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MotrPropnio
Pope's Apolosato the Americas
Pope'sMeosage sfPerce
Amtricm Deelmtim on &e Rigkts of Indigeirous Peaplw

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U-S. Office of Personnel Management


Guide to Personnel Data Standards

ETHNICITY AND RACE IDENTIFIGATION


(Please read the Privacy Act Statement and instructions before completing form.)

Name (Last, Firsl, Middle lnitial)

t4

nuno

-Da,r"

SocialSecurity Number

L\?{

r in

3tu,oA

Birthdate (Month and Year)

0g

Rgdncy Use Ohty

lntq

Privacy Act Statement


Ethnicity arfl race information is requested under the authority of 42 U.S.C. Section 2000e-16 and in compliance with
the Office of Management and Budgefs 1997 Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race
and Ethnicity. Providing this information is voluntary and has no impact on your employment stiatus, but in the instance
of missing information, your employing agency will attempt to identifu your race and ethnicity by visual observafion.
This information is used as necessary to plan for equal employment opportunity throughout the Federal govemment. lt
is also used by the U. S. Office of Personnel Management or employing agency maintaining the records to locate
individuals for personnel research or survey response and in the production of summary descriptive statistics and
analytical studies in support of the function for which the records are collected and maintained, or for retated workforce
studies.

Social Security Number ($SN) is requested under the authority of Executiye Order g397, which requires SSN be used
for the purpose of uniform, orderly administration of personnel records. Providing this information is voluntary and failure
to do so will have no effect on your employment status. lf SSN is not providqd, howeyer, other agency sources may be
used to obtain it.
Specific lnstructions: The two questions betow are designed to identify your ethnicity and race. Regadless of your answer to
question 1r go to queetion 2.
Queetion

1.

Are You Hispanic or Latino? (A person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other

Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.)

Jves il

tto

Question 2. Please select the racial category or categories with which you most closely identify by placing an ")fl in the appropriate
box- Check as many as apply.
RACIAL CATEGORY
(Check as many as apply)

nmerican lndian or Alaska Native

DEFINITION OF CATEGORY

A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South America
(including Central America), and who maintains tribal affiliation or community
attachment.

fl

Asian

A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast
Asia, or the lndian submntinent induding, for example, Cambodia, China, lndia,
Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine lslands, Thailand, and Vietnam.

fl

Black or African American

A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.

ff

Native Hawaiian orOther Pacific tslander

A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Halvaii, Guam, Samoa, or
ofter Pacific lslands.

wtrite

A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or
North Africa.
Standard Form 181
Revised August2005
Previqrs editions not usable
42 U.S.C. Section 2000e-16
NSN 754&01-099-3446

rikl;Htxry

H. Res. 194

In the House of Representatiaes, f/. S.,


July 29, 2008.
Whereas millions sf A-fricans and their deseendanLs rvere
enslaved in the Ilnited States and the 13 Ameriean colonies frorn 1619 through 1865;

in Ameriea resembled no other form of involuntary servitude knornn in history, as Afrieans were eaptured and sold at auetion like inanimate objects or ani-

Vtrhereas slavery

mals;

Whereas Afrieans forced into slavery were brutalized, humili-

ated, dehumanired, and subjected to the i"dignity of


being stripped of their names and heritage;
Whereas enslaved families were torn apart after having been
sold separately from one another;
-lVhereas

the system of slavery and the viseeral raeism against


persons of Afriean deseent upon which it depended be-

came entrenched in the Nation's social fabric;


-lVhereas
slavery was not offieially abolished until the passage

of the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1865 afber the end of the Civil'War;
Whcreas after emaueipation ftom 246 years of slavery, AfrL
can-Amerieans soon saw the fleeting politieal, soeial, and
economic gains they made during Becsnstruetion eviscerated by virulent racism, lyoehios*, disenfranchisement,

Black Codes, and raeial segregation laws that imposed a


rigid system of officially sanctioned racial segregation in
virtually all areas of life;

jnre racial segregatiorr knovt n as


"Jim Crow," whieh arose in certain parts of the Irtration
following the Civil \Yar to create separate and unequai

Whereas

tlie slrstem of

de

for rvhites aud Afi:ican-Americans, was a direct


result of the racism against persons of African deseent
soeieties

engendered by slavery;

Wrereas a centur;r after the official end of slavery in America, Federal action was required during the 1960s to
eliminate the dejure and defacto systern of Jim Crow
tlrroughout parts of the lVatiorr, though its vestiges still
linger to this da;r;

to suffer from the complex interplay between slaverlr and Jim f1sy.-lsng after

\&Ihereas Afoican-Americans continue

both systems were formall;. abolished-tlrrough enormous


clamage and loss, both tangible and intangible, including
the loss of human dignity, the firrstratiori of careers and
professionai lives, and the long-term loss of income and
opportunity;
Wrereas the story of the enslavement and de jure seppegation
of African-Americans and the dehumanizing atrocities

committed against them should not be purged from or


minimized il the telling of American history;
\\Ihereas ou July 8, 2003, during a trip to Goree Island, Senegal, a former slave pofr, President George'W. Bush ackrrowledgecl slavery's continuing legacy

in American life

and the need to confront that legacy when he stated that


slavery "rvas
one of the greatest erimes of history

. The racial bigotry fed b3. slavery did not end r,vith

slavery or with segregation. And many of the issues that

still trouble America have roots rn*th* bitter

experienee

of other times. But however long the journe1 our destiry


is set: liberty and justice for all.";
Vtrhereas President

Bill Clinton dso aehrowledged the deep-

seated problems eaused by the continuing legaey of rac-

ism against African-Americans that began with slavery


when he initiated a national dialogue about raee;

Srhereas

a genuine apolog- is an innportant and

necessary

frrst step in the process of raeial reeonciliation;

for eenfuries of brutal dehumanization


and injustiees eannot erase the past, but eonfession of

Whereas an apolory

the wrongs committed can speed raeial healing and reconeiliation and help Americans confront the ghosts of
their past;
Whereas the legislature of the Commonwealth of Yirginia has

recently taken the lead in adopting a resolution offieially

expressing appropriate remorse for slavery and other


State legislatures have adopted or are considering similar
resolutions; and

it is important for this eountry, which legally recognized slavery through its Constitution and its laws, to

Whereas

make a formal apologSr for slavery and for its sueeessor,

Jim Cmw, so that it ean move forward and seek reconeiliation,. justice, and harmony for all of its eitizens:
Now, therefore, be
Resolued,,

it

That the Elouse of Representatiyes-

(1) aeknowledges that slavery is ineompatible with


the basic founding prineiples reeognized in the Declaration of fndependence that all men are ereated equal;

(2) aek*on'ledges the fundamental injustice, eruelt-r',


bmtaliS,, antl inlmmanity of slavery and Jim Crow;
(3) apologizes to African Americalls on behalf of the

f{

peopie

of the lJrdted States, f,or t}re

\rryongs committed

against them and their ancestors who suffered undel


slavery and Jim Crorv; and

t+l

expres$es

its

eommitment

to rectiff the lin-

gering ronsequenees cf the misdeeds eommitted against


African. Amerieans under slavery and Jim Crow and to
stop the oceurrenee of human riglrts r4olations in the future.

Attest:

Clp.rk^

912712016

AFnstdic Ldter Issued Mdu Proprio On tire Jurisdiction of Judicid Auhoritie d\&tican City State in Criminal Maters (11 JrJy 2913) | Francis

APOSTOUC LETTER
ISSUED MOTU PROPRIO
OF THE SUPREME PONTIFF

FRANCIS
ON THE JURISDICTION OF JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES OF VATICAN CITY STATE
IN CRIMINAL MATTERS

In our times, the common good is increasingly threatened by transnational


organized crime. the impropr use of the markets and of the economy, as well
as by tenorism.

It

is therefore necessary for dre intemational community to adopt adequate


legal instruments to prevent and counter criminal actMties, by promoting
intemational judicial cooperation on criminal matters.

In ratifying numerous international conventions in these areas, and acting also


on behalf of vatican city state, the Holy see has constantly maintained that
such agreements are effective means to prevent criminal activities that threaten
human dignity, the common good and peace.
With a view to renewing the Apostolic see's commitment to cooperate to these
ends, by means of this Apostolic Letter issued Motu Proprio, I establish that:
1. The competent

ludhial Authorities of Vatican City State shall also exercise

penal jurisdiction over:

a) crimes committed against the security, the fundamental interests


or the patrimony of the Holy See;
b) crimes referred to:
- irt Vatican City State Law No. VIII, of 11 July 2013,
containing Supplementary Norms on Criminal Law
Matters;

- in Vatican City State Law No. X(, of 11 July 2013,


containing Amendments to the Criminal Code and the
Criminal Procedure Code;

when such crimes are committed by the persons


refened tc in paragraph 3 below, in the exercise of
their functions;

6) any other crime whose prosecution is requircd by an intemational


agreernent ratified by tte Holy See, if the perpetrator is physically
present in the tenitory of Vatican CityState ard has'not been
extrcdited.

2. The crimes refened to in paragraph I are to be judged pursuant to the


criminal law in force in Vatican City State at the time of their comrnission,
without prejudke to the general principles of the legal system on the temporal
applimtion of criminal laws. _

3. For the pur?oses of Vatlcan criminal law, the following persons are deemed
"public offcials":

a) nembers, offaials and prsonnel af the varbus organs of the


Roman Curia and of the Institutions connected to it.
b) papal legates and diplomatic personnel of the Holy See.
c) those persons who serve as reprcsentatives, managers or
directors, as well as percons who even de facto manage or exercise
control over the entities directly dependent on the Holy See and
listed in the registry of canonical iuridical persons kept by the
Govemorate of Vatican City State;

d) any other person ho6ing an administrative or judhial mandate in


the Hoty See, permanent or temporary, paid cr unpaid, inespective
of that percon's seniority.

4. The jurisdictisn refened to in paragraph 1 camprises also the administrative


liability of jurirlical pelsons arising from crimes, as regulated by Vatican C*y

State

laws.

5. When the same matters are prosecuted in other States, the provisitrns in
force in Vatican City State on concurent jurisdiction shall apply.

W28l2016

ApcUic

Lfrer lssued

Md: Propio

On the Jurisdiction cf

Jndcid Arfiprities d\frtican City Stde in Crimird Mafiers

5. The content of afticle 23 of Law No. CXD( of 21 November 1987, which


approves the Judicial Order of Vatican Gty State remains in force.

This I decide and establish, anything to the contmry notwithstanding.

I establish that this Apostotic Letter issued Motu koprio will be promulgated by
its publication in L'Gservatore Romano, entering into force on l September
2013.
Given in Rome, at the Apostolic Palace, on
Pontificate.

1l luly 2113, the first of my

FRAT{CISCUS

@ Copyright - Ubreria Editrice Vaticana

(11

Jdy 2013) | Frbrrcis

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The Floly See

"

*,.IESSAGE SF i-iIS HOLINESS

POPE FR#,ICIS
FOR THE CELEBRATIGN SF THE

WSRLD gAY SF PEACE


1 JANUARY 2015

M* LOHGER SI*&VES, BUT ERETHERS AND SISTERS

1. At the beginning of this Nerrv Year, which we welcome as God's gracious gift to all humanity, I

offer heartfelt wishes of peace to every rnan and urcrrrafi, ts all the werid's peoplas and nations, to
hea s of shte and governr*ent" and to religious leders. ln doirqg so, i pray for an end io wars,
canflicts amd the great suffaing caused by human agenq, by epidemics past and prgsent, and by
the devastation wr*ugftt by *aturat disasters, I pray esp+cially that" on the basis of our @rnrnon
calling to cooperate with God and all people of good will for the advancement of harmony and
peace in the world, we may resist the temptation to act in a manner unworthy of our humanity.
{$ rrly &leggagetFar Peee}

kst

vea':" I spoke of "*re desire

icr a full life... ra&ich indudes a lonEing

for fraterr*ity wh{alr drauus us to.feilunrsl'lip with cthers and enatdes us to see Sr*rn not as enernies
or rivafs, bed as brottrem and si$tsrs to be accep&ed and ernbrace#.fi,! Since we are by nature
relationatr beings, rneant lo-find fu{filment fi:rough intelperscnal relationships inspired by iustice
and love, it is fundarnental for our human developrnent that our dignity, freedorn and autonomy be

acknowledged and respected. Tragimlly. the growing scourge of trnan's exploitatirm by rnan
gravely damryes tlrc life o.f mrnrnuniora and our mlfing to brge interpssonal relatims nrarked by

resped, iustice and lorre. This absrninable phenomenon, wtrich leads to contempt for the
fundamental rights of othrs and to &e supplesslon of Hreir *edorn a*d dignig, taks $iar]y
forms. I would like briefly to consider these, so that, in the light of God's word, we can eansider all
rnen and womsn "no /orryrer sfa'yes. 6,uf bro$rcgro a*d sis&ersf .
Listeniss fo

fu3

o{an for humanitv

-167AG/RES. 2888 (XLVI-O/I6)

AMERICAN DECLARATION ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES


(Adopted at &e &ird plenary sessio*, held on June 15, 2016)
$,4

THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY,

RECALLING the contents of resolution AG/RES. 2867 {XLIV-O114), "Draft American


Declaration orr the Rights of Indigenous Peoples," as well as all the previous resolutions cn this issue;

RECALLING also the '?eclaration cn the Rights of ths Indigenous Peoples in the
Amsricas," document AGIDEC. 79 (XLff-O114), which reaffirms that progress in promoting and
effectively protecting ths righ* of the indigenous peoples of the Americas is a pricrity for the
Organization of American Statss;
RECOGNIZING the valuable support provided by the member states, observer states, the
orgars, ageacies, and entities of the Organization of American States for &e process within the
trYorking Group to Prepare the Draft Amerieaa Declaration oa the Rights of Indigenous Peoples;
RECOGNIZING as well the important participation ofindigencus peoples ofthe Americas in
the process of prsparing this Declaration; and

TAKING INTO ACCOUNT the significafit cortribution that the indigercus peoples of the
Americas have made to humanity,

RESOLVES:
To adopt the following Draft American Declaration on fhe Rights of Indigenous Peoplesll2/

1.

2.

Ths United States remains committed to addressing the urgent issues of concm to indigenous peoples
across the Americas, including combating societal discrimination against indigotous peoples and...
Canada reiterates its commitrnent to a reaewed relatienship with i* Indigenous peoples, based on
reeognition ofrights, respcf co-operatioa and partnership. Canada isnow fully engaged" ...

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