.

If you are a member of the media and have questions about this story, please contact Nick Alexopulos at nalexopulos@loyola.edu or Stephanie Weaver at sweaver@loyola.edu.

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Loyola receives gifts from the Rizzo family - Loyola News

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Tickets on sale for women’s empowerment conference in Vallejo – Vallejo Times Herald

Posted: at 12:45 pm

The Vallejo Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. is seeking women seeking professional growth, development and personal enrichment.

Women from all walks of life are invited to take time away from their busy schedules to pamper themselves, learn valuable, potentially life-saving, lessons and network with other women who share similar life experiences and aspirations, event organizers said.

The sorority group hosts this motivational day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 20, at the Norman C. King South Vallejo Community Center, 545 Magazine Street, officials said. The Vallejo Alumnae chapter has sponsored this annual womens conference for more than 25 years, they said.

A diverse panel of local business community women will provide insights on their career paths and offer advice for how to balance work and family life along the road to success, organizers said.

Featured speakers and workshops include:

Alice Wilson Fried local author and motivational speaker, shares secrets to her successful literary journey and life lessons from her New Orleans heritage.

Tara Sanders partnership liaison with Los Medanos College and CEO/President of Sanders Image Consultants, addresses the hefty weight women carry and how to shift the load to succeed.

Phyllis Gordon Contra Costa County Womens Commission, brings her passion for womens causes to a discussion of the value of establishing a womans commission to address common issues and concerns.

Lisa Oivares Mary Kay director, provides a pampering, make-over session and offers a unique business perspective on how women can break the corporate glass ceiling.

Zena Johnson Kaiser Permanente health educator, focuses on womens health and prevention tips to help ward off disease and stay healthy. .

Chef Liilani demonstrates easy-to-make, healthy meals the entire family will enjoy.

Lindsay Elam financial adviser, presents strategies every woman should know.

Meredith Webb Solano County Mental Health, will provide an update on the serious impact and consequences of human trafficking and domestic violence in our community.

Theres a little something for everybody, Empowerment Conference chairwoman Valerie Roberts Gray said. The ladies tend to leave uplifted and refreshed and we want to encourage everyone to come out and spend the day with us.

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Additionally, the Vallejo Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. will present its annual scholarship awards to deserving Vallejo high school students. Since the chapter was established in 1974, it has provided more than $200,000 in scholarships to high school seniors pursuing higher education.

A reception will follow.

Space is limited. Register at Eventbite.com. The $18 online and $20 at the door includes continental breakfast, lunch and conference materials. Some community stipends and group discounts are available. For tickets and more information, contact Valerie Roberts Gray, at (707) 334-1986.

Contact Rachel Raskin-Zrihen at (707) 553-6824.

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Tickets on sale for women's empowerment conference in Vallejo - Vallejo Times Herald

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University of Windsor Students Named National Champions of Youth Empowerment – Canada NewsWire (press release)

Posted: at 12:45 pm

VANCOUVER, May 11, 2017 /CNW/ -Upon learning that 60 per cent of students leave high school without basic financial education, students from the University of Windsor created Youthrive, an intensive 10-week one-on-one consulting and financial literacy education program focused on accelerating young entrepreneurs.

Enactus University of Windsor has been named the 2017 Scotiabank Youth Empowerment Challenge National Champion by this country's largest student leadership development organization, Enactus Canada, and program supporter Scotiabank. The national competition took place at the 2017 Enactus Canada National Exposition in Vancouver.

Through Youthrive, 265 youth have been empowered and over 4,500 lives have been improved.

"Young people are our future leaders; it is inspiring to see what kind of leaders they will become by looking at the engaging, compassionate and creative work done by the participants of the Scotiabank Youth Empowerment Challenge," said Terri Williams, Vice President of Corporate Social Responsibility at Scotiabank. "Congratulations to the winners and to everyone who took part in projects to address the needs and opportunities facing youth. The Enactus teams are truly making a difference in the lives of young people in communities across Canada."

The Scotiabank Youth Empowerment Challenge is a national competition that encourages post-secondary students to develop and deliver projects that address the needs and opportunities facing youth. Focused on education, learning skills and supporting the life-long success of youth aged 25 and under, this challenge has engaged 5,085 students since 2016, who have impacted more than 26,505 youth through 302 community empowerment projects.

"By focusing on youth, Enactus University of Windsor is making a real impact on the long-term sustainability of their communities," says Nicole Almond, Enactus Canada president.

The 2017 Enactus Canada National Exposition welcomed 1,500 delegates including the country's brightest university and college students, academic professionals and top Canadian CEOs to enable progress by supporting entrepreneurial action through competition, recognition and education.

For competition results during the event, please follow @Enactus_Canada on Twitter. All event results will also be published on enactus.ca/events/national-exposition.

ABOUT ENACTUS CANADA: Enactus Canada, the country's largest post-secondary experiential learning platform, is shaping entrepreneurial leaders who are passionate about advancing the economic, social and environmental health of Canada. Guided by academic advisors and business experts, more than 2,734 entrepreneurial post-secondary students led 280 community empowerment projects and business ventures last year in communities coast to coast. As a global network of 36 countries, Enactus uses the power of entrepreneurial action to transform lives and shape a better, more sustainable world. For more information, visit enactus.ca.

ABOUT SCOTIABANK: At Scotiabank, we aim to support organizations that are committed to helping young people reach their full potential. Young people are our future leaders and Scotiabank's goal is to help ensure that they have the necessary skills and resources they need to support their success. Together with our employees, the Bank supports causes at a grassroots level. Recognized as a leader for our charitable donations and philanthropic activities, in 2016, Scotiabank contributed more than$70 millionto help our communities around the world.

Scotiabank is Canada's international bank and a leading financial services provider in North America, Latin America, the Caribbean and Central America, and Asia-Pacific. We are dedicated to helping our 23 million customers become better off through a broad range of advice, products and services, including personal and commercial banking, wealth management and private banking, corporate and investment banking, and capital markets. With a team of more than 88,000 employees and assets of $887 billion (as at January 31, 2017), Scotiabank trades on the Toronto (TSX: BNS) and New York Exchanges (NYSE: BNS). For more information, please visit http://www.scotiabank.com and follow us on Twitter @ScotiabankViews.

SOURCE Scotiabank

For further information: For media enquiries only: Jen Falzon, Enactus Canada, jen@enactus.ca, (416) 315-2099; Diana Hart, Public and Corporate Affairs, Scotiabank, diana.hart@scotiabank.com, (416) 866-7238

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Girls empowerment camp planned – Business Times of Western Colorado

Posted: at 12:45 pm

Article date: May 10 2017

A Grand Junction tutoring and academic coaching service has scheduled a camp to help middle school girls handle peer pressure, develop a positive self-image and create a personal vision board.

Essentials in Learning has scheduled the girls empowerment camp for Aug. 1 to 3. Admission is $229. For more information, call 210-9271 or visit http://www.essentialsinlearning.com.

Anna Goetz, co-owner of EIL, and Patty Shephard, a Mesa County School District 51 counselor, will lead the camp. They will help young girls develop a strong and positive identity to help them counteract many of the social and emotional pressures theyll likely experience as they enter adolescence.

Operating out of the Business Incubator Center, Essentials in Learning helps students in first grade through college whore struggling in school or want to strengthen their academic skills. The business offers assistance with not only the core areas of math, reading and writing, but also goal setting, organization and time management.

EIL staff holds certifications in elementary education, middle and high school education, Colorado Writing Project, administration, reading recovery and executive skills training. Staff members have participated in multiple national workshops, including the learning differences conference at the Harvard University Graduate School of Education.

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