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Austin Peace Academy (APA) is an Islamic school in Austin, Texas, serving pre-kindergarten through grade 12.As of 2016, its students originate from 19 nationalities. It opened in 1997 in West Campus, housing pre-kindergarten, and moved to current location in 1999.
Community of Peace Academy serves a diverse population of around 800 students. According to the 2018 Minnesota Report Card published by the Minnesota Department of Education, 41.8% of the students at CPA are Asian, 24.7% are Hispanic or Latino, 23.5% are Black or African American, and 8.3% are White. 86.5% of students qualify for free or reduced-cost meals, and 25.3% are English Language Learners.
The Hmong American Peace Academy (HAPA) is a charter school in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, under the authority of Milwaukee Public Schools. [1] It includes the HAPA K-8 program, and it has an affiliated high school program.
The International Peace Academy is a high school in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, operating as a charter school, primarily for Hmong American students. It was started in 2008 when the ninth grade was established, and it added another grade each year, with twelfth grade scheduled to be added in the 2011-2012 school year.
The International Peace Institute (IPI, formerly the International Peace Academy) is an independent non-profit think tank [4] founded in 1970 [5] based in New York. The institute has a regional office in the Middle East ( Manama, Bahrain ) and had a regional office in Europe ( Vienna, Austria ) until 2020.
Peace and Diversity Academy was a New York City public high school located in the Longwood neighborhood of the Bronx 40°49′39″N 73°53′50″W / 40.82750°N 73.89722°W / 40.82750; -73
The institution that eventually became William Peace University was founded in 1857 as Peace Institute by a group of men within the Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina. The leading donation of $10,000 (equivalent to $327,000 in 2023) came from William Peace, a prominent local merchant and a founding member of the First Presbyterian Church of Raleigh.
Nancy Lindborg, former president of USIP. President Ronald Reagan signed the United States Institute of Peace Act in 1984. [2]Spurred by a grassroots movement in the 1970s and 1980s, [citation needed] Senator Jennings Randolph joined senators Mark Hatfield and Spark Matsunaga and Representative Dan Glickman in an effort to form a national peace academy akin to the national military academies. [8]