Adriana Gregson: We Must De-mystify the Pathology of Crime in Adolescents
Akaida Orozco: Let’s talk about the background to this. How did the project develop, who did the work-team consist of?Adriana Gregson: Well, at that moment in 2005, we students from the Social Communication and Social Psychology departments met up. One of the students, María Eugenia Fréitez, was working in an institution that defended children’s and adolescents’ rights – CECODAP. She was also linking the issue of the Law of Social Responsibility – La Lopna – to her work at the CECODAP, and within that were the different focuses and investigative directions, such as adolescents from care homes, adolescents who are prisoners etc.
She had the opportunity to do a report on the situation of adolescents in the Carolina Uslar Internment prison in Carapita. During that report, one of the kids that she was interviewing said to her, “Miss, bring us stuff, bring us something, we are bored here, dying from having too much time on our hands, we want to do different things, whatever course you guys want”. So Maria Eugenia spoke to the Director, who at that time was creating the Bolivarian School of Morals and Lights for Liberty, and it was precisely from those circumstances that we came up with a holistic focus for a project and considered the topic of communication.
In a smaller studio, this is the only speaker you'd need – they're a Swiss Army knife, because they enhance the sound, but you still get all the accuracy out of a speaker that you need to mix on. The enclosures of the Guzauski-Swist GS-3a monitor allow