POPULARITY
Right now, we're investing billions of dollars into charging infrastructure in order to speed up the transition to electric cars and decarbonize transportation. But there are all sorts of problems that EVs won't solve: bumper-to-bumper traffic, extractive metal mining, and car collisions that kill tens of thousands of drivers, passengers, cyclists, and pedestrians every year in the US. That's why transit activists say we need to rethink the way we get around. Because learning to drive less isn't just about safer streets and better quality of life – it's also key to winning the race to net zero. Featuring: Effie Kong, Jascha Franklin-Hodge, LaShea Johnson, Alex Hudson, Edwin Lindo, Thea Riofrancos. SUPPORTOutside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In. Subscribe to our FREE newsletter.Follow Outside/In on Instagram or Twitter, or join our private discussion group on Facebook LINKSRead more about Boston's 3-year plan to expand the city's biking infrastructure, make crosswalks safer for pedestrians, and offer biking classes to women and gender-diverse adults.The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) is in the middle of getting feedback on the Seattle Transportation Plan on how to build a safer and more efficient transportation system.Read about Cul De Sac Tempe, a new car-free community in Arizona, where residents are contractually forbidden from parking within a quarter-mile radius of the site. (Bloomberg)According to studies in Cambridge, MA and Toronto, Canada, bike lanes have a neutral or even positive impact on local businesses, even if some parking spaces are taken away.A paper in the journal Energy Research & Social Science describes the EV transition as “a wolf in sheep's clothing” and argues that private vehicle electrification is neither effective, nor equitable.This LA Times Op-ed argues that switching to electric cars isn't enough to solve climate change.Studies say pedestrians and bikers are more likely to be hit by EVs and cause more damage because they're quieter and heavier than gas cars.Archival audio in this episode come from the 1953 film The American Road funded by Ford Motor Company, and Futurama at the 1939 NY World's Fair. CREDITSHost: Nate HegyiReported and produced by Felix PoonMixed by Felix Poon and Taylor QuimbyEdited by Taylor QuimbyEditing help from Rebecca lavoie, Justine Paradis, Jessica Hunt, and Mara HaplamazianRebecca Lavoie is our Executive ProducerMusic for this episode by Blue Dot Sessions, and Roy Edwin WilliamsOur theme music is by Breakmaster Cylinder.Outside/In is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio
In this episode, League of Education Voters CEO Lauri Hennessey talks with Edwin Lindo, a Critical Race Theory scholar at the University of Washington. Professor Lindo addresses the controversy around Critical Race Theory, clarifying what it is and also how incredibly important it is that students learn about our true history. You can find more about him on Twitter @edwinlindoBook recommendations from Estelita's Library:* Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic - Critical Race Theory: An Introduction* Paulo Freire - Pedagogy of the Oppressed* Howard Zinn - The People's History of the United States
Join us for a spotlight on one of our partner bookstores, Estelita's Library, a “justice-focused community library and bookstore” originally located in the Beacon Hill neighborhood. Local Journalist Mike Davis chats with Estelita's co-founder Edwin Lindo about the history and founding of the bookstore and considers the impact the Library has on the Seattle community as they prepare to open a second location in the International District. Edwin Lindo, JD, is a critical race theory scholar and educator who is faculty within the Department of Family medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine; and Associate Director for Equity and Critical Teaching in the Center for Leadership and Innovation in Medical Education. Edwin teaches, presents, and writes on issues of race and racism within Medicine and society. He is also the creator of The Praxis Podcast. You can reach Edwin via Twitter @edwinlindo. Mike Davis is a local journalist covering arts, culture, and politics for the South Seattle Emerald. Davis is also co-host of “Clap Back Culture” on Converge Media. Estelita's Library: http://estelitaslibrary.com/ Presented by Town Hall Seattle. To become a member or make a donation click here.
Join us for a spotlight on one of our partner bookstores, Estelita's Library, a “justice-focused community library and bookstore” originally located in the Beacon Hill neighborhood. Local Journalist Mike Davis chats with Estelita's co-founder Edwin Lindo about the history and founding of the bookstore and considers the impact the Library has on the Seattle community as they prepare to open a second location in the International District. Edwin Lindo, JD, is a critical race theory scholar and educator who is faculty within the Department of Family medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine; and Associate Director for Equity and Critical Teaching in the Center for Leadership and Innovation in Medical Education. Edwin teaches, presents, and writes on issues of race and racism within Medicine and society. He is also the creator of The Praxis Podcast. You can reach Edwin via Twitter @edwinlindo. Mike Davis is a local journalist covering arts, culture, and politics for the South Seattle Emerald. Davis is also co-host of “Clap Back Culture” on Converge Media. Estelita's Library: http://estelitaslibrary.com/ Presented by Town Hall Seattle. To become a member or make a donation click here.
In what feels like a fireside chat, SNT meets with the minds of power couple, Edwin Lindo and Dr. Estell Williams, founders of Seattle's social justice bookstore and library, Estelita. From building community and psychological growth, to the Black Panther Party, and even love, these three griots discuss living the dream our ancestors imagined. #HelloSomebody LINKS Estelita's Library: Justice Focused Community Bookstore & Library http://estelitaslibrary.com/ Edwin Lindo Assistant Dean for Social & Health Justice at University of Washington - School of Medicine https://www.linkedin.com/in/edwin-lindo-a4628a6/ Dr. Estell Williams Estell Williams https://huddle.uwmedicine.org/estell-williams-mentoring-the-next-generation-of-black-doctors/ Judas and the Black Messiah https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judas_and_the_Black_Messiah Geronimo Pratt – https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/pratt-geronimo-1947-2011/ The Fire Next Time – James Baldwin https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/7753/the-fire-next-time-by-james-baldwin/ Maya Angelou – Still I Rise, poem https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46446/still-i-rise Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
In what feels like a fireside chat, SNT meets with the minds of power couple, Edwin Lindo and Dr. Estell Williams, founders of Seattle’s social justice bookstore and library, Estelita. From building community and psychological growth, to the Black Panther Party, and even love, these three griots discuss living the dream our ancestors imagined. #HelloSomebody LINKS Estelita’s Library: Justice Focused Community Bookstore & Library http://estelitaslibrary.com/ Edwin Lindo Assistant Dean for Social & Health Justice at University of Washington - School of Medicine https://www.linkedin.com/in/edwin-lindo-a4628a6/ Dr. Estell Williams Estell Williams https://huddle.uwmedicine.org/estell-williams-mentoring-the-next-generation-of-black-doctors/ Judas and the Black Messiah https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judas_and_the_Black_Messiah Geronimo Pratt – https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/pratt-geronimo-1947-2011/ The Fire Next Time – James Baldwin https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/7753/the-fire-next-time-by-james-baldwin/ Maya Angelou – Still I Rise, poem https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46446/still-i-rise Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
‘Hidden Barriers’ producer Jen Dev and health justice educator Edwin Lindo on raising awareness of and seeking solutions to systemic racism in the health care industry. When Dr. Ben Danielson resigned in protest from his post with Seattle Children's late last year, he provided a rallying point for those seeking changes to a health care industry that produces disparities in care based on race. Danielson’s departure brought greater attention to the issue and resulted in action from Seattle Children’s, which, among other things, launched an independent investigation into his claims. Systemic racism, though, is not about a single doctor or a single hospital. It is, by definition, everywhere. That broader view of inequities within the health care system is the subject of the second season of the Crosscut documentary series “Hidden Barriers,” in which data and personal stories are brought together to shed light on disparities invisible to many, but all too apparent to some. For this week’s episode of the Crosscut Talks podcast, we speak with the creator of “Hidden Barriers,” Jen Dev, about her approach to this story. Joining her is Edwin Lindo, the assistant dean for social and health sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine and one of the voices that helped guide Dev’s reporting. --- Credits Host: Mark Baumgarten Event producers: Jake Newman, Andrea O'Meara Engineers: Resti Bagcal, Viktoria Ralph
This is the first episode of a three-part series on understanding and dismantling race-based medicine by unearthing its origin and exposing the paucity of rigorous evidence in support of it. In this episode, we invite Critical Race Theory scholar Edwin Lindo, JD to discuss the invention of race, how its definition has changed over time,… Read More »Episode 141: Antiracism in Medicine Series Episode 2 – Dismantling Race-Based Medicine Part 1: Historical and Ethical Perspectives with Edwin Lindo
Hanna Scott previewing today's BLM marches/ updates on The CHAZ // Colleen O'Brien talks with a resident of one of the CHAZ apartment buildings // Edwin Lindo, UW race and medicine lecturer, on racism's role in public health and vice versa // Chris Sullivan on King County Metro cutting ties with SPD/ Metro's money problems // Feliks Banel, All Over the Map -- Hooverville, Nickelsville, and other temporary communities // Dr. Keith Jerome, UW Virology, on a potential 2nd wave/more testing // Dose of Kindness -- a car and a scholarship for a responsible young man // Gee Scott on Coach Carroll's explanation for not hiring Colin Kaepernick
As people take to the streets to protest anti-Black racism despite the continued risk of coronavirus, many health experts have signed an open letter to support the movement, calling racism itself as a public health crisis. Add to this the data showing a disproportionate impact of Covid-19 on minority populations, and the conversation about racism and community health has been cast in an urgent new light. So Dave Ross calls Edwin Lindo, a scholar of Critical Race Theory and the Associate Director for the University of Washington's Center for Leadership and Innovation in Medical Education (CLIME). He also hosts The Praxis Podcast, which addresses racism as a health issue.
"We hear this narrative of a broken system, 'the system is broken, the system is broken, we have to fix it.' And what I remind my students is that the system actually isn't broken. It's doing exactly what it was designed to do. And our job is to create a new one and to build a new one," says Dr. Rachel Hardeman in the latest episode of the Praxis, in the second part of a powerful conversation with host Edwin Lindo.Hardeman, an acclaimed assistant professor in the Division of Health Policy and Management at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, is a health equity researcher who spends a lot of time studying the pervasiveness of race in medical education and the ways to dismantle the structures and the systems that have led to the health inequities we've been discussing in our interviews. She's joined in this episode by Dr. Eduardo Medina, a community health physician who works in a community health clinic in Minneapolis serving a diverse population, and has a practice in obstetrics with an interest in public health, health equity, and particularly around immigrant health and health for the poor and underserved. He does research focused on social determinants of health, racism, community health and chronic disease management. Dr's. Hardeman and Medina offer a frank assessment of the systemic racism pervading our medical system and our schools of medicine, along with a prescription for bringing about the change needed to significantly improve health equity and justice for all.
In a special edition of The Praxis, Edwin Lindo is joined by Dr. Rachel Hardeman and Dr. Eduardo Medina - two phenomenal scholars, researchers and amazing doctors from the University of Minnesota Schools of Medicine and Public Health - to take a hard look at racism in medical education and practice. Dr. Rachel Hardeman is an assistant professor in the Division of Health Policy and Management at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health and is a noted health equity researcher. She studies the impact of race and racism on health outcomes with the focus on moms and babies. Dr. Hardeman spends a lot of time studying the pervasiveness of race in medical education and really thinking about the ways to dismantle the structures and systems that have allowed health inequities to continue and persist in our own country. Dr. Eduardo Medina is a community health doctor who works in a community clinic in Minneapolis and serves a very diverse population of patients, has a practice in obstetrics, interest in public health, health equity (particularly around immigrant health care for poor and underserved communities), does research and focuses on social determinants of health, racism, community health and chronic disease management.
In this podcast Edwin Lindo, JD, CLIME’s Associate Director of Critical Teaching and Equity and William Harris, MD, the block lead for the University of Washington School of Medicine’s Blood and Cancer Block discuss how they worked together to improve a presentation on health outcome inequality, with a specific focus on breast cancer in African American women. We created this podcast to highlight Edwin’s work as a consultant with CLIME. He is available to assist faculty in making their teaching more equitable and inclusive.
In this podcast, Drs. Amanda Kost, Edwin Lindo, and Roberto Montenegro return to the studio to provide some “real-life” examples of how to implement the critical teaching frameworks they introduced during their first CLIMEcast, “Do No Harm: An Introduction to Equitable Teaching.” They share strategies for framing instructional sessions about race and gender that invite critique and mutual learning, responding positively to student critique, and turning teaching challenges into learning opportunities.
Edwin Lindo runs Estelita’s Library - a new Justice Focused Community Bookstore & Library located inside the Station Wine Bar in North Beacon Hill. We discuss growing up in San Francisco’s Mission District, attending law school and finding liberation through struggle and activism. Edwin Lindo and Estelita's Library Social Media & Web: facebook.com/EdwinLindoSF/ twitter.com/edwinlindo facebook.com/pg/Estelitas-Library-Justice-Focused-Community-Bookstore-Library-213525645868594/about/?ref=page_internal No Blueprint & AmbassadorStories Social Media: instagram.com/ambassadorstories/ twitter.com/AMBStories facebook.com/NoBlueprintPodcast/ ambassadorstoriesllc@gmail.com Support + Merch paypal.me/AmbassadorStories patreon.com/AmbassadorStories ambassadorstories.bigcartel.com/ Official Websites: NoBlueprintPodcast.com/ AmbassadorStories.com/
Hosts Nick Jarin and Dyer Oxley kick off the show with an announcement about NW NERD’s upcoming cosplay contest and con after party on March 2nd (4:30). Then, Dyer reveals that he was among the many Americans who were notified by Twitter that he interacted with Russian troll tweets (6:00). Wrapping up the news section, Dyer interviews Edwin Lindo, who launched a very successful GoFundMe for black youth in Seattle to see Black Panther in theaters (12:25). This episode’s feature looks at the unlikely rise to ubiquity of the computer lab classic Oregon Trail (20:30). Nick gets quizzed on Oregon/Northwest geography and history (40:00) before paying off the last quiz’s bet (50:46). 4:30 -- Cosplay Contest6:00 -- Dyer and Russian Twitter12:25 -- Interview: Black Panther GoFundMe organizer20:30 -- Feature: Oregon Trail40:00 -- Quiz: Oregon Trail history and geography50:46 -- Payoff: Nick on Cowboy Bebophttps://www.gofundme.com/51n5tigSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/nwnerd)
Episode 1: Progressive Millennials co-hosts sit down with University of Washington School of Law lecturer Edwin Lindo to discuss race & politics. Also, the co-hosts reflect on their very first memories of dealing with racism.
Episode 2: Progressive Millennials co-hosts sit down with University of Washington School of Law lecturer Edwin Lindo for part 2 of our discussion on race & politics. Also, the co-hosts discuss hate crimes in America.
Gyasi and Wes are joined by law professor Edwin Lindo to discuss a few things that have been in the news lately, along with an in depth discussion of what it means to be indigenous.