POPULARITY
What do communities on the social, economic and environmental margins have in common? For one thing, they tend to be on the east sides of cities. In this short talk about a surprising insight, anthropologist and venture capitalist Stephen DeBerry explains how both environmental and man-made factors have led to disparity by design in cities from East Palo Alto, California to East Jerusalem and beyond — and suggests some elegant solutions to fix it.
This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/stephen_deberry_why_the_wrong_side_of_the_tracks_is_usually_the_east_side_of_cities ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/87-academic-words-reference-from-stephen-deberry-why-the-wrong-side-of-the-tracks-is-usually-the-east-side-of-cities-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/V4xDwJVugaI (All Words) https://youtu.be/S6t9qTA5_zY (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/C5h0leTM-7k (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)
Venture Unlocked: The playbook for venture capital managers.
Listen now | Sometimes the truth is right in front of us and it just takes the right person to see it for it all to make sense, our guest today Stephen DeBerry had such a moment when he first devised the Eastside Thesis. The notion that the wrong side of the tracks has the code word “Eastside” eventually became a viral TED Talk and was a factor in why Stephen decided to invest in change through Venture Capital at Get on the email list at ventureunlocked.substack.com
What do communities on the social, economic and environmental margins have in common? For one thing, they tend to be on the east sides of cities. In this short talk about a surprising insight, anthropologist and venture capitalist Stephen DeBerry explains how both environmental and man-made factors have led to disparity by design in cities from East Palo Alto, California to East Jerusalem and beyond -- and suggests some elegant solutions to fix it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What do communities on the social, economic and environmental margins have in common? For one thing, they tend to be on the east sides of cities. In this short talk about a surprising insight, anthropologist and venture capitalist Stephen DeBerry explains how both environmental and man-made factors have led to disparity by design in cities from East Palo Alto, California to East Jerusalem and beyond -- and suggests some elegant solutions to fix it.
사회적, 경제적, 그리고 환경적인 차이가 있는 지역사회의 공통점은 무엇일까요? 이러한 지역사회는 도시의 동부지역에 위치하는 경향이 있습니다. 깊은 통찰력을 보여주는 이 강의에서, 인류학자이자 벤처투자가인 스티븐 디베리는 캘리포니아에 위치한 동부 팔로알토에서 예루살렘에 이르기까지 인적 그리고 환경적 요인들로 인해 어떻게 의도적인 차별이 발생하는지 설명합니다. 그리고 이러한 문제를 해결하기 위한 훌륭한 해결책을 제안합니다.
O que as comunidades nas margens social, econômica e ambiental têm em comum? Por um lado, elas tendem a estar no lado leste das cidades. Nesta breve palestra sobre um insight surpreendente, o antropólogo e capitalista de risco Stephen DeBerry explica como fatores ambientais e provocados pelo homem levaram à disparidade do design em cidades de East Palo Alto, Califórnia a Jerusalém Oriental e além - e sugere algumas soluções elegantes para corrigir isso.
¿Qué tienen en común las comunidades que están social, económica y ambientalmente marginadas? Para empezar, suelen estar en el lado este de las ciudades. En esta charla breve sobre una percepción sorprendente, antropólogo e inversor de capital de riesgo Stephen DeBerry explica cómo factores tanto ambientales como humanos han creado una desigualdad por diseño en ciudades como Palo Alto Este, California, Jerusalén y más allá -- y propone unas soluciones elegantes para arreglar este problema.
Was haben soziale, wirtschaftliche und ökologische Randgemeinschaften gemeinsam? Zunächst einmal liegen sie tendenziell auf der Ostseite von Städten. In dieser kurzen Rede über eine überraschende Erkenntnis erklärt Anthropologe und Risikokapitalanleger Stephen DeBerry, wie sowohl ökologische als auch vom Menschen bedingte Faktoren zur beabsichtigten Ungleichheit in Städten geführt haben; von East Palo Alto in Kalifornien bis nach Ost Jerusalem und darüber hinaus -- und er schlägt einige elegante Lösungsansätze vor.
Qu'ont en commun les communautés marginales socialement, économiquement et environnementalement ? Une seule chose, elles ont tendance à être à l'est des villes. Dans cette courte présentation sur une vision surprenante, l’anthropologue et investisseur en capital, Stephen DeBerry, explique comment les facteurs environnementaux et ceux créés par l'homme, ont conduit à une inégalité dans l'aménagement des villes comme l'est de Palo Alto, en Californie ou à Jérusalem. Il propose des solutions justes pour remédier au problème.