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The Yellow Ribbon Project is a campaign by the CARE Network to raise awareness and support for ex-offenders and their families in Singapore. It organizes various events, such as the Yellow Ribbon Prison Run and the Yellow Ribbon Art Exhibition, to engage the community and inspire second chances.
Yellow Ribbon Singapore is a statutory board under the Ministry of Home Affairs that enhances the employability of offenders and prepares them for reintegration. It offers vocational training, work, employment assistance and community engagement for offenders and ex-offenders.
A yellow ribbon is a symbol of support for military forces, especially those deployed overseas and in conflicts, including prisoners of war and those missing in action. It can also have other meanings depending on the context, such as suicide prevention, endometriosis awareness, or rural fire service.
Yellow Ribbon rededication ceremony to commemorate the 3rd Infantry Division's fourth deployment since September 11, 2001, at Victory Park in Hinesville. Yellow is the official color of the armor branch of the U.S. Army, used in insignia, etc., and depicted in Hollywood movies by the yellow neckerchief adorning latter-half 19th century, horse-mounted U.S. Cavalry soldiers.
The Yellow Ribbon Suicide Prevention Program (YRSPP) is a suicide prevention program based in the United States, and aimed in particular at teenagers. [1] The program is run by the Yellow Ribbon non-profit. [2] YRSPP uses a yellow ribbon with a heart to encourage awareness about suicide / suicide prevention.
Awareness ribbons are symbols to show support or raise consciousness for a cause. Learn about the origin and significance of different colors and patterns, such as red for AIDS, pink for breast cancer, and yellow for military service.
Yellow Ribbon Singapore's use of the yellow ribbon for raising awareness of anti--ex-con stigma in hiring may be eligible for inclusion in this list but I don't know if it has received much notable use beyond the YRS (nee SCORE) organisation's own advertisements.
The color yellow symbolizing hope and solidarity took other forms as well, including yellow hats, fans, handkerchiefs, bracelets, cell-phone stickers, keychains, balloons, depictions of butterflies, paper life-boats, t-shirts, and linen brooches, often featuring a yellow flower and the number 4.16 signifying the date of the ferry disaster.