Form of social disadvantage and relegation to the fringe of society
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Writer and activist Shane Claiborne calls out the hypocrisy within fundamentalist Evangelical Christianity in America, advocating for a return to the radical compassion of Jesus.Shane challenges what it means to truly be "pro-life," challenges its entanglement with Christian nationalism, and its allegiance to Donald Trump. As he unpacks these priorities, he wrestles with what to keep, what to challenge, and what bones to "spit out” along the way.
Jameela Jamil joins us for a conversation about her rise to fame, the dangers of divisive echo chambers, and her decision to reject harmful beauty narratives.With her signature wit and vulnerability, Jameela's dives into toxic beauty standards, the destructive anti-aging narrative that has plagued women for generations, and the deep-rooted values that inspire Jameela to use her platform as a force for positive change.
Que viennent faire les cryptomonnaies dans un podcast sur la location courte durée ?L'idée n'est pas de comparer deux investissements, mais de souligner une trajectoire similaire. Il y a dix ans, la location courte durée était perçue comme marginale, incertaine, voire risquée. Aujourd'hui, elle s'est imposée comme un marché solide et incontournable.Dans cet épisode, nous analysons son évolution en adoptant le regard que l'on porte aujourd'hui sur les cryptomonnaies. Absence de réglementation, euphorie du marché, nécessité de professionnalisation : ce parallèle permet de mieux comprendre le chemin parcouru par la LCD et les enseignements pour l'avenir.Les débuts d'Airbnb ont marqué l'arrivée massive de nouveaux acteurs, séduits par des rendements élevés et un marché prometteur. La saturation a suivi, avec une concurrence croissante et des réglementations locales qui ont durci les conditions d'exploitation. Aujourd'hui, la professionnalisation s'impose : seuls ceux qui s'appuient sur des outils performants et une gestion rigoureuse parviennent à maintenir leur rentabilité.Euphorie, désillusion, stabilisation… Le parallèle avec le marché des cryptomonnaies nous offre un regard global et des pistes pour réfléchir aux stratégies nécessaires à une exploitation compétitive et durable à long terme.
durée : 00:13:21 - L'INVITE franceinfo soir - Le député de la Somme a réagi, mardi sur franceinfo, à la non-invitation de son parti aux tractations politiques en vue de former un nouveau gouvernement.
In Bolivia, "cholitas", or indigenous women, were long marginalised and discriminated against. Forty years ago, these women, recognisable by their traditional large skirts, bowler hats, and long braids, were barred from entering cinemas and certain restaurants. Since 2010, however, indigenous women have made unprecedented social strides, achieving genuine national recognition after their rights were enshrined in the Constitution. Today, they are in the spotlight, both in the media and in politics. A remarkable success, especially given that Bolivia remains one of the countries with the highest rates of violence against women in Latin America.
Aubrey Blanche-Sarellano is an Equity Operations Leader and Mathpath (Math Nerd and Empath). Her work has been featured in Wired, the Wall Street Journal, the Australian Financial Review, USA Today, and more. She is also the founder and CEO of Mathpath, her self-titled equitable design consultancy. Subscribe to Open To Work's Podcast here: https://youtube.com/@Opentoworkpod?si=6VHI8BrPNr1l7Wma Follow us on TikTok for more tips: https://www.tiktok.com/@opentoworkpod?_t=8l0LWuKRnQE&_r=1
Nos débats : La France Insoumise continue-t-elle à se marginaliser ?/ Sommes-nous armés contre les cyberattaques pro-russe ?
Nos débats : La France Insoumise continue-t-elle à se marginaliser ?/ Sommes-nous armés contre les cyberattaques pro-russe ?
There are approximately 2.7 million Muslims living in Italy, which amounts to about 4.9 percent of the population, a community that is being targeted by the current coalition government led by the right-wing Brothers of Italy party. They are the second largest religious group in the country after Christians, but local governments and mayors frequently impose restrictions on their right to practice their religion. This is the case in Monfalcone, a town in the Northern part of the peninsula. Our correspondent in Italy tells us more.
We chat to Dr. Heath Schechinger about the need for research into non-monogamy and how the current lack of insight into the non-monogamous experience impacts our families, workplaces and health care. Luckily, Heath is working alongside individuals and groups that are dedicated to researching alternative family structures and relationships and he shares with us some incredibly interesting and insightful data. But first, Siobhan and Rich discuss an exciting breaking news story and to finish, Question Of The Week makes a come back. We can't thank Dr. Heath enough for coming on the show. You can find him and his offerings at his website. He's a Co-Founder of the Modern Family Institute and is currently fundraising to establish a unique institute at UC Berkeley dedicated to the study of family and relationship diversity. If you're interested in helping with fundraising efforts, you can contact Heath at this form. Dr. Heath's also involved in many different organisations including The Polyamory Legal Advocacy Coalition (PLAC), American Psychological Association Division 44 Committee on Consensual Non-Monogamy (CNM) and Organization for Polyamory and Ethical Non-monogamy. He's an Affiliate Faculty member at the Kinsey Institute and an Advisor to the Kinsey Institute's Haslam Collection on Polyamory. You can follow us on socials, @poly_podcast on Instagram, Threads and Twitter. Find us at our website, the-poly-podcast.captivate.fm. Get in touch with us at our email address, podcastthepoly@gmail.com.
Advocate Ricki Spencer discusses marginalisation, including a focus on people struggling to pay rent during the cost of living crisis. Ricki is a trans sociologist, a member of multiple advisory panels and presents Quests By Community on Channel 31's Bent TV. Repeat interviews: Greens' MP for Richmond Gabrielle de Vietri discusses the rental crisis, the Greens' demands for a rent freeze and rent caps, and calls for the Victorian Government to scrap its plans to demolish public housing towers. Starts 14:33. Sean Mulcahy discusses the Rainbow Local Government Campaign and LGBTIQA+ inclusion and representation within local governments in Victoria. Starts 35.23. Our interviews with Gabrielle and Sean were first broadcast November 10 and October 27 and were edited for today's show. Our interview with Ricki was live to air today. 3CR broadcasts from the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation.
Watch behind the scenes with Bert on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/bert-de-vries-93230722 https://discord.gg/aNPkGUQtc5 https://twitter.com/MLStreetTalk Note, there is some mild background music on chapter 1 (Least Action), 3 (Friston) and 5 (Variational Methods) - please skip ahead if annoying. It's a tiny fraction of the overall podcast. YT version: https://youtu.be/2wnJ6E6rQsU Bert de Vries is Professor in the Signal Processing Systems group at Eindhoven University. His research focuses on the development of intelligent autonomous agents that learn from in-situ interactions with their environment. His research draws inspiration from diverse fields including computational neuroscience, Bayesian machine learning, Active Inference and signal processing. Bert believes that development of signal processing systems will in the future be largely automated by autonomously operating agents that learn purposeful from situated environmental interactions. Bert received nis M.Sc. (1986) and Ph.D. (1991) degrees in Electrical Engineering from Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) and the University of Florida, respectively. From 1992 to 1999, he worked as a research scientist at Sarnoff Research Center in Princeton (NJ, USA). Since 1999, he has been employed in the hearing aids industry, both in engineering and managerial positions. De Vries was appointed part-time professor in the Signal Processing Systems Group at TU/e in 2012. Contact: https://twitter.com/bertdv0 https://www.tue.nl/en/research/researchers/bert-de-vries https://www.verses.ai/about-us Panel: Dr. Tim Scarfe / Dr. Keith Duggar TOC: [00:00:00] Principle of Least Action [00:05:10] Patreon Teaser [00:05:46] On Friston [00:07:34] Capm Peterson (VERSES) [00:08:20] Variational Methods [00:16:13] Dan Mapes (VERSES) [00:17:12] Engineering with Active Inference [00:20:23] Jason Fox (VERSES) [00:20:51] Riddhi Jain Pitliya [00:21:49] Hearing Aids as Adaptive Agents [00:33:38] Steven Swanson (VERSES) [00:35:46] Main Interview Kick Off, Engineering and Active Inference [00:43:35] Actor / Streaming / Message Passing [00:56:21] Do Agents Lose Flexibility with Maturity? [01:00:50] Language Compression [01:04:37] Marginalisation to Abstraction [01:12:45] Online Structural Learning [01:18:40] Efficiency in Active Inference [01:26:25] SEs become Neuroscientists [01:35:11] Building an Automated Engineer [01:38:58] Robustness and Design vs Grow [01:42:38] RXInfer [01:51:12] Resistance to Active Inference? [01:57:39] Diffusion of Responsibility in a System [02:10:33] Chauvinism in "Understanding" [02:20:08] On Becoming a Bayesian Refs: RXInfer https://biaslab.github.io/rxinfer-website/ Prof. Ariel Caticha https://www.albany.edu/physics/faculty/ariel-caticha Pattern recognition and machine learning (Bishop) https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/uploads/prod/2006/01/Bishop-Pattern-Recognition-and-Machine-Learning-2006.pdf Data Analysis: A Bayesian Tutorial (Sivia) https://www.amazon.co.uk/Data-Analysis-Bayesian-Devinderjit-Sivia/dp/0198568320 Probability Theory: The Logic of Science (E. T. Jaynes) https://www.amazon.co.uk/Probability-Theory-Principles-Elementary-Applications/dp/0521592712/ #activeinference #artificialintelligence
Social media can serve as an avenue for empowerment but also has the capacity to deepen exclusion of already marginalised groups. How can we ensure online spaces are safe and equitable for all? Tonight on #ConsiderThis Melisa Idris speaks to researchers Vilashini Somiah and Benjamin YH Loh.
Mathilde Ramadier se penche sur les différentes raisons qui entrainent cette intolérance subit par un bon nombre de personnes bisexuelles.Selon l'essayiste, les femmes qui se définissent comme bisexuelles ou qui vivent une sexualité fluide ouvertement font l'objet de certains clichés ainsi que des discriminations. Et cela, venant autant de personnes hétérosexuelles que de personnes homosexuelles. Elle souhaite insister sur le fait qu'être bi est une sexualité à part entière.
durée : 02:00:25 - Les Matins - par : Quentin Lafay - Le président syrien Bachar el-Assad participera au sommet de la Ligue arabe vendredi 19 mai, après 13 ans d'absence. Après une longue période de marginalisation, cette participation signe-t-elle le retour de la Syrie sur la scène régionale ? - invités : Salam Kawakibi Chercheur, directeur du CAREP (Centre arabe de recherches et d'études politiques).; Leïla Vignal géographe, professeure et directrice du département de géographie à l'École normale supérieure (ENS), spécialiste de la Syrie et du Moyen-Orient, coordinatrice du Pôle Europe, Think-Tank Terra Nova
Borderlands is a monthly event where we create a warm hearted space in a Belfast pub for music and reflection on the most pressing issues facing our societies today. The conversation is led by the voices of musicians, activists, civic leaders and artists. This was our Advent event where our theme was Hope. Alan McBride works to advocate for those who lost loved ones in the Troubles in Northern Ireland. His own wife was killed in the Shankill bomb in 1993. He spoke about a book he is compiling about grassroots redemptive stories that emerged from the horror of the Troubles. Denise Bradley works for Corrymeela in the area of Marginalisation. She works with refugee communities and advocates for the victims of Gender Based Violence. Music is from Andy McClenaghan who plays a couple of songs he has written for Borderlands. Also we have two members of Na Leanaí, Fra Sands and Sorcha Turnbull playing some trad tunes and seasonal songs. We hope you enjoy this glimpse into a brave space for sacred stories. Borderlands is an event run by a small collective. Guardians Of The Flame works to record these kinds of voices and events and uses the audio skill of Fra Sands and the filming and editing skills of Josh Eaves.
delta talks about "not like other girls" and how people who feel alienated from womanhood are stigmatised as traitors. ask me questions: https://ngl.link/out_castpod patreon: patreon.com/out_castpod twitter: twitter.com/out_castpod instagram: instagram.com/out_castpod send me a voice message: https://anchor.fm/out_cast/message further contact: gndrqr98@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/out-castpod/message
delta talks about "not like other girls" and how people who feel alienated from womanhood are stigmatised as traitors. ask me questions: https://ngl.link/out_castpod patreon: patreon.com/out_castpod twitter: twitter.com/out_castpod instagram: instagram.com/out_castpod send me a voice message: https://anchor.fm/out_cast/message further contact: gndrqr98@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/out-castpod/message
Rosie Wilby is an award-winning comedian, author and podcaster who has appeared a number of times on BBC Radio 4 programmes including Woman's Hour, Saturday Live and Four Thought. Her first book Is Monogamy Dead? was longlisted for the Polari First Book Prize and followed a trilogy of solo shows investigating the psychology of love and relationships. Her new book The Breakup Monologues is based on her acclaimed podcast of the same name and it explores the science of heartbreak and the unexpected joy that can come from breakups.In this conversation Rosie talks about growing up and coming out as gay in the 1980s and how she found her crowd in the queer community after moving to London. She tells me about her experience of being in a 'secret' relationship for five years with a woman who hadn't come out to her parents and we talk about the internalized homophobia experienced by many and Rosie shares how she's learned to empower and enable others to 'own' and feel more at ease with their sexuality.Rosie includes a chapter in her book on friendship breakups and we talk about how they are rarely acknowledged in the same way as romantic relationships, and there's no 'script' for them, despite the pain they can cause.We talk about post-traumatic growth after a painful breakup and how they can eventually lead to healing personal growth, leaving us better equipped to make informed choices in future. Rosie shares her greatest learnings from her breakups and we discuss the merits of singledom.Rosie's first book, Is Monogamy Dead? explores the need to reinvestigate monogamy for modern times and she shares some inspired insights into how we can reimagine monogamy and make relationships work for us, without piling the pressure and expectation onto one person to provide everything we need.Rosie is on Twitter @rosiewilby and Instagram @breakupmonologues and you can check her book out here.Find Sophie on Instagram here.
Rhonda Moore is a medical anthropologist in her early 50s. After self diagnosing as autistic in 2019, she was formally diagnosed the following year. She spent her childhood in Chicago, USA, and now lives in Bethesda, Maryland, where she is Program Director in Global Mental Health at NIH (the National Institutes of Health, the main US government agency responsible for public health research). She has a PhD in Cultural Anthropology from Stanford University and postdoctoral fellowships from Stanford Medical School and the University of Texas, and has published four books, with a fifth – about mental health equity – on the way. In our conversation we talk about: ➡ Intergenerational autism ➡ The impact of growing up autistic in an abusive home ➡ Autism, trauma and resilience ➡ The intersectionality of autism, gender, age and race and its impact on marginalisation and health ➡ Being neurodivergent at work, disclosure, accommodations and career progression I hope you'll get as much out of our conversation as I did. Content warning: During this conversation Rhonda shares her childhood experience of domestic violence, so if this is something you don't want to hear about, you might choose not to listen to this episode. Squarepeg is a podcast in which neurodivergent women, and trans and nonbinary people, explore navigating a neurotypical world and share their insights, challenges and successes. I hope that these conversations will be inspiring and thought provoking, open you up to new ways of thinking about being neurodivergent, and help you feel more connected to a worldwide community of people with similar experiences. I'm Amy Richards, and after being diagnosed autistic at the age of 37 I'm now on a mission to learn more about different perspectives and issues around being a neurodivergent adult in a world that feels like it doesn't quite fit. EPISODE LINKS: Rhonda's Twitter: https://twitter.com/skyymoore Her LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rhondamoore/ If you'd like to connect or get in touch with Squarepeg, you can find me on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/squarepeg.community/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/squarepegautism Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/squarepegautism/ Or on my website: https://squarepeg.community/ THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS! A HUGE thank you to my amazing patrons, who support my work on the podcast: Abi Hunter, Amy Adler, Amy-Beth Mellor, Abigail J Moore, Ben Davies, Benita Borchard-Thierbach, Caroline, Cat Preston, Catrin Green, Cindy Bailey, Corinne Cariad, Danielle Warby, Dawn Trevellion, Elizabeth Williams, Elise, Jackie Allen, Jeff Goldman, Kate Faust, Katharine Richards, Katherine Lynch, Lea Li, Lilli Simmons, Lyb, Mandy Allen, Pete Burke, Rebecca Kemp, Sarah Jeffery, Sarah Swanton, Sioned Wynn, Susan Millington, Suzanna Chen, Suzanne, Tree Hall, Una Walkenhorst, Vera Cady, Vicki Temple and Victoria Routledge. If you're enjoying the Squarepeg podcast and would like to help me carry on making new episodes, you can become a member of the Squarepeg community on Patreon from just £3 per month: https://www.patreon.com/squarepegpodcast
Rough Edges is a community centre for people experiencing homelessness and other forms of marginalisation in Darlinghurst. This drop-in centre is operated by St John's Anglican Church and supervised by Team Leader, Ryan Naoum. As a service, Rough Edges aims to create a safe space where community is fostered and individuals can move from crisis to flourish.In this episode, Ryan talks about the issues facing Darlinghurst's communities, how Rough Edges has found new ways to create impact owing to the pandemic, and the misconceptions people have about communities experiencing homelessness.What Can We Do is produced by Samuham Media, and hosted by Prema Menon.This podcast is also available on major podcast platforms.
Trailblazing psychotherapeutic counselor, coach and award-winning international wellness expert Grace Quantock hasn't let chronic illness or disability stop her from living a fulfilled, joyful life. Living – and thriving – with often debilitating illness, she understands the emotional and physical rollercoaster that accompanies diagnosis and life struggles. Grace and host Gabby highlight and address the obstacles marginalized and multi-marginalized communities are met with. From discrimination and ignorance to technology and trauma, Grace works with clients all over the world that are faced with the question ‘how can we learn to live well in a society not designed for us?' In this episode, Grace shares her own inspiring story, along with some tools and techniques that can help.
A study has found that Muslim children face systematic exclusion at the pre-primary level in Delhi’s private schools – less than 3% of those who applied to private unaided schools at the nursery level were admitted. Jannat Fatima Farooqui, co-author of the study, speaks to All Indians Matter.
Carrying on from the first episode, Charlene Delos Santos and Craig Petty hear perspectives on marginalisation with Dave Andrews and Uncle Ray Minniecon helping us to explore the topic of marginalisation and continue to be challenged in the conversation about what it takes to put Jesus in the centre. We want to embody a lifestyle of justice. SURRENDER partners with dozens of organisations and hundreds of initiatives, we invite you to find them and take action at surrender.org.au
Charlene and Craig hear perspectives on marginalisation from Uncle Ray Minniecon and Dave Andrews. What does it take to place Jesus in the centre? SURRENDER partners with dozens of organisations and hundreds of initiatives. Find them and take action at surrender.org.au Pastor Ray Minniecon Pastor Ray Minniecon is a descendant of the Kabi Kabi nation and the Gurang Gurang nation of South-East Queensland. Pastor Ray is also a descendant of the South Sea Islander people with deep and abiding connections to the people of Ambrym Island. Pastor Ray ministers at St John's Church in Sydney, is a resource worker for the Uniting Aboriginal and Islander Christian Congress, honorary pastor at St. John's Scarred Tree Ministry in Glebe and Director of Bunji Consultancies. He was a former National Director of World Vision Australia's Indigenous programs. Pastor Ray has a BA in Theology from Murdoch University and assisted in the establishment of Aboriginal studies and employment programs at that university. Dave Andrews Dave Andrews, his wife Ange, and their family, have lived and worked in intentional communities with marginalised groups of people in Australia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and Nepal for more than forty years. He now lives in a large joint household with his wife, children, grandchildren and others in an inner city community in Brisbane. Dave is particularly interested in radical spirituality, incarnational community and the dynamics of personal and social transformation.
Ben grew up in a Glasgow housing estate, then married, went to University and made a life for himself as a musician. But some years later, he was homeless (R)
Ben grew up in a Glasgow housing estate, then married, went to University and made a life for himself as a musician. But some years later, he was homeless (R)
Even though the world is richer today than ever before, a large number of people do not share in those riches, even in democracies. So, what does living in a democracy mean for people who simultaneously confront persistent deprivations and increasing inequalities? Do people living in poverty absorb the universalistic ideas associated with democracy? Or do their precarious lives overwhelm them so much so that they cannot act beyond particularistic concerns? These are the questions that Indrajit Roy tackles in Politics of the Poor: Negotiating Democracy in Contemporary India. Indrajit Roy is Senior Lecturer in Global Development Politics at the University of York. "Why the subaltern chose, not Hindutva, but Trinamool in Bengal""India: a year after Narendra Modi's re-election the country's democracy is developing fascistic undertones""Contesting Consensus. Disputing Inequality: Agonistic Subjectivities in Rural Bihar"Twitter: Indrajit Roy Dan Banik In Pursuit of Developmenthttps://in-pursuit-of-development.simplecast.com/
This week, Jonathan sits down with three leaders from the charity accelerator The Voluntary Solidarity Fund (VSF) to discuss the complex topic of marginalisation. Jean Pierre Casey, Executive Trustee, VSF, Andy Keen-Downs, CEO, Prison Advice and Care Trust (PACT), and Caroline Hattersley, Director, women@thewell, all reveal the intrinsic relationship between health and social inclusion, unravelling how good health is far more intricate than freedom from disease.
This week I speak to Erinn Oxford, Executive Director of The Dale Ministries in Toronto Canada, on a life time spent serving those who have found themselves living on the streets. We speak about what it is like to be nomadic, how the concept of 'home' can have little to do with physical spaces, what is difficult about serving such vulnerable people, how brokenness can actually unearth blessedness, and what the church can do to create safer spaces for the marginalised to gather and find family. Throughout our conversation, Erinn offers insight after insight on serving people with highly difficult life experiences and discovering their joy in the midst of such hardship.
Supportez toutEs ou pantoute sur Patreon À PROPOS DE CET ÉPISODE Ça vous arrive tu de marcher dans votre ville ou dans votre village pis de vous sentir pas tout à fait en sécurité? Ou de vous sentir pas tout à fait bienvenuE? Ça peut être à cause de regards, des règlements, des commentaires sur votre passage, des installations qui répondent pas à vos besoins. Ou ben un manque de lampadaire dans une ruelle, des horaires d'autobus qui fit pas avec votre vie, des parcs payants pour pouvoir profiter de la nature. L'accès aux espaces supposément publics, pis le sentiment de sécurité dans ces espaces, a pas l'air égal égal vu d'ici. Mais là à toutEs ou pantoute on est pas du genre à tirer des grandes conclusions sans pouvoir se backer par des paroles d'expertEs, donc on a essayé d'en savoir plus sur premièrement, à qui la rue? et deuxièmement, comment ça donc que le monde est pas à tout le monde? Pour parler de ce sujet complexe mais important, on a rencontré la chercheuse et autrice Célia Bensiali. Célia travaille avec une approche intersectionnelle sur les pratiques d'engagement des jeunes en contexte urbain. Elle nous parle de ses recherches et d'espace public en général dans une entrevue vraiment intéressante. Rox nous lit aussi un texte de Catherine Beau-Ferron sur l'arrière pays et le sexisme. Vous pouvez trouver ce texte dans l'édition 2021 de l'Agenda des femmes de remue-ménage. Il a aussi été publié dans l'édition numéro 2 du journal à tendance féministe, anarchiste, écologiste et paysanne La Grève. Nos invitées Célia Bensiali Son projet de recherche TRYSPACE Son profil Research Gate Queering the map Librairie Racines Catherine Beau-Ferron : Agenda des femmes 2021 Nos références Laurie: Diversité 02 Alex: Collectif C(Rues) sur le harcèlement de rue pour toutes les infos sur le harcèlement de rue! Merci à Marie-Eve Boisvert pour le montage Laurie LaFée Perron pour la musique Odrée Laperrière pour l'illustration Visites le toutesoupantoute.com pour tous nos épisodes, et pour de la merch de star! Vous pouvez aussi faire un don non récurrent ici! -- Attention, les montants sont en dollars US! Suivez-nous sur instagram, sur Facebook, ou écrivez-nous un e-mail au toutesoupantoute@gmail.com
Nicole McKinney, Founder, and President of WAKING THE unCONSIOUS In, 2019 Nicole founded and launched the Not for Profit WtC WAKING the unCONSCIOUS that has a core premise to focus a lens on both the systemic and relational dynamics of elements like Anti-Black/POC Racism and Unconscious Bias, specifically the Unpacking of Privilege and Marginalisation, allowing for critical examination and an understanding of intersectionality. Nicole's work is inspired by the legacy of her father, Dr. David McKinney Jr: a renowned Academic in the US and Canada, who ended his career at the University of Guelph With a career-long focus on anti-black racism, he worked with organizations such as the Black United Front in Nova Scotia and pioneered research into police brutality. The Women Leadership Nation, Breaking Barriers Podcast is committed to helping women break barriers through the power of storytelling, self-awareness, and knowledge sharing. We started this podcast as a platform for women to share their journeys, experiences, and insights so that we can learn and grow from one another. We hope you enjoyed this episode and would love for you to subscribe to our podcast! Also, we hope you will follow us on our journey thru Instagram at @LadouceurJennifer! Thanks for listening and welcome to the Women Leadership Nation community! Together we can break barriers! www.WomenLeadershipNation.com He also advocated for human rights in conjunction with Daniel G Hill and took on several major court cases including the famed 1990 Supreme Court case, McKinney vs the University of Guelph.
Producer and Host: Sneha Visakha Intro Music: Wehrmut by Godmode Outro Music: Opheliea's Blues by Audionautix In the ninth episode of the Feminist City, Sneha Visakha is in conversation with Dr. Mohsin Alam Bhat, Associate Professor, Jindal Global Law School. He is the principal investigator of the Housing Discrimination Project (HDP), a three-year empirical research project on urban rental housing discrimination in India. In this episode, they discuss the housing discrimination project and the nature of rental housing discrimination against Muslims in Indian cities such as Delhi and Mumbai. Dr. Bhat explains the modalities and narratives that underpin discriminatory practices against Muslims in the city and how ‘access' to housing networks differs for different groups in the city. He also highlights the need to understand the cost and impact of discrimination, not merely in terms of outcomes, but as an ongoing, affective process, that results in the construction of exclusionary cities. They also discuss the role of law in addressing discrimination and the importance of multidisciplinary engagements with the law. You can read more about Dr. Mohsin Alam Bhatt, here: https://jgu.edu.in/jgls/faculty/mohsin-alam-bhat/ and find more information on the Housing Discrimination Project, here: https://jgu.edu.in/jgls/faculty-research/research-centers/public-interest-law/housing-discrimination-project/. Readings Cities Divided: How Exclusion Of Muslims Sharpens Inequality, Mohsin Alam Bhat & Asaf Ali Lone, Article14 https://www.article-14.com/post/cities-divided-how-exclusion-of-muslims-sharpens-inequality Bigotry At Home: How Delhi, Mumbai Keep Muslim Tenants Out, Mohsin Alam Bhat, Article14 https://www.article-14.com/post/bigotry-at-home-how-delhi-mumbai-keep-muslim-tenants-out Urban Rental Housing Market: Caste and Religion Matters in Access, Sukhdeo Thorat, Anuradha Banerjee, Vinod K. Mishra, Firdaus Rizvi, EPW (2015) https://www.epw.in/journal/2015/26-27/housing-discrimination/urban-rental-housing-market.html For whom does the phone (not) ring? Discrimination in the rental housing market in Delhi, India, Saugato Datta, Vikram Pathania, WIDER Working Paper (2016) https://www.wider.unu.edu/publication/whom-does-phone-not-ring Muslims in Indian Cities: Trajectories of Marginalisation, eds. Laurent Gayer, Christophe Jaffrelot, Hurst Publishers (2012) https://books.google.co.in/books/about/Muslims_in_Indian_Cities.html?id=qSnmSjPO6JsC&source=kp_book_description&redir_esc=y In Search of Fraternity: Constitutional Law and the Context of Housing Discrimination in India, Rowena Robinson, EPW https://www.epw.in/journal/2015/26-27/housing-discrimination/search-fraternity.html The Capitalist Logic of Spatial Segregation: A Study of Muslims in Delhi, Ghazala Jamil, EPW http://epw.in/journal/2014/3/special-articles/capitalist-logic-spatial-segregation.html The Right Time to Speak of Housing Rights in India is Right Now, Sushmita Pati, TheWire https://thewire.in/urban/housing-rights-covid-19-city-space-delhi-mumbai
The Police Service Commission dismissed a report that it is not fair to all constituent parts of the federation in the promotion of senior police officers of the Nigerian Police Force.The commission, in a statement by its spokesman, Mr Ikechukwu Ani, says promotion in the police was guided by rules and regulations devoid of ethnic or religious considerations.The commission says it had since sanitised the processes of recruitment, promotion and discipline in the force and had ensured that they were also governed by rules and regulations.The commission added that it is on record that it has contributed to ensuring sanity in the recruitment of qualified Nigerians into the police where the principle of federal character is now considered alongside merit.
In society, when we don't fit the so-called norm, it is common for those of us who don't quite fit to be marginalised. In today's episode we'll explore what this means for someone dealing with low vision or blindness and possible ways around being categorized. We will also look at the flip side to try and recognize when we are in fact doing it to ourselves so that we may change that behaviour to lead better and more fulfilling lives as equals
E.V. Ramasamy promoted the principles of rationalism, self-respect, women's rights and eradication of caste. He opposed the exploitation and marginalisation of the non-Brahmin Dravidian people of South India and the imposition of what he considered Indo-Aryan India.
This podcast is about job losses due to the Coronavirus epidemic, possible age discrimination, how to find another job, even if you are older, effect of losing your job, savings levels and living paycheck to paycheck in the USA, and how to get out of this cycle.
Commentaire de Mathieu Bock Côté, chroniqueur blogueur au Journal de Montréal et au Journal de Québec et animateur du balado « Les idées mènent le monde » à QUB radio : Même Régis Labeaume met en garde contre la lente marginalisation des francophones au Québec.
Marginalisation and Grace: Centres and peripheries in a world turned inside out. There are many ways to think about and define the centres and peripheries of Christianity, who or what controls, shapes and influences the markers of belonging and right belief, who or what is mainstream or marginal. This talk, which focuses on ideas of centres and peripheries in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney, was intended to sit alongside three other talks at a – now cancelled – conference in New Zealand, which combined, would explore ideas of centres and peripheries in Protestant Christianity in Australia, along the lines of gender, sexuality and ‘race’. In this talk, Rosie Clare will consider some of the ways in which gender and sexuality can be used to mark the spaces of centre and periphery, power and non-power, and what we might learn or do differently if we were to listen to those who speak and lead from the margins. Rosie Clare Shorter is a PhD Candidate in the Religion and Society Research Cluster at Western Sydney University. She is studying Anglicanism as a lived religion in Sydney. She is interested in hearing about how people live their faith, and in exploring the interaction of gender, sexuality, evangelism and religious authority. She has a Master of Research and Bachelor of Creative Arts from Macquarie University. This event is PEACEtalks (see PEACEtalks.info): a monthly event (held on a Thursday or Saturday evening) starting at 7pm hosted by Paddington Anglican Church aimed at serving the community by promoting and cultivating deep conversations about life, the world and everything. ‘PEACE’ stands for ‘political, ethical, artistic & cultural engagement’. Also on iTunes / Apple Podcasts by searching for PEACEtalks.
I am joined by the TL's favourite faceman, Nathan. We discuss his personal experience of being a gay man in the black community, what challenges he went through growing up and how he has dealt with certain situations. He speaks on having to face bitter judgements from the LGBT community itself. We touch on the nature vs nurture argument and why some views are damaging, and also delve into the world of ballroom culture... There are a lot of laughs in this episode and he even gives advice to people who may be struggling to find acceptance from people close to them. Don't forget to follow @opinionatedcpodcast on Insta for updates!
This article discusses how marginalisation can occur in a work from home setting and provides both individuals and managers some tips to reduce its occurence and impact The post Working from home during corona virus part 5 – marginalisation appeared first on ULFIRE.
This episode, we are starting a short series highlighting speakers from the third ForumBIE 2030, which was held on 27 to 29 January in Djibouti. The event featured the first official signing ceremonies for the Universal Declaration of Balanced and Inclusive Education and, perhaps more importantly, the Constitutive Charter of the newly-created Organisation of Educational Cooperation which will be charged with supporting the implementation of commitments made in the Universal Declaration.What commitments were those? To learn more you can of course look up the Declaration on educationrelief.org, but there were also a number of presentations exploring different aspects of Balanced and Inclusive Education at the Forum, which bear listening to. So here we have a first set, focusing on the questions: who are marginalised? And how do we support them?
In this episode, we speak with Malva Villalon, a professor with over 40 years’ experience studying and improving early childhood literacy and education. She shared with us four exciting recent initiatives from across Latin America that show how new approaches to teaching can reach and engage students from traditionally marginalised communities.
The historic NALSA judgment (National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India, 2014) was historic in that it read in major rights to be applicable to the transgender community, including specific directives to the government around social and economic welfare. The implications of this judgment were diluted with the Transgender Persons Bill 2018. The legislation has faced significant resistance and criticism within the community. To discuss the voices within the movement, claims for social welfare, the particular challenges faced by trans-men, and multiple marginalities - and the ways these play into shaping the transgender movement and the broader societal implications - we are joined by Nadika Nadja, who is a trans-lesbian feminist and a writer and researcher with interests in History and Archaeology, Entertainment, Gender and Internet.
Ever heard of intragroup marginalisation? No, nor had we. But what effect can being caught between two (or more) cultures have on a person? How does that constant niggling fear of rejection or guilt potentially impact much larger emotions? Annabel and Ian discuss, examine this concept at a personal level and consider why it is so rarely talked about. SHOW NOTES:The original articlehttp://theconversation.com/what-being-stuck-between-two-cultures-can-do-to-a-persons-psyche-80448The Reply All episode We referred to a Reply All episode featuring Sal, a Syrian refugee living in Turkey, whose story is both heartbreaking and possibly scarily typical of so many in the present day.https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/5whgo2
Ever heard of intragroup marginalisation? No, nor had we. But what effect can being caught between two (or more) cultures have on a person? How does that constant niggling fear of rejection or guilt potentially impact much larger emotions? Annabel and Ian discuss, examine this concept at a personal level and consider why it is so rarely talked about. SHOW NOTES:The original articlehttp://theconversation.com/what-being-stuck-between-two-cultures-can-do-to-a-persons-psyche-80448The Reply All episode We referred to a Reply All episode featuring Sal, a Syrian refugee living in Turkey, whose story is both heartbreaking and possibly scarily typical of so many in the present day.https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/5whgo2
Fiosraíonn an páipéar seo an idirghabháil atá idir filí na gceantar Gaeltachta seo i gCiarraí agus an pobal léitheoireachta. Is gníomh imeallach é an fhilíocht in aon teanga – gan trácht ar mhionteanga a bhfuil dúshláin éagsúla roimpi. I measc an chomhthéacs dúshlánach seo, tá líon suntasach filí ag cumadh na filíochta i ndá cheantar Gaeltachta i gCiarraí. Léiríonn na filí amhras ar leith go bhfuil aon phobal léitheoireachta acu agus deir cuid acu nach mbíonn siad ag cuimhneamh ar an bpobal léitheoireachta ina gcleachtas cruthaitheachta. In ainneoin seo, tá na filí an-ghníomhnach i bhfoilsiú saothar filíochta. Téann an dearcadh seo i gcoinne theoiricí móra na cruthaitheachta a leagann béim ar thábhacht an chomhthéacs agus ar thábhacht na hidirghabhála leis an bpobal léitheoireachta maidir le cruthú chiall an ghníomh chruthaithigh. (Ó Crualaoich 1992, Glăveanu 2016 & Sternberg 2016). Muna bhfuil na filí ag cuimhneamh ar an bpobal léitheoireachta – conas go mbeidh pobal ann dóibh? Cén ról atá ag na filí seo sna pobail Ghaeltachta mar sin? Féachann an páipéar ar cheist an easpa pobail léitheoireachta agus ar an tost indíreach a ghintear as an saothrú pearsanta seo. Mar a d’aithin an file Paddy Bushe ‘Aon ealaíontóir a dhéanann dearúd ar phobal, bíonn sé ag labhairt leis féin’. Chuige sin, díreofar ar thuairimí pearsanta na bhfilí a nochtadh in agallaimh agus déanfar anailís téacslárnach mar thaca don bplé. This paper seeks to tell the story of a group of active, contemporary Irish language poets of the south and west Kerry Gaeltacht areas of Corca Dhuibhne and Uíbh Ráthach. These poets demonstrate a meta-awareness of being a relatively unheard voice, they deem their work to be generally unread and as a result present with a sense of doubt as to whether an audience even exists for their poetry. Despite this, the poets continue to publish material and engage in public readings and performances. Marginalisation forms part of each of the poets’ lives due to several factors, from writing in a minority language, being based physically on the edge of Europe, engaging in poetry, a creative mode that tends to have a limited audience even in majority languages, along with finding refuge in isolation as an important part of the creative process. The paper will highlight a range of thoughts and ideologies pertaining to this sense of indirect silence and lack of audience, drawing on material from interviews with several of the poets. It aims to provide an interpretation of this phenomenon of writing for an audience, whom does not appear to be present, with a particular focus on the poets’ feelings and outlook to this regard. Tá Shane Grant mar mhac léinn PhD le Roinn na Gaeilge i gColáiste Mhuire Gan Smál, Luimneach. Cáilíodh é mar bhunmhúinteoir i 2016 agus bronnadh ‘Comhaltacht Taighde’ air sa bhliain 2017. Baineann a chuid taighde le filí comhaimseartha na Gaeilge i ndá cheantar Gaeltachta i gCiarraí; Corca Dhuibhne agus Uíbh Ráthach faoi stiúir an Dr. Róisín Ní Ghairbhí. Féachann an taighde ar conas a ghintear, a chothaítear agus a chleachtaítear an chruthaitheacht sa Ghaeilge ag díriú ar na ceantair seo mar chás-staidéar. Tá spéis ar leith ag aige i bhfilíocht chomhaimseartha na Gaeilge, sa tsochtheangeolaíocht, i bhfoghlaim an tarna teanga, i bpleanáil teanga agus i bhforbairt pobail Ghaeltachta. Shane Grant is a PhD student with the Irish Department in Mary Immaculate College, Limerick. Shane graduated as a primary school teacher in 2016 following his completion of the Bachelor of Education (B.ED) programme. He was awarded a Departmental Assistantship with the college in 2017 to undertake his postgraduate studies under the supervision of Dr. Róisín Ní Ghairbhí. His research is concerned with the practices and fostering of a group of Irish poets linked to the West Kerry Gaeltacht of Corca Dhuibhne and South Kerry Gaeltacht of Uíbh Ráthach.
Entrevue avec Dorothée de Collasson, Chargée de projet Ville Inclusive d'Exeko, sur les résidences artistiques Métissages urbains. Pour plus d'infos: https://exeko.org/fr/metissages-urbains
This week, Benny Chastney discusses with Ivan six things which he thinks should be better known. The Political Compass - https://www.politicalcompass.org/ OK Diner - http://okdiners.com/ The sub-culture of Alan Partridge - https://twitter.com/AccidentalP Good news trends - https://www.forbes.com/sites/johnmauldin/2017/12/19/20-positive-trends-that-will-make-you-feel-good-about-the-world-in-2018/ Marginalisation of Gypsies and Travellers - http://leedsgate.co.uk/ Recipe Kits - https://www.thespicery.com/ This podcast is powered by ZenCast.fm
Feeling hopeless is an understandable response in the face of climate change. In fact, an emerging field of research is focusing on the mental health impacts of our changing climate. This can be in the wake of natural disasters such as floods and bushfires, but also the slower creeping effects of climate change like drought and displacement. But the biggest environmental threat to life in Australia is the one we hear least about. You perhaps wouldn't know it, but urban heatwaves are the most fatal kind of natural disaster, killing more people than bushfires, floods or cyclones. Elderly women are the biggest victims, and their deaths could be largely avoidable. On today's show we're investigating the disproportionate impacts climate change will have on already vulnerable populations in Australia. Specifically we'll be hearing about how marginalisation due to mental illness, age and gender can place people at a greater risk. Guests: Professor Helen Berry (Climate Change Institute, ANU); Margarita Windisch. This weeks' show is #1043 and was produced by Teishan Ahearne. Image credit: 'Melbourne Sunset' by Rennie Ellis, c. 1970s.
Recognising and managing the effects of marginalisation in a virtual team environment is one of the major responsibilities of the leadership of the team, all team members are at risk of marginalisation at some stage but particularly those in small and remote offices who may not receive the level of information and attention as the central and usually larger offices. This article attempts to highlight some of the symptoms and cures. The post Managing Marginalisation In Virtual Teams appeared first on ULFIRE.
Transcript -- Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
Transcript -- Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
Transcript -- A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Transcript -- A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Transcript -- Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPod/iPhone
A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPad/Mac/PC
A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
Transcript -- Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
Empowerment may lead to the imposition of outside ideas on developing communities.
International Development: microcredit and migration - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- A look at the a challenges Ethiopians are facing in London and how they are coping with them.
Looking at the civil war that broke out in Sierra Leone in the nineties and the issues surrounding it.
Transcript -- Looking at the civil war that broke out in Sierra Leone in the nineties and the issues surrounding it.
Sierra Leonians' views that corruption and nepotism were some of the reasons for the eruption of the civil war.
Transcript -- Sierra Leonians' views that corruption and nepotism were some of the reasons for the eruption of the civil war.
The fate of women and youths since the war ended. The search for jobs, money and food.
Transcript -- The fate of women and youths since the war ended. The search for jobs, money and food.
Transcript -- Looking at the civil war that broke out in Sierra Leone in the nineties and the issues surrounding it.
Sierra Leonians' views that corruption and nepotism were some of the reasons for the eruption of the civil war.
Transcript -- Sierra Leonians' views that corruption and nepotism were some of the reasons for the eruption of the civil war.
The fate of women and youths since the war ended. The search for jobs, money and food.
Transcript -- The fate of women and youths since the war ended. The search for jobs, money and food.
Looking at the civil war that broke out in Sierra Leone in the nineties and the issues surrounding it.