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International space law has a rich history that offers valuable lessons for today's challenges in protecting humanity's use of outer space. So, what prospect is there that the space powers can agree new laws to ensure a smooth path into the next frontier of space use and exploration? Michelle Chase explores key moments such as the 1967 Outer Space Treaty and the 1972 ABM Treaty, revealing that self-interest often drives these international agreements. Chase calls for renewed international cooperation, drawing from Cold War-era lessons to manage state competition and protect space from modern threats like warfighting and space debris. Progress? is a UNSW Centre for Ideas project, with illustrations designed by Lucy Klippan, video production by AVI and All things All Creatures, and podcast production by Matt Sladen and Kara Jensen-MacKinnon. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Michelle & Chase commemorate Mental Health Awareness Month by sharing strategies for cultivating mental wellbeing in the workplace and navigating the intersection of work and mental health. Whether you're seeking balance, resilience, or simply a moment of solace, this episode offers actionable insights to support your journey toward making your workday work for you as you puruse your Career Dreams. Article: Harvard Business Review - Make Your Workday Work For Your Mental Health Article: FranklinCovey - I Can't Shut My Brain Off After Work Got a question? Ask us! Do you have a question you'd like to hear answered on Career Dreams? You can submit an audio recording of your question to be featured on an upcoming episode! Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
In the last episode, Michelle & Chase chatted with Jeff Welch about how "Inclusion and Belonging is Everybody's Responsibility". In this episode, they reflect on their conversation with Jeff, share a bonus clip from him, and provide their key takeaways from the discussion. Connect with Jeff: https://www.linkedin.com/in/welch-jeff/ Article: https://www.honestculture.io/blog/inclusion-and-belonging-is-everyones-responsibility#:~:text=It's%20important%20for%20every%20person,that%20ensures%20others%20feel%20included. Resource: https://www.comnetworkdei.org/ ATD Career Dreams Review: https://www.td.org/magazines/td-magazine/career-dreams Got a question? Ask us! Do you have a question you'd like to hear answered on Career Dreams? You can submit an audio recording of your question to be featured on an upcoming episode! Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
Ever heard of FOFO? The Fear of Finding Out? Likely, we're all familiar with the phrase FOMO (the Fear of Missing Out) and in this epiosde Michelle & Chase explore a similiar sounding but very different idea ... FOFO. Listen in to hear what it is, why we experience it, and how we can overcome it. Got a question? Ask us! Do you have a question you'd like to hear answered on Career Dreams? You can submit an audio recording of your question to be featured on an upcoming episode! Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
Back on the scene with the ladies of Black Girl Stuff, singer, TV personality K. Michelle opens up about dating outside her race and learning to love herself again. Comedian Chase Anthony performs. . Plus, a BGS debate on Black vs. white woman's tears. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What if we thought about investing in ourselves, our professional wealth, just as much as we think about investing in other forms of wealth? 401(k), IRA, Compound Interest, Capital Gains... these are words and phrases most of us our familiar with, but what about the return we get when we invest ourselves, in our ongoing professional development? Michelle & Chase take inspiration from Tax Day in the United States and explore the importance of career development similar to the importance of compound interest. Resources: Article: Compound Career Opportunities (Discover Praxis) Article: Career Compound Interest Magic (My Career Habit) Podcast: Lessons from a Super Bowl Champion (Career Dreams) Podcast: Becoming a Manager is More Than a Promotion (Career Dreams) Podcast: Career Insights from Inside the C-Suite Part 1 & Part 2 (Career Dreams) Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
In this episode, Michelle & Chase talk about the importance of feedback. They talk through tips to give feedback to others; how to provide feedback to your manager; and how to effectively process feedback you receive. Michelle & Chase dig into the suggestion that feedback is best served like coffee ... it's best served hot and fresh. Listen in to hear how HOT is an easy acronym to help you keep feedback top of mind and a tool to help you deliver feedback in a meaningful way that inspires growth and improved performance. Resources: Article: How to Ask For Feedback That Will Actually Help You (Harvard Business Review) Article: The Right Way to Process Feedback & Decision Tree (Harvard Business Review) Article: Stop Softening Tough Feedback (Harvard Business Review) Article: The Right Way to Give Feedback to Your Manager (Harvard Business Review) Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
Michelle & Chase are joined by a special guest in this week's Career Dreams … the first guest ever! The duo sits down with one of their FORUM Teammates, Jessica Roeder, to talk about how we make a difference in people's lives even though we're not saving lives. In this episode Michelle, Chase, and Jessica discuss: What it means to be a Leader The importance of ongoing development FORUM's "Hall of Fame" Best Places to Work in Indiana Celebration How Jessica supports her teammates so they can serve Members exceptionally. Additionally, Michelle and Chase learn more about Jessica, her career aspirations, her career setbacks, her resilience, and hear how she has successfully moved recently from Staff Auditor to Internal Audit Manager. Whether you're a FORUM teammate, or at another company, on the front line, or in a supporting role … you make a difference, your contributions impact something or someone. Leave this episode excited about your career and the difference you make whether it's been a few months or a few decades. Like it? Share it! If you're finding value in exploring your Career Dreams through this podcast, please share it with your friends, followers and colleagues! Also, your ratings and reviews help others find the show...so please, let us know what you think! You can share your Career Dreams with us anytime via email: careerdreams@forumcu.com. To learn more about making your Career Dreams come true at FORUM Credit Union, visit our website: https://www.forumcu.com/careers Dream on!
Interviews with history professor Michelle Chase and Cuban scholar Marta Nuñez Sarmiento. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
La historiadora Dra. Michelle Chase habla de su libro *Revolution within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962* con Carmen Soliz.
La historiadora Dra. Michelle Chase habla de su libro *Revolution within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962* con Carmen Soliz.
Connect with Michelle: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michelle-chase-b073901b/ Connect with Steve: https://www.linkedin.com/in/steve-watson-cpa/ ************************* Are your employees okay with another year of insurance rate increases? Visit Trendbreakers.com to find out more on how I was able to lower the cost of benefits by 1k/employee which allow us to invest those savings back into the company and the employees.
Michelle Chase, a Licensed Professional Counselor and Founder of Chase Consulting, LLC, joins the program to discuss some of the most common mental health issues that employees are facing during the COVID-19 pandemic. She also shares tips for employers about how they can support their employees, and provides coping strategies and resources.
In this ‘State of the Field' edition, Dr. Michelle Chase and Dr. Devyn Spence Benson spoke with Dustin and Steven about the historiography and current status of scholarship on the Cuban Revolution. The conversation explores the evolution of the scholarship of Cuban Revolution 60 years on and how many scholars today are less interested in the leadership. Instead, researchers are increasingly interested in how the revolutionary period has been experienced by ordinary Cubans. Originally aired February 25, 2019
In this ‘State of the Field’ edition, Dr. Michelle Chase and Dr. Devyn Spence Benson spoke with Dustin and Steven about the historiography and current status of scholarship on the Cuban Revolution. The conversation explores the evolution of the scholarship of Cuban Revolution 60 years on and how many scholars today are less interested in the leadership. Instead, researchers are increasingly interested in how the revolutionary period has been experienced by ordinary Cubans. Originally aired February 25, 2019
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women's participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista's coup d'etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women's liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women's cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women's activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What's more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women's participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista's coup d'etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women's liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women's cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women's activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What's more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha.
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women’s participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista’s coup d’etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women’s liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women’s cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women’s activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What’s more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women’s participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista’s coup d’etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women’s liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women’s cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women’s activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What’s more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women’s participation in the movements of resistance that began in... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women’s participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista’s coup d’etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women’s liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women’s cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women’s activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What’s more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Michelle Chase, who joins us to discuss her fascinating new book, Revolution Within the Revolution: Women and Gender Politics in Cuba, 1952-1962 (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). The book is a rich and nuanced history of women’s participation in the movements of resistance that began in the immediate aftermath of Fulgencio Batista’s coup d’etat in 1952—resistance that culminated in the overthrow of Batista in the Cuban revolution of 1959. Eschewing both official top-down narratives of women’s liberation as well as anti-communist accounts of women’s cooptation, Revolution Within the Revolution demonstrates that women’s activism and leadership was critical at every stage of the revolutionary process. It also centers urban activism in the years leading up to the Cuban Revolution, and reveals how focusing on the city changes our understanding of how the Revolution evolved and triumphed. What’s more, the book is also a history of how notions of gender roles in Cuba at midcentury—questions of marriage and family, of masculinity and femininity—were both defined by and came to define the revolutionary moment, dialectically shaping the strategy of both revolutionaries and counter-revolutionaries, men and women alike. Michelle Chase is an Assistant Professor of History at Bloomfield College, where she teaches courses on Latin American and Caribbean History and World History. You can follow her on Twitter at @michaymicha. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we interview Michelle Chase. She left the game in episode 1 of Survivor Gabon. She might have only spent a short time with the Fang tribe, but she had some pretty clear opinions of them that she did not hesitate to share. Listen to this interview to learn more about her connection to last season's winner, why she thought Randy should have been taken out of the game, how she faired on that first night, who ended up covered in leeches plus answers to questions you submitted and lots more! If you are not a subscriber to the Survivor Fans Podcast, you can click the Listen Now button on the webpage and the interview will download and play on your computer. If you enjoyed this interview, check out our others here: SFP Audio Interviews SFP Videos Survivor Fans Podcast Homepage Links for Today's Show Michelle at CBS BombShellBaller Survivor Gabon News at Survivor Fever Survivor Links News Archive at Sir Linksalot Contact Info: New Voicemail: 206-350-1547 Email: joannandstacyshow@gmail.com Survivor Fans Podcast P.O. Box 2811 Orangevale, CA 95662 Enjoy, Jo Ann and Stacy