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Last episode, we focused on the accountability part of community accountability. We explored how changing our behavior to live accountably is lifelong work, is violence prevention, takes building skills until they become muscle memory. Fortunately for us, Mia gave us many opportunities to practice. In this episode, we learn from this practice – and – we focus on the community part of community accountability. Mia emphasized that transformative justice is not about intervening in or saving someone else's community – TJ is responding to harm, violence, and abuse in our OWN communities. So as we built up fundamental TJ skills, she guided us to envision the changes we'd like to see in Bay Area theater.Episode transcript: Coming soon!Sogorea Te' Land Trust: https://sogoreate-landtrust.org/Save the West Berkeley Shellmound: https://shellmound.org/Story F.4. “Surviving and Doing Sexual Harm: A Story of Accountability and Healing” from Section 4.F: Taking Accountability in the Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence: https://www.creative-interventions.org/toolkit/“What Is Accountability” panel recorded at Building Accountable Communities: A National Gathering on Transforming Harm on April 27, 2019 at Barnard College, NYC featuring Shannon Perez-Darby, Esteban Kelly, RJ Maccani, Mia Mingus, Sonya Shah, and Leah Todd, and moderated by Piper Anderson: https://bcrw.barnard.edu/videos/building-accountable-communities-what-is-accountability/Theater-Specific Case Study #1 - Abusive Rehearsal Room: https://f2606a71-bda8-4907-8ea6-d848e7fd6671.usrfiles.com/ugd/f2606a_5869addf765749b99d63019969bf0ceb.pdfTheater-Specific Case Study #2 - Award-Winning Director + Sexual Violence: https://f2606a71-bda8-4907-8ea6-d848e7fd6671.usrfiles.com/ugd/f2606a_310f018b45de437bb24639f478166068.pdfBATJC Case Studies: https://batjc.wordpress.com/resources/case-studies/Mia Mingus: https://www.soiltjp.org & https://leavingevidence.wordpress.comBay Area Transformative Justice Collective: https://batjc.wordpress.com/For additional resources, including this episode's ASL video: https://www.weriseproduction.com/therealworkzAnda of DiaspoRADiCAL: @diaspo.radical on Instagram & https://soundcloud.com/diasporadicalConnect with us at weriseproduction[at]protonmail[dot]com, and follow us on Facebook & Instagram at weriseproduction, & on twitter at WeRiseProducers.
A conversation between LP Executive Director Kemi Ilesanmi and 2021 Radical Imagination Fellow Piper Anderson on abolition, mental health, rethinking carceral approaches to harm, and more. Piper discusses her personal journey to abolition work, and projects Mass Story Lab and Rikers Public Memory Project, which use storytelling as a tool to address and name the injustice of the prison system.
In episode 9 Dr. Durell Cooper connects with Piper Anderson to discuss leadership, entrepreneurship, and accountability. Piper Anderson is a storyteller, coach, master facilitator, and Founder of Create Forward, a social impact firm delivering experiences that advance equity and justice. In spring 2016, Anderson was awarded a TED Residency to develop an innovative storytelling project called Mass Story Lab. Mass Story Lab has traveled to more than thirteen U.S cities making the stories of people impacted by incarceration an instrument of justice. In her TED Talk, "Can Stories Create Justice?” she challenges us to throw out punitive notions of justice and imagine a justice system that builds and restores humanity. In 2018 she co-founded the Rikers Public Memory Project, an oral history project documenting the legacy of Rikers Island through the narratives of generations of New Yorkers who have experience with the penal colony. Best known for her masterful facilitation, she is in high demand nationally for her training, speaking, and consulting with institutions on how to make workplaces and communities more inclusive and equitable. With growing urgency within our culture on how to engage in conversations about race and power, FastCompany turned to Anderson for her best strategies on how to facilitate difficult conversations. Piper Anderson is a Professor at NYU's Gallatin School and a founding member of the advisory board and faculty of NYU's Prison Education Program. She has guest lectured at universities across the country including Harvard Law, Columbia University, Georgetown, and the New School. She is a New School Writing Democracy Fellow, a Culture Push Fellow for Utopian Practice, and a Civic Hall Organizer in Residence, TED Resident, Aspen Ideas Scholar, and the Laundromat Project's first Radical Imagination Fellow. Piper has dedicated her life to providing leaders with the generative spaces and tools they need to build thriving communities and organizations.
Ellevate Podcast: Conversations With Women Changing the Face of Business
On this episode, Piper Anderson, writer, educator, and cultural organizer, sits down with long-time friend Kristy, CEO of Ellevate, to talk about the start of her entrepreneurship journey and who her commitment to social justice affects her work career. Piper also shares her thoughts on the impact of generational trauma, creating change on a local level, and how storytelling can be an impactful step toward creating change. She also answers the age old question: "Who should have a seat at the table?"
Ellevate Podcast: Conversations With Women Changing the Face of Business
On this episode, Piper Anderson, writer, educator, and cultural organizer, sits down with long-time friend Kristy, CEO of Ellevate, to talk about the start of her entrepreneurship journey and who her commitment to social justice affects her work career. Piper also shares her thoughts on the impact of generational trauma, creating change on a local level, and how storytelling can be an impactful step toward creating change. She also answers the age old question: "Who should have a seat at the table?"
John has finally gotten around to setting up the podcast equipment in a new location. His daughter Piper helps him blow the dust off. If you are wondering how 2nd grade is going so far for her you don't want to miss this one.
John has finally gotten around to setting up the podcast equipment in a new location. His daughter Piper helps him blow the dust off. If you are wondering how 2nd grade is going so far for her you don't want to miss this one.
A young Piper Anderson comes in and breaks down life, school, politics, and all things important to a five year old. It's a bit goofy but whatever.
A young Piper Anderson comes in and breaks down life, school, politics, and all things important to a five year old. It's a bit goofy but whatever.
LIVE EPISODES WE LOVE! This is Part II of a two-part series where four guests give personal stories about their Resistance & Resilience Despite Mass Incarceration. This week we get to hear from Johnny Perez and Piper Anderson. The event was held at the Brooklyn Museum in conjunction with the Equal Justice Initiative’s (EJI) exhibit, The Legacy of Lynching: Confronting Racial Terror in America Learn more this episode, including Bryan Stevenson’s exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum: https://eji.org/news/lynching-in-america-exhibit-opens-at-brooklyn-museum Mass Story Lab: http://www.massstorylab.com/#overview Johnny Perez: https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/policing/spotlight/2017/03/29/invest-education-instead-incarceration-voices/99709902/ Tweet about this episode: #decarceratedpodcast /@decarceratedpod / _marlonpeterson Reach out to: Johnny Perez Twitter: @mrjohnnyperez | Piper Anderson: @PiperAnderson1 & Mass Story Lab: @massstorylab Leave a review on Itunes, Soundcloud, IHeartRadio, or wherever you subscribe. Please subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. Subscribe. You can also send us an email with show comments and suggestions at decarcerated@beprecedential.com.
In this podcast, I interview Piper Anderson from Mass Story Lab. Piper describes herself as a prison abolitionist. For her, the prison does not work and has never worked. She uses Mass Story Lab to imagine the world beyond prisons. She shares her approach to criminal justice reform from the bottom up and story driven. Mass incarceration disrupts lives, and we need to take an approach that is not compartmentalized. She believes that we need to spend more time talking to the people who have been most affected by mass incarceration. Links: Mass Story Lab: http://www.massstorylab.com/overviewPiper Anderson: http://piperanderson.com/Mass Story Labs on Twitter: https://twitter.com/massstorylabMisson Launch: http://www.mission-launch.org/This podcast was recorded over Skype.Music provided by Clint Harewood you contact him on these websites: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Tamo.T or LinkedIn: https://www.facebook.com/Tamo.T
In this podcast, I interview Piper Anderson from Mass Story Lab. Piper describes herself as a prison abolitionist. For her, the prison does not work and has never worked. She uses Mass Story Lab to imagine the world beyond prisons. She shares her approach to criminal justice reform from the bottom up and story driven. Mass incarceration disrupts lives, and we need to take an approach that is not compartmentalized. She believes that we need to spend more time talking to the people who have been most affected by mass incarceration. Links: Mass Story Lab: http://www.massstorylab.com/overviewPiper Anderson: http://piperanderson.com/Mass Story Labs on Twitter: https://twitter.com/massstorylabMisson Launch: http://www.mission-launch.org/This podcast was recorded over Skype.Music provided by Clint Harewood you contact him on these websites: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Tamo.T or LinkedIn: https://www.facebook.com/Tamo.T