12016-06-20T14:40:15-07:00Kelly McElroye5d393ef518ba7df9cc94a38947ccfc69dff8d46100122This is a practice page for our in-class activity.google_maps2016-06-20T14:48:27-07:00Kelly McElroye5d393ef518ba7df9cc94a38947ccfc69dff8d46
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12016-06-17T11:02:43-07:00Keenan Ward2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29Information and Global Social JusticeKorey Jackson4book_splash2016-06-20T14:59:57-07:00Korey Jackson94cd93e587a0b4a5263c90ec4f2facaa0c913083
12016-06-21T09:20:46-07:00Kelly McElroye5d393ef518ba7df9cc94a38947ccfc69dff8d46Raval Neighborhood3From Wikipedia: El Raval (Catalan pronunciation: [əɫ rəˈβaɫ]) is a neighbourhood in the Ciutat Vella district of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The area, especially the part closest to the port, was also informally known as Barri Xinès or Barrio Chino, meaning "Chinatown". El Raval is one of the two historical neighborhoods that border La Rambla, the other being the Barri Gòtic, and contains some 50,000 people. An area historically infamous for its nightlife and cabarets, as well as prostitution and crime, El Raval has changed significantly in recent years and due to its central location has become a minor attraction of Barcelona. It currently has a very diverse immigrant community (47.4% of its population was born abroad, ranging from all South America, Pakistanis and Filipinos, to a more recent Eastern European community, especially from Romania. It is home to many bars, restaurants, and night spots.plain2016-11-30T13:39:14-08:00CC BY-NC-ND41.379074, 2.169655Laurie Bridges755e5adaf3686cb01ee2c513326df5329b57f379