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Cambridge Community Kitchen

Hunger relief organizationsUse British English from July 2018
The Lockon, Cambridge
The Lockon, Cambridge

Cambridge Community Kitchen (CCK) is a collective that provides free hot vegan meals several times a week in Cambridge. Meals are packaged and collected at the kitchen or delivered by volunteers by bike or car. The group is not a charity, wishing to avoid the Lobbying Act that restricts party-political statements from charities in election seasons and the paperwork required to gain the legal status. Instead, the non-hierarchical organisation views its work as mutual aid. Many, though not all, volunteers view themselves as anarchists and many are activists, including one of the original squatters who had previously been involved with Extinction Rebellion. Another of the founding squatters had previously volunteered at the Calais Refugee Community Kitchen.

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Cambridge Community Kitchen
Fair Street, Cambridge Petersfield

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Wikipedia: Cambridge Community KitchenContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 52.207362 ° E 0.129446 °
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Cambridge Community Kitchen

Fair Street 11-12
CB1 1HA Cambridge, Petersfield
England, United Kingdom
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The Lockon, Cambridge
The Lockon, Cambridge
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Parkside Community College

Parkside Community College is a secondary academy school with 600 places for children aged 11–16, situated in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. It is part of the United Learning Cambridge Cluster, along with Parkside Sixth, Coleridge Community College, Trumpington Community College, and Cambridge Academy for Science and Technology (formerly UTC Cambridge). Cambridge Academic Partnership joined the United Learning group of academies as a unit in September 2019. It is located next to the main Cambridge Parkside Police Station, the main Cambridge Fire Station and the National Express coach stops. It is east of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. From 1960 to 1974 it was the Cambridge Grammar School for Girls, after which it became the co-educational comprehensive Parkside Community College. It was the first school in the UK to be designated a Media Arts College under the UK government's specialist schools programme, in 1997, and was granted Foundation status in 2003.In 2005 Parkside Community College formed the Parkside Federation with Coleridge Community College, which had then been placed in special measures. The school achieved Academy status in 2011 when the federation converted to a multi-academy trust. At the same time it opened a new sixth-form college, Parkside Sixth. In 2017 the trust changed its name to the Cambridge Academic Partnership. The Cambridge Academic Partnership would later go on to change its name to the United Learning Cambridge Cluster. The history of the school is related in An Epoch-Making School, by former Deputy Principal Rosemary Gardiner (1983).