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Entrevista en La Diez Capital radio a la Dra. Laura Pulido, educadora de Loro Parque, que nos hace un balance del curso escolar 24/25 del Departamento de Educación.
Bienvenidos a La Diez Capital Radio! Están a punto de comenzar un nuevo episodio de nuestro Programa de Actualidad, donde la información, la formación y el entretenimiento se encuentran para ofrecerles lo mejor de las noticias y temas relevantes. Este programa, dirigido y presentado por Miguel Ángel González Suárez, es su ventana directa a los acontecimientos más importantes, así como a las historias que capturan la esencia de nuestro tiempo. A través de un enfoque dinámico y cercano, Miguel Ángel conecta con ustedes para proporcionar una experiencia informativa y envolvente. Desde análisis profundos hasta entrevistas exclusivas, cada emisión está diseñada para mantenerles al tanto, ofrecerles nuevos conocimientos y, por supuesto, entretenerles. Para más detalles sobre el programa, visiten nuestra web en www.ladiez.es. - Informativo de primera hora de la mañana, en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital Radio. El Gobierno de Canarias activa una nueva prealerta por temperaturas máximas en Tenerife y Gran Canaria. Además, la Aemet mantiene los avisos amarillos por fenómenos costeros y viento en cinco islas. Hoy hace un año: España actúa ante la emergencia de Canarias y adelantó la reunión para repartir a los menores. Hoy se cumplen 1.226 días del cruel ataque e invasión de Rusia a Ucrania. 3 años y 119 días. Hoy es jueves 3 de julio de 2025. Día Internacional Libre de Bolsas de Plástico. El 3 de julio se celebra el Día Internacional libre de bolsas de plástico, con un objetivo claro: reducir las bolsas de plástico de un solo uso y fomentar su consumo responsable. En el día a día, las bolsas de plástico se han convertido en uno de los objetos más cotidianos y también uno de los más perjudiciales para el medio ambiente. Algunos países, como Francia e Italia ya han prohibido la producción de bolsas de plástico y han reducido notablemente su consumo. Las bolsas de plástico tardan más de 500 años en descomponerse. Se estima que cada persona gasta una media de unas 230 bolsas de plástico al año, lo que representa más de 500 billones de bolsas de plástico en el mundo. Al no ser reciclables, las bolsas quedan en el planeta perjudicando a todos los que aquí vivimos, todos los seres vivos del planeta. A los océanos llegan cerca de 12 millones de toneladas de plásticos cada año. Estos residuos suponen una grave amenaza para los océanos y las especies marinas. Uno de cada seis peces que se venden en las pescaderías contiene microplásticos en sus estómagos. El plástico ya ha entrado en la cadena trófica. 1775.- Guerra de la Independencia de EEUU: el general George Washington toma el mando de las tropas sublevadas contra Inglaterra. 1898.- La flota norteamericana que bloqueaba la bahía de Santiago hunde los seis barcos de la escuadra española dirigida por el almirante Pascual Cervera. En la batalla mueren 323 españoles. España pierde Cuba. 1928.- Primera retransmisión de televisión en color en Londres por J.L. Baird. 1946.- Se estrena en París la película de Orson Welles "Ciudadano Kane". 1962.- Argelia se proclama República independiente. 1976.- Adolfo Suárez es nombrado presidente del Gobierno español. 1979.- Legalizada la masonería en España, tras una sentencia del Tribunal Supremo. 2005.- Entra en vigor en España la ley de matrimonios homosexuales. Santos Tomás, Trifón, Heliodoro y Dato. EE.UU. detiene el envío de un lote de armamento prometido a Ucrania. Netanyahu insiste en acabar con Hamás tras aceptar la oferta de tregua de EE.UU. y la milicia pide la retirada de tropas ¿Cómo podría afectar a Europa la reordenación comercial entre EE.UU. y China? Dimite la directora general del sistema de acogida para solicitantes de asilo en España. El Boletín Oficial del Estado (BOE) de este miércoles recoge el "cese, a petición propia" de Blasco, acordado en el Consejo de Ministros. El PSOE intenta capear la "dolorosa" entrada en prisión de Cerdán a tres días del Comité que reestructure el partido. El Supremo exige al Estado y a Canarias un informe quincenal sobre los menores refugiados. Los gobiernos tendrán que informar sobre los avances alcanzados para cumplir con la orden del Tribunal, que obliga al Ejecutivo central a hacerse cargo de mil jóvenes solicitantes de asilo acogidos en las islas. El paro baja en Canarias en 1.467 personas en junio. Desciende un 1% menos que el mes anterior, acumulando cuatro meses consecutivos de descensos. Vigilancia Aduanera pierde la mitad de su capacidad de lucha antinarco en Canarias. El patrullero Cóndor del Servicio de Vigilancia Aduanera (SVA) está averiado... y su tripulación varada en tierra. Los agentes marítimos de ese cuerpo policial han recibido orden de desembarco de la delegación de la Agencia Tributaria en Canarias “por causa de fuerza mayor”. Canarias se queda así sin la parte principal de su despliegue en la lucha contra el narcotráfico. No se ha habilitado un barco de reemplazo, y en el archipiélago la Agencia Tributaria tiene solo operativo el patrullero Sacre, con base en Tenerife, con menos agentes, menos tamaño y menos autonomía de navegación. Canarias atiende hasta mayo a casi 300.000 turistas extranjeros más que en el mismo periodo de 2024. La llegada de visitantes internacionales crece el 3,7% respecto a mayo del año anterior, con 1,1 millones de personas; en los cinco primeros meses del año son ya 6,8 millones, un más 4,1% más, la segunda subida más potente por comunidades. 3 julio 1973. David Bowie decide retirarse del mundo de la música, y lo haría en pleno directo en Londres, en el concierto final de su gira. Sería uno de los momentos clave del glam rock británico. - Sección de actualidad con mucho sentido de Humor inteligente en el programa El Remate de La Diez Capital radio con el periodista socarrón y palmero, José Juan Pérez Capote, El Nº 1. - Sección en La Diez Capital radio con Cristina A. Secas y Francisco Pallero en La Diez Capital Radio.Economía, actualidad y análisis con criterio. La economista Cristina A. Secas y el periodista Francisco Pallero unen conocimiento y experiencia para desgranar cada semana las claves económicas que marcan el rumbo de Canarias, España y el mundo. Una conversación directa, crítica y sin concesiones sobre política económica, empleo, fiscalidad, inversión pública y el día a día que afecta a ciudadanos y empresas. Información rigurosa con vocación de servicio público. - Entrevista en La Diez Capital radio a la Dra. Laura Pulido, educadora de Loro Parque, que nos hace un balance del curso escolar 24/25 del Departamento de Educación. - En La Diez Capital Radio conversamos con Konstantin Hinner, CEO, y Juan Pablo Cabrera Molina, Director Comercial de Proyectos Insulares, una empresa que está revolucionando el sector inmobiliario en Canarias. ¿Qué es lo primero que debo hacer si quiero vender mi casa? ¿Cuánto influye la situación del mercado inmobiliario en la decisión de vender? ¿Es un buen momento para vender mi propiedad? Una conversación imprescindible para quienes buscan soluciones modernas y accesibles para el acceso a la vivienda. - 🎙️ Entrevista a Luis Macías – Vocación, deporte y educación. En este episodio conversamos con Luis Macías, profesor del Colegio Luther King La Laguna y entrenador de baloncesto, una figura clave en la formación de jóvenes tanto dentro como fuera de las aulas. Luis nos habla de su experiencia como docente, su compromiso con los valores del deporte y cómo combina la enseñanza con su labor como entrenador. Una charla inspiradora sobre la importancia del trabajo en equipo, la educación emocional y el papel que juega el deporte en el desarrollo integral de los estudiantes.
En nuestro episodio 374 conversamos con Sandra Quitián, CHRO de WOM Colombia, Ignacio Giraldo CEO de Rappipay y Laura Pulido, Head of Sales en WeWork sobre:+ Cómo alimentar el bienestar de los empleados en las compañías.+ Potenciar el bienestar y la productividad del talento. + Ser productivos de forma sostenible y a largo plazo.+ Incentivar el bienestar y la bondad para generar una mejor sociedad.+ Los niveles actuales de productividad de la empresa.+ Analizar el nivel de energía e involucramiento de los empleados.Gracias a WeWork por apoyarnos en este episodio.Acá puedes conocer más sobre Hackers del Talento y Ricardo PinedaSuscríbete a nuestro newsletter Cartas al Talento donde reflexionamos sobre Talento Humano, el futuro del trabajo y la humanización
Laura Pulido professor of Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies and Geography at the University of Oregon where she studies race, environmental justice, and cultural memory. Her research explores the relationship between race, place, and social and environmental processes. She has devoted much of her career to studying environmental racism, especially how racism is conceptualized and operationalized in the scholarship and practice of environmental justice. Most recently, she has been studying how white supremacy and white nationalism impact climate denial and refusal.
Mil perfums i mil colors. Crítica teatral de l'obra «La cançó de sempre». Dramatúrgia d'Albert Mora i Companyia 23. Intèrprets: Ariadna Montoro, Mireia Obregón, Marina García, Mireia Federico i Esteve Roig. Músics: Andreu Roqueta / Roser Gelis Estalella. Assessoria de moviment: Candela Díaz Sanz. Tècnic i assessoria en il·luminació: Andrés Piza. Tècnic de so: Salva Zanetti. Fotografies: W_Fotografia i @Instantsiuncl. Gravació de vídeos: Antoni Font-Mir. Tècnica de sala TGB: Camila Benavente. Taquilla TGB: Bea Fenollar. Producció Companyia 23 amb la col·laboració del Teate Eòlia. Agraïments: Floristeria Viver Serra, Laura Pulido, Mariona Olmos (MwFotografia), Gregori Ferrer, Sara Font, Anna Espunya, Neus Soler, Jordi Prat i Coll, Ana Alborch, Teresa Ferret, Xavier Albertí i a tota la família d’Eòlia. Direcció musical i arranjaments: Gregori Ferrer. Direcció: Albert Mora. Teatre Eòlia, Barcelona, 6 setembre 2023. Reposició: Sala Gran, Teatre Gaudí Barcelona (TGB) Barcelona, 19 gener 2024. Veu: Andreu Sotorra. Música: Barcelona i jo. Interpretació: Joan Manuel Serrat i banda de Josep Maria Bardagí. Composició: Joan Manuel Serrat. Àbum: Material sensible, 2000.
En este primer capítulo de una nueva temporada aprovechamos para relanzar nuestra marca y el nombre de nuestro podcast: de Fintech Revolution Podcast a Fintech Talks by Colombia Fintech. Esta nueva temporada fue grabada desde la 5ta versión del Latam Fintech Market en la ciudad de Barranquilla. En este capítulo Paula Santander del equipo de Colombia Fintech conversa con Laura Pulido de WeWork y Santiago Espinoza de LexisNexis Risk, dos de nuestros grandes patrocinadores del Latam Fintech Market, sobre cómo desde la revolución de un nuevo modelo de trabajo y desde la tecnología aportan al ecosistema fintech. Acompáñennos.
Laura Pulido, Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies and Geography; and 2022–23 OHC Faculty Research Fellow. I am analyzing how National Historic Landmarks represent process of white supremacy and settler colonization in the U.S. Based on both archival analysis and fieldwork, we explore both the racial and colonial processes inherent in the creation of these sites, as well as how they are represented. We identified four forms of representation: erasure, valorization, multiculturalism, and acknowledgement. We are publishing these findings as an historical atlas that illustrates how white innocence and denial have been instrumental in the territorial development of the U.S.
Amanda Ramón es arquitecta, una apasionada de la moda y actualmente se encuentra realizando un doctorado sobre modelos digitales de edificios y sus aplicaciones energéticas. Y, mientras tanto, también divulga. Por ello, hablamos con ella sobre su canal de Youtube AEscala, su reciente estancia en Emiratos Árabes y, entre otras muchos y variopintos temas, sobre Pedro Pascal y BTS. Finalmente, en un nuevo PaliqueJIC, charlamos con Laura Pulido sobre micorrizas en retamas. ¿Estás listo para subir a las alturas de la divulgación? ¡Comenzamos! Bienvenidxs a Palique Divulgativo, un podcast semanal sobre ciencia en el que hablaremos sobre las últimas noticias científicas, polémicas y más cosas interesantes. Puedes utilizar el hashtag #PaliqueDivulgativo o etiquetarnos para dejarnos tus preguntas y dudas por Twitter y las responderemos al inicio del siguiente episodio. TWITTER: Amanda Ramón: https://twitter.com/amandaaescala Palique Divulgativo: https://twitter.com/PDivulgativo Rafael Suárez: https://twitter.com/rafsuafu Daniel Prieto:https://twitter.com/100cerosblog Víctor de León: https://twitter.com/BiodiverSiTal Adrián Flores: https://twitter.com/adrifloresrvl
Bringing together 100 essential critical articles across 4 volumes, Literature and the Environment: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2021) is a comprehensive collection of the most important academic writings on ecocriticism and literature's engagement with environmental crisis. With texts by key scholars, creative writers and activists, the articles in these four volumes follow the development and history of environmental criticism, as well as interdisciplinary conversations with contemporary philosophy and media studies. Literature and the Environment includes work by such writers as: Stacy Alaimo, Jonathan Bate, Winona LaDuke, Laura Pulido, Kyle Powis Whyte, Jacques Derrida, Ursula K. Heise, Bruno Latour, Rob Nixon, Ken Saro-Wiwa, William Shakespeare, Leslie Marmon Silko, Henry David Thoreau, Rita Wong. E.O. Wilson, Cary Wolfe and William Wordsworth. Stephanie LeMenager is Barbara and Carlisle Moore Distinguished Professor in English and American Literature and Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, USA. She is co-founder (with Stephanie Foote) of Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities and her previous books include Living Oil: Petroleum and Culture in the American Century (2014). Teresa Shewry is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. She is the author of Hope At Sea: Possible Ecologies in Oceanic Literature (2015). Gargi Binju is a researcher at the University of Tübingen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Bringing together 100 essential critical articles across 4 volumes, Literature and the Environment: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2021) is a comprehensive collection of the most important academic writings on ecocriticism and literature's engagement with environmental crisis. With texts by key scholars, creative writers and activists, the articles in these four volumes follow the development and history of environmental criticism, as well as interdisciplinary conversations with contemporary philosophy and media studies. Literature and the Environment includes work by such writers as: Stacy Alaimo, Jonathan Bate, Winona LaDuke, Laura Pulido, Kyle Powis Whyte, Jacques Derrida, Ursula K. Heise, Bruno Latour, Rob Nixon, Ken Saro-Wiwa, William Shakespeare, Leslie Marmon Silko, Henry David Thoreau, Rita Wong. E.O. Wilson, Cary Wolfe and William Wordsworth. Stephanie LeMenager is Barbara and Carlisle Moore Distinguished Professor in English and American Literature and Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, USA. She is co-founder (with Stephanie Foote) of Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities and her previous books include Living Oil: Petroleum and Culture in the American Century (2014). Teresa Shewry is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. She is the author of Hope At Sea: Possible Ecologies in Oceanic Literature (2015). Gargi Binju is a researcher at the University of Tübingen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
Bringing together 100 essential critical articles across 4 volumes, Literature and the Environment: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2021) is a comprehensive collection of the most important academic writings on ecocriticism and literature's engagement with environmental crisis. With texts by key scholars, creative writers and activists, the articles in these four volumes follow the development and history of environmental criticism, as well as interdisciplinary conversations with contemporary philosophy and media studies. Literature and the Environment includes work by such writers as: Stacy Alaimo, Jonathan Bate, Winona LaDuke, Laura Pulido, Kyle Powis Whyte, Jacques Derrida, Ursula K. Heise, Bruno Latour, Rob Nixon, Ken Saro-Wiwa, William Shakespeare, Leslie Marmon Silko, Henry David Thoreau, Rita Wong. E.O. Wilson, Cary Wolfe and William Wordsworth. Stephanie LeMenager is Barbara and Carlisle Moore Distinguished Professor in English and American Literature and Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, USA. She is co-founder (with Stephanie Foote) of Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities and her previous books include Living Oil: Petroleum and Culture in the American Century (2014). Teresa Shewry is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. She is the author of Hope At Sea: Possible Ecologies in Oceanic Literature (2015). Gargi Binju is a researcher at the University of Tübingen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/environmental-studies
Bringing together 100 essential critical articles across 4 volumes, Literature and the Environment: Critical and Primary Sources (Bloomsbury, 2021) is a comprehensive collection of the most important academic writings on ecocriticism and literature's engagement with environmental crisis. With texts by key scholars, creative writers and activists, the articles in these four volumes follow the development and history of environmental criticism, as well as interdisciplinary conversations with contemporary philosophy and media studies. Literature and the Environment includes work by such writers as: Stacy Alaimo, Jonathan Bate, Winona LaDuke, Laura Pulido, Kyle Powis Whyte, Jacques Derrida, Ursula K. Heise, Bruno Latour, Rob Nixon, Ken Saro-Wiwa, William Shakespeare, Leslie Marmon Silko, Henry David Thoreau, Rita Wong. E.O. Wilson, Cary Wolfe and William Wordsworth. Stephanie LeMenager is Barbara and Carlisle Moore Distinguished Professor in English and American Literature and Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Oregon, USA. She is co-founder (with Stephanie Foote) of Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities and her previous books include Living Oil: Petroleum and Culture in the American Century (2014). Teresa Shewry is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA. She is the author of Hope At Sea: Possible Ecologies in Oceanic Literature (2015). Gargi Binju is a researcher at the University of Tübingen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
Pulido: “Con una dosis alcanzamos casi el 80% de eficacia”
We begin our discussion about Critical Race Theory (CRT) with a Primer of sorts to lay down the foundation for what CRT is, it's origins, and the different aspects of its application in academia and the classroom. As Michael Scott says in the office, "Why don't you explain it to me like I'm five", and this is just the approach we took with this episode. Whether you've been studying CRT your whole life, or have very strong opposition to it, this episode will at least lay down the framework for understanding it and help us navigate this controversial topic and series. In the first of our three part series we talk with Daniel Hosang who is a Professor at Yale University and teaches Ethnicity Race & Migration, and American Studies. He is a well respected scholar in this field and has worked with many of the pioneers of CRT, to include Kimberle Crenshaw. Guest Bio:Daniel Martinez HoSang received his BA in History from Wesleyan University and PhD in American Studies and Ethnicity from the University of Southern California. He is the author of Racial Propositions: Ballot Initiatives and the Making of Postwar California (University of California Press, 2010) which was awarded the 2011 James A Rawley Prize from the Organization of American Historians. He is co-editor, with Oneka LaBennett and Laura Pulido, of Racial Formation in the 21st Century (University of California Press, 2012). HoSang's research and teaching explore the contradictory labor of race within U.S. political culture across a wide-range of sites, including electoral politics, social movements, and cultural production.He has a long record of collaboration with community-based organizations and labor unions as a trainer, board member, and advisor, with groups including the Restaurant Opportunities Center (ROC), the Alliance for a Just Society, Oakland Kids First!, the Partnership for Safety and Justice, and Forward Together.Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/faithpolitics)
There are nearly 3,000 designated historic landmarks across the country, each with their own set of descriptive plaques and associated tours. But how many of those monuments contain information about the racial injustice or white supremacy that were inherent in their history? That's a question University of Oregon professor Laura Pulido has set out to answer. Pulido joins us to discuss how these monuments reflect what the U.S. chooses to remember and represent in history.
Episode 2 of Antipod is the second in a two-part series dedicated to the life, work, and wisdom of Dr. Clyde Adrian Woods. This episode builds on the conversation that Akira and Brian had in the Episode 1, which engaged with a pair of panel discussions held in 2018 at the New Orleans Community Book Center and the American Association of Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. The panels focused on Dr. Woods’s Development Drowned and Reborn: The Blues and Bourbon Restorations of Post-Katrina New Orleans, edited by Jordan T. Camp and Laura Pulido (University of Georgia Press, 2017). In Episode 2, hosts Allison Guess and Alex Moulton dive deeper on themes presented in Episode 1, especially Woods’s notion of the Blues Epistemology. Allison and Alex trade licks with Dr. Woods, Sunni Patterson, and Dee-1, among others and craft a multi-layered understanding of the Blues Epistemology. They do so in conversation with “No One Knows the Mysteries at the Bottom of the Ocean,” which is the opening chapter of Black Geographies and the Politics of Place (Between the Lines Press, 2007), a book co-edited by Dr. Woods and Dr. Katherine McKittrick (Queen’s University, Canada). As they unfold the notions of “the underside,” “the bottom of the belly,” and “Blues time,” Allison and Alex refer to and draw upon a panel organized by the Antipod Sound Collective at the 2019 American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. That panel, titled “Creating a Soundscape of Radical Imagination: Podcasts as Scholarship,” involved a conversation among the Antipod Sound Collective members and Nerve V. Macaspac (Assistant Professor, College of Staten Island, City University of New York). ◆◆◆ Our theme music is "It’s Not Jazz" by Tronx. archive.org/details/netlabels archive.org/details/dystopiaq02…TronxItsNotJazz.mp3 Our interstitial music in this episode is: “I Am Who I Am” by Dee-1 featuring Shamarr Allen (Produced by Shamarr Allen); “When the Levee Breaks,” by Kansas Joe and Memphis Minnie; and “Attention” by Dee-1 featuring Sunni Patterson (Produced by Mystro). https://archive.org/details/Kansas_Joe_Memphis_Minnie-When_Levee_Breaks https://archive.org/details/Dee-1_-_The_Focus_Tape Our outro music for this episode is from a live performance of the New Orleans-based New Breed Brass Band, recorded on January 18, 2019 at the Crystal Bay Club in Crystal Bay, Nevada. https://archive.org/details/NewBreedBrassBand-TheRedRoomCrystalBayClubCrystalBayNV18-JAN-2019 Music from all of these artists is available on archive.org and licensed under Creative Commons 3.0. creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ ◆◆◆ Make sure to follow us on Twitter! @ThisIsAntipod and Instagram @antipod2019 and subscribe to our podcast. Follow Allison on Twitter @AllisonGuess1. Many thanks to The Antipode Foundation for their generous support. Episode 2 is written/hosted by Allison Guess and Alex Moulton. The episode was mixed and edited by Darren Patrick/dp. This episode was produced by all members of the Antipod Sound Collective. Please cite as: Antipod Sound Collective. "Episode 2: The Blues Epistemology, Lick Trading in Blues Time from the Bottom of the Belly." Written/hosted by Allison Guess and Alex Moulton, edited by Darren Patrick/dp. October 30, 2019. https://thisisantipod.org/2019/10/30/episode-2 Bibliography Woods, Clyde. 2017. Development Arrested: The Blues and Plantation Power in The Mississippi Delta. 2nd Edition. London: Verso. –––. 2017. Development Drowned and Reborn: The Blues and Bourbon Restorations in Post-Katrina New Orleans. Edited by Jordan T. Camp, and Laura Pulido. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press. Woods, Clyde and Katherine McKittrick. “No One Knows the Mysteries at the Bottom of the Ocean.” In Black Geographies and the Politics of Place, edited by Clyde Woods and Katherine McKittrick. Toronto: Between the Lines Press. –––, eds. 2007. Black Geographies and the Politics of Place. Toronto: Between the Lines Press.
An intro to Unit 3: Mapping Hidden Histories with Place-Based Experiences with Readings by Dolores Hayden, Laura Pulido, Rebecca Solnit, Steven High, Melanie Kiechle, and Devin Hunter. In addition, the episode introduces public history projects like the Slave Dwelling Project and the smartphone app Urban Archive. Finally the episode introduces the Mapping/Place-Based Project assigned for the week. — Featuring host Dr. Kera Lovell from the University of Utah.
Laura Pulido, UO professor of Ethnic Studies and Geography, discusses her research interests in critical human geography, political activism and social movements, environmental justice, Chicanix Studies, and Los Angeles. She also talks about how the disciplines of Ethnic Studies and Geography intersect. A self-described scholar activist, Pulido co-authored A People's Guide to Los Angeles—a "radical guidebook."
Colin Marshall talks with Patricia Wakida, editor of Heyday Books' new LAtitudes: An Angeleno's Atlas, a collection of cartographically organized essays on the real Los Angeles from such contributors as David L. Ulin, Glen Creason, Laura Pulido, Lynell George, and Josh Kun.
As we look ahead to the holiday season, has technology changed the way we celebrate? Have you switched from sending a stack of cards in the mail to sending them by e-mail? Is that proper etiquette? Laura Pulido with The Protocol Institute will join us along with HearSay tech consultant and career expert Ed Sykes of The Sykes Group.
Author Laura Pulido traces the roots of third world radicalism in Southern California during the 1960s and 1970s. Focusing on the Black Panther Party, El Centro de Accin Social y Autonomo (CASA), and East Wind, a Japanese American collective, she explores how these groups sought to realize their ideas about race and class, gender relations, and multiracial alliances. Series: "Voices" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 14997]
Author Laura Pulido traces the roots of third world radicalism in Southern California during the 1960s and 1970s. Focusing on the Black Panther Party, El Centro de Accin Social y Autonomo (CASA), and East Wind, a Japanese American collective, she explores how these groups sought to realize their ideas about race and class, gender relations, and multiracial alliances. Series: "Voices" [Public Affairs] [Humanities] [Show ID: 14997]