Podcasts about who belongs

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Best podcasts about who belongs

Latest podcast episodes about who belongs

Sovereign Grace Church Sermons
Who Belongs at the Table? (Exodus 12:43-51, Apr 27th 2025)

Sovereign Grace Church Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2025 47:18


Who Belongs at the Table? (Exodus 12:43-51, Apr 27th 2025) by Sovereign Grace Church

Love Is Stronger Than Fear
A Life Worth Living? Reimagining Life, Choice, and Disability with Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, PhD

Love Is Stronger Than Fear

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2024 52:26 Transcription Available


Send us a textHow do we decide who has a life worth living? Author and professor emerita Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, PhD, joins Amy Julia Becker to discuss what it means to:be humanlive in communitycare for one anothernavigate the complicated ethics of selective abortionfind the language and stories to talk about a life worth living_ADVENT DEVOTIONAL: Prepare Him Room: Advent Reflections on What Happens When God Shows Up_ON THE PODCAST:Plough essay: “The Body She Had” by Rosemarie Garland-Thomson Book: About Us: Essays from the New York Times about Disability by People with Disabilities Sara Hendren's episode: “Who Belongs? Disability and the Built World”_CONNECT with Dr. Garland-Thomson on her website: rosemariegarlandthomson.com_Watch this conversation on YouTube by clicking here. Read the full transcript and access detailed show notes by clicking here or visiting amyjuliabecker.com/podcast._About:Rosemarie Garland-Thomson is professor emerita of English and bioethics at Emory University. She works in disability culture, bioethics, and health humanities. She is a Hastings Center Senior Advisor and member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is co-editor of About Us: Essays from the New York Times about Disability by People with Disabilities and author of Staring: How We Look and several other books._Connect with me: Instagram Facebook YouTube Website Thanks for listening!

Comic News Insider
Episode 1453 - NYCC: Greg Pak!

Comic News Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 56:19


Jimmy went to New York Comic Con (NYCC) last week and got about 12 interviews and 1 press room. Producer Joe even got an interview in! In this episode, you'll hear from Greg Pak but it WASN'T at NYCC! Greg and Jimmy decided to chat post-NYCC away from the madness. They met in Central Park here in NYC and had a lovely chat about Greg's prolific work on comics like DARTH VADER, MECH CADETS, WHO BELONGS? DEADLY HANDS OF KUNG-FU, CITY BOY, etc. They also talked about the Netflix animated series MECH CADETS based on his comics, the Amadeus Cho action figure and his photography. Always a delightful catch-up. Post interview, Greg surprised Jimmy with an impromptu photo shoot! Look for Jimmy to be walking the runways of fashion week very soon. Enjoy! Also, get a hold of us! Thanks for listening!

Outside the Walls
Evangelization, Discipleship, and Race - Rome Rerun

Outside the Walls

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2023 56:00


I'm in Rome this week, so we're revising a conversation we had in June of 2022 with Fr. Josh Johnson. Be sure to visit patreon.com/outsidethewalls to see highlights from Rome! What picture pops into your head when you envision "the Church?" Whose faces are situated next to yours in the family portrait above God's mantle? The answer to this question has implications on how we live out our faith, practice evangelization, and make disciples. It's the fundamental question of "Who Belongs?" Fr. Josh Johnson joins us to discuss his new book, On Earth as It Is in Heaven: Restoring God's Vision for Race and Discipleship. This book follows Fr. Josh's journey of serving as the only Black priest in the diocese of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Fr. Josh draws from the riches of Scripture, personal experience as a Catholic of color, his priestly ministry, and the wisdom of the Church to encourage Catholics to understand more deeply the call of Christ to make disciples of “all peoples and nations (Matt. 28:19).”

Jacobin Radio
Dig Presents: Superhighway!

Jacobin Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 52:47


We have as many roads in the United States as we have streams and rivers. Produced by Caroline Kanner and Jackson Roach, with original music by Jackson Roach. Edited by Liza Yeager and Mitchell Johnson. Subscribe to The Dig Presents, and support The Dig at Patreon.com/TheDig. Bibliography (in order of appearance):A Field Guide to Roadside Wildflowers at Full Speed - Chris HelzerCar Country: An Environmental History - Christopher W. WellsOn Trails: An Exploration - Robert MoorSnell-Rood LabCrossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet - Ben GoldfarbA Short History of the Blockade: Giant Beavers, Diplomacy, and Regeneration in Nishnaabewin - Leanne Betasamosake SimpsonWho Belongs to the Land: An Essay on Camps, Blockades, and Indigenous Models of Remaking the World - Lou CornumFurther reading available here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The County Line: Lee Carl & Friends

Mikaëla M. Adams is an accomplished professor and author of "Who Belongs?" Her work focuses on Native American tribes vying for tribal recognition and citizenship in the southern United States throughout the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. https://www.amazon.com/Who-Belongs-Resources-Tribal-Citizenship/dp/0190619465Attention County Line Congregation: our website is currently under construction and will be accessible again soon! As always, thank you for all your love and support!Support the show

Jesus Name Podcast
"Who Belongs" Pastor William Moore 2-5-2023 Sunday Morning

Jesus Name Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2023 59:12


"Who Belongs" preached by Pastor William Moore at the First Jesus Name Church of Benndale on the Sunday morning of 2-5-2023. For more information about our church or this message please email us at fjncbenndale@icloud.com. Have a wonderful and blessed day.

Calvary Apostolic Church

Who Belongs? Putting Others First

God's Word for Life
Who Belongs?

God's Word for Life

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2023 25:46


In one chapter in Mark, Jesus ministered to children people neglected, a rich young ruler people envied, and a blind beggar people ignored. Pick up your Bible or phone and turn to Mark 10 to hear the story.For those who use Word Aflame Curriculum, the Bible passage focused on in this episode comes from God's Word for Life, Winter 2022-2023, entitled, "Who Belongs?" (February 5, 2023). This episode is produced by the Pentecostal Publishing House and is hosted by LJ Harry. Visit us at www.pentecostalpublishing.comTo order resources of the God's Word for Life curriculum, visitPentecostalPublishing.comApostolicDiscipleship.com 

Family & Children on SermonAudio
Who Belongs in Jesus's Family?

Family & Children on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 37:00


A new MP3 sermon from Tri-County Bible Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Who Belongs in Jesus's Family? Subtitle: The Servant King (Mark) Speaker: Joe Tyrpak Broadcaster: Tri-County Bible Church Event: Sunday - AM Date: 8/28/2022 Bible: Mark 3:7-35 Length: 37 min.

Outside the Walls
Fr. Josh Johnson - Evangelization, Discipleship, and Race

Outside the Walls

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2022 70:00


What picture pops into your head when you envision "the Church?" Whose faces are situated next to yours in the family portrait above God's mantle? The answer to this question has implications on how we live out our faith, practice evangelization, and make disciples. It's the fundamental question of "Who Belongs?" Fr. Josh Johnson joins us to discuss his new book, On Earth as It Is in Heaven: Restoring God's Vision for Race and Discipleship. This book follows Fr. Josh's journey of serving as the only Black priest in the diocese of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Fr. Josh draws from the riches of Scripture, personal experience as a Catholic of color, his priestly ministry, and the wisdom of the Church to encourage Catholics to understand more deeply the call of Christ to make disciples of “all peoples and nations (Matt. 28:19).”

Bruntsfield Evangelical Church
Who Belongs here?

Bruntsfield Evangelical Church

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2022 30:56


Who Belongs here?Series: The Unstoppable Gospel Speaker: Archie Winnington-IngramSunday MorningDate: 24th April 2022Passage: Acts 16:1-40

Imagine Belonging at Work
Who Belongs? Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson! Learn How Exceptional Black Women Lead with Bestselling Author, Dr. Avis Jones-DeWeever - Part I

Imagine Belonging at Work

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 22:10


Who Belongs? Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson!Earlier this month marked an historic occasion…Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson was confirmed as the first Black woman to serve on the United States Supreme Court. To celebrate, I've dedicated a very special 3-part learning series that delves further into the topic of who belongs.Only 4.7 percent of attorneys are Black, and only 70 Black women have ever served as US federal judges, so Justice Brown Jackson's confirmation to the United States Supreme Court represents a truly remarkable example of perseverance in punching a hole in the glass ceiling, making way for other Black women to follow. Please join me for this very special episode of the Imagine Belonging at Work podcast, as Dr. Avis Jones-DeWeever, bestselling author and social entrepreneur. Her significant expertise and lived experiences helps put into perspective this truly monumental occasion as we discuss how exceptional black women lead.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
Cultures of Care, ep. 2 | Naima Green and Rich Medina

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 37:18


Welcome back to Cultures of Care, a special new miniseries from Who Belongs? hosted by Evan Bissell and Giovanna Fischer. This series celebrates people that practice collective care in unconventional and insurgent ways. Visit the project, read more about our interviewees, and check out transcripts for this episode at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/cultures-of-care. In this episode, we hear from photographer Naima Green and DJ Rich Medina. Naima is an artist, photographer and educator from New York. Her work is an invitation to participate, observe and consider safety, utopia and intimacy. You can view her work here at http://www.naimagreen.com/, and follow her on social media on Twitter, @naimapatrice, and on Instagram, @naimagreen/. Rich is a world-renowned, Philadelphia-based DJ, producer, poet, journalist, and lecturer on hip hop and music theory. Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, Rich has been cultivating a vibrant online space for a globe-spanning community to gather, listen, dance, meditate, and tap into collective joy and release during a time of social isolation. You can see visit his website at https://richmedina.com/ and follow him on Instagram @richmedina. These interviews were edited by Majo Calderon and adapted for podcast by Erfan Moradi, with original music created by Alex Lemire Pasternak. Additional music in this episode is by Mini Vandals, Bad Snacks, Emily Sprague, and Silent Partner. Thanks for listening!

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
Cultures of Care, ep. 1 | Nicki Jizz and Kristina Wong

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 27:39


In this episode of Who Belongs?, we're debuting Cultures of Care, a special new miniseries hosted by Evan Bissell and Giovanna Fischer. This series celebrates people that practice collective care in unconventional and insurgent ways. Care is an essential, immediate and practical way to create belonging. Perhaps most vitally in our urgent times, at the heart of each profile you will find provocations that are seeds for reshaping society and how we relate to each other and the world. Visit the project, read more about our interviewees, and check out transcripts for this episode at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/cultures-of-care. We spoke with Nicki Jizz and Kristina Wong for this episode. Nicki is a Black, San Francisco-based drag queen who founded Reparations: an all-Black Drag Show in June of 2020. In the monthly online show, Nicki creates a vibrant online space centered around beautiful, hilarious, thought-provoking and sensual performances by Black performers. Check out Reparations at Oasis here, https://www.sfoasis.com/reparations, and follow Nicki on her social media to keep up with her work: @nicki_jizz on Instagram and @nickijizz on Facebook. Kristina is a comedian and performance artist who founded the Auntie Sewing Squad, a network of hundreds of Aunties across the United States who have sewn and shipped tens of thousands of masks to First Nations, farmworkers, migrants seeking asylum, incarcerated communities and poor communities of color. Learn more about the Aunties here at their website, http://auntiesewingsquad.com/, and keep up with Kristina's work here at https://www.kristinawong.com/. These interviews were edited by Majo Calderon and adapted for podcast by Erfan Moradi, with custom music created by Alex Lemire Pasternak. Additional music in this episode is by Emily Sprague, Puddle of Infinity, and Silent Partner. Thanks for listening!

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 47 - Returning Citizens

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2021 56:56


In this episode we speak with two of the founding members of the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, the President Desmond Meade and the Political Director Neil Volz. Together, Desmond and Neil have been working on restoring the rights of people who have a prior felony conviction, referred to as returning citizens. In 2018, they were successful in passing amendment 4 that restored the right of over 1.4 million Floridians to vote. How were they successful getting 65% of Floridians to support this amendment? Bridging. In this episode Desmond and Neil discuss their personal path into this work and how they successfully led a campaign through bridging that returned citizens and accordingly restored their right to vote. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and this episode is hosted by strategy analyst Gerald Lenoir. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 46 - Co-creating a future where everyone belongs

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 61:50


In this episode we speak with Reverend Ben McBride. Ben McBride is a spiritual leader and longtime activist for peace and justice in the Bay Area. McBride serves as a national leader around reconstructing public safety systems and gun violence prevention work. In 2014, McBride launched the Empower Initiative to support bridging and belonging work across the country. McBride shares how he conceptualizes the building, bridging, belonging, and becoming frameworks. He outlines how cultural and structural belonging can occur, and the role that we each can play in creating a world where everyone belongs. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and this episode is co-hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez and EJ Toppin. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 45 - Co-Creating Public Spaces of Belonging

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 42:30


In this episode we interview with Debbie Lacy. Debbie is the founder of Eastside for All, which serves communities outside of Seattle, WA including Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond, Issaquah and Sammamish. Eastside for All has a mission to transform East King County into a place where racial, economic and social justice are realized, and belonging is made possible for communities of color. Debbie shares about her Build for Belonging Initiative and specifically her use of the co-creation framework as she advocates to build a cross-cultural center with belonging in mind. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

In this episode we speak with Angel Mortel and Aleena Gonzalez. Angel is a lead organizer with LA Voice, which is a multi-racial and multi-faith community organization that awakens people to their own power and trains them to organize together. LA Voice has been implementing the Belong Circles with their partner network, including at Dolores Mission Church. Aleena Gonzalez is a high school student that is part of the Dolores Mission community who has participated in Belong Circles and is now leading circles with other young people. In the last episode we spoke with Ashlin Maluuf-Gashaw from PICO California about the design and intention of the Belong Circles. Angel and Aleena will both share with us what the Belong circles have meant to them as organizers and participants. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 43 - The Belong Movement

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 42:53


In this episode we speak with Ashlin Malouf-Gashaw. Ashlin is the Chief Formation Officer at PICO California, the largest multi-racial faith-based community-organizing network in the state. PICO is leading The Belong Movement, which aims to address the polarization and racial anxiety across California by bridging across race, faith and status through facilitated Belong Circles. Ashlin shares the intention and design behind the Belong Circles, and how anyone, including our listeners can implement them in their own community. To learn more about Belong Circles go to picocalifornia.org. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 42 - Belonging in Oakland

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 26:17


In this episode we speak with Roberto Bedoya. Roberto is the Cultural Affairs Manager for the City of Oakland in California. He developed the City's Cultural Plan, titled, Belonging in Oakland. Throughout his career Roberto has consistently advocated for inclusion and belonging in the cultural sector. In our conversation, Roberto shares how he's utilized belonging in his city planning work through intentional grant giving, and encouraging city departments to re-think how Oakland residents interact with each other and with physical spaces around the city. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 41 - On being seen and heard: Students reflect on their high school experience

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 35:05


In this episode we speak with Tamia Dantzler & Dashley Concepcion. Tamia is an alum and Dashley is a current student at El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice. In a previous episode we spoke with Frances Lucerna, founding principal of El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice. We heard from Frances about the school design and intentions, in this conversation Tamia & Dashley share with us their personal experience. They tell us what it has meant to be students at a school that makes them feel seen and heard. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 40 - Belonging in Schools: The Story of El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 38:50


In this episode we speak with Frances Lucerna. Frances is the founding principal of El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice. El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice is a public school located in the Southside community of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, New York City. El Puente is Spanish for ‘the bridge' - which is exactly what the school is doing: creating bridges between the school and students, parents and the community. Frances shares how she and other community leaders created and designed a school environment that fosters a true sense of belonging among all students and their families. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc. Visit our website at https://belonging.berkeley.edu/bridging-belonging-case-series to explore all of the case studies in the Bridging to Belonging series.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 39 - Black and Native Folks in the Climate Justice Movement

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 41:47


In this episode we interview two of the founding members of The Wind & The Warrior, Ife Afriye Kilimanjaro and Nana Korantema. In 2020, The Wind & The Warrior led a Sacred Waters Pilgrimage to connect Black and Native culture-bearers and advocacy leaders working to address the climate crisis for ritual and conversation. Throughout the pilgrimage, they made 7 stops along the Mississippi River. In each stop The Wind & The Warrior coordinated with local Native womxn to connect through ritual and conversation. Ife Afriye Kilimanjaro and Nana Korantema share with us how their journey allowed them to create bridges between Black and Native womxn and between humans and Mother Earth. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 38 - Looking to Belong: A Conversation with a Diaspora Dialogue Participant

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 37:33


In this episode we interview Byb Bibene. Byb is a professional performer, choreographer, dance artist, director and dance educator originally from the Republic of Congo. Currently he lives in the Bay Area in California. Byb has participated in the African Diaspora Dialogues hosted by Nunu Kidane and Gerald Lenoir. In our last episode, we got to hear from Nunu and Gerald about what it means to organize dialogues. In this conversation, Byb shares his experience as a dialogue participant and how he's incorporated bridging into his own professional work. To learn more about Byb Bibene's work please go to mbonguifest.org and kiandandadt.com. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 37 - Different Histories, Parallel Stories: Bridging African American and Immigrant Communities

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 46:48


In this episode we hear from Gerald Lenoir and Nunu Kidane about their work on bridging African American and African immigrant communities through dialogues. Gerald is OBI's identity and politics strategy analyst and was the founding executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI). Nunu was a founding member of BAJI and is currently the director of Priority Africa Network. Gerald and Nunu share their experience facilitating Diaspora Dialogues, which are intentional conversations used to bridge African American and immigrant communities. Listeners will learn how the dialogues are organized and get tips on how to replicate this work. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 36 - Developing a shared vocabulary: Introduction to Othering, Bridging & Belonging

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 46:26


In this episode we interview UC Berkeley Professor and OBI Director john a. powell. john a. powell is an internationally recognized expert in the areas of civil rights, civil liberties, structural racism, housing, poverty, democracy, and othering, bridging and belonging frameworks-- which he has been critical in developing and translating between academia and fields of practice. In this interview, Professor powell breaks down the definitions of othering, bridging and belonging. Through storytelling he elucidates how both interpersonal and structural othering occurs, and how people and organizations have been successful in addressing it. He gives advice to listeners so that we can all play a role in co-creating a society where everyone belongs. This episode of Who Belongs? is part of a new series of podcasts focused on telling bridging stories. Throughout the series we'll talk to leaders implementing bridging work and individuals who have experienced the bridging transformation. This project is led by OBI's Blueprint for Belonging project (B4B), and hosted by program researcher Miriam Magaña Lopez. This project is funded by The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Inc.

The Freaks of the Industry
"Community Dick/Pussy - Stop Cuffing"

The Freaks of the Industry

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2021 62:48


WATCH THIS EPISODE on Their YouTube Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UCgVxXUN-qXLHZ2_pEceugDg Find Out What "Community Dick/Pussy Is & Who "Belongs to the Streets", If Your "Body Count" can be Deleted. Each of The Hosts has a Story or 2 to share & Moe B gives the Rules on how to STOP CUFFING/BLOCKING Community Dick/Pussy. Bosslady shares a few things about a "Dude" from her past...(that used to be friends w/Moe B) & the "Dude" just found out(live on the air) that She had Sex on his King Sized Bed(w/someone else) a few years ago...It Wasn't Her Husband Moe B. (SAVAGE) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mario-brooks9/support

Dick Jokes and Dinosaurs
Carnotaurus and Gen 2 Pokemon

Dick Jokes and Dinosaurs

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 39:43


In this episode Adam Jacobson talks about one of his favorite theropods Carnotaurus, an all new edition of Who Belongs in the Cum Barrell and his opinions on Gen 2 Pokemon Designs!

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 35 - The economic case for a $15 minimum wage

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 26:43


In this episode of Who Belongs? we look at the impacts of minimum wage increases with Michael Reich, a Professor of Economics and Chair of the Center on Wage and Employment Dynamics at UC Berkeley. The federal minimum wage has been frozen at $7.25 an hour since 2009. That's an annual income for a full time worker of just $15,000. But a few weeks ago Senator Bernie Sanders and other progressive legislators introduced the 2021 Raise the Wage Act, which would gradually increase the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025. After 2025 the minimum wage would continue to increase to keep up with inflation without having to introduce new legislation every few years. The lawmakers had been trying to get this act included in the coronavirus relief package so it could be passed with a simple majority, but on Thursday we learned that's probably not going to happen because of an archaic Senate rule, meaning it would need to be introduced as a standalone bill and require 60 votes to pass, which is unlikely. Our guest Michael Reich is a leading expert on minimum wage research and has published extensively on the topic, including a recent study on how minimum wage hikes reduce racial wage gaps between black and white workers. So we'll discuss that, as well address some of the common critiques of minimum wage increases. Check back for a link to a transcript of this interview.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 34 - How ICE uses tech to target immigrants

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2021 39:21


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from Jacinta González, an organizer with Mijente, a non-profit which leads campaigns to educate and organize around issues concerning immigration, detentions and deportations. Jacinta explains how ICE and other law enforcement agencies are using surveillance technologies to target immigrant communities and other communities of color, and gives us her take on what the new administration in Washington must do about it. This interview was conducted by Emnet Almedom, a policy analyst here at OBI. For a transcript of this interview visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/ice-tech

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 33 - Storming the Capitol and the dilemma of Trumpism

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2021 68:05


In this episode of Who Belongs?, we hear from three thinkers and members of the OBI faculty — john a. powell, Ian Haney López, and Emnet Almedom — on the situation unfolding in the wake of the Washington D.C. riots. This past week, we saw remarkable scenes of violence take place at the country’s Capitol Building. Our guests will help us make sense of what happened, how race and class politics shaped the events, and what social solidarity can offer us moving forward. This episode is a recording of a live Q&A titled “Storming the Capitol: Trumpism’s Last Stand” which took place on January 8, 2021. The recording has been lightly edited for concision. john a. powell is the Othering & Belonging Institute director and Professor of Law. Ian Haney López is a Professor of Law and author of the book Merge Left: Fusing Race and Class, Winning Elections, and Saving America. Emnet Almedom, an analyst at the institute, moderated this event. For a transcript of this episode, please visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/storming-the-capitol

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 32 - The struggle against Islamophobia in France

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2020 49:44


In this episode of Who Belongs?, we speak with two activists based in France — Yasser Louati and Houria Bouteldja — about the intensification of Islamophobia and state repression unfolding in the country following Samuel Paty's gruesome murder. Our guests help us understand the current situation as it relates to the country's history of racist marginalization and terror attacks, what strategies affected communities must embrace to combat Islamophobia, and what this means for Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Yasser Louati is a human rights advocate and head of the Justice & Liberties for All Committee. Houria Bouteldja is a decolonial activist, author, and founding member of the Party of the Indigenous of the Republic. The music heard at the introduction is “La carte de residence” performed by Algerian singers Sliman Azem & Cheikh Nourredine. For a transcript of this episode visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/Islamophobia-in-france

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 31 - 'A kick in the stomach': Ethnic studies advocates react to Newsom veto

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2020 27:41


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Lara Kiswani, Executive Director of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center based in San Francisco, and Theresa Montaño, professor of Chicana and Chicano Studies at California State University, Northridge, to discuss the efforts to develop an ethnic studies curriculum in California. On September 30, California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed Assembly Bill 331 which would have made ethnic studies a high school graduation requirement across the state. For more than a year, Professor Montaño has been a part of an advisory committee tasked with drafting a model curriculum based on the anti-racist principles of ethnic studies. The curriculum provides sample lesson topics on things like housing segregation, Central American immigration, Filipino labor organizing, and indigenous struggles over land, just to name a few. Lara Kiswani’s organization, AROC, is part of the coalition promoting the inclusion of lessons related to the experiences of Arab Americans. The guests help us understand why ethnic studies is needed, why the bill was vetoed, and what comes next. For a transcript of this episode visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/why-newsom-vetoed-ethnic-studies

Planet Green Trees
Planet Green Trees TV - Episode - 469 - Who Belongs and Who Decides Who Is Crazy

Planet Green Trees

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2020 174:01


EPISODE 469 - Who Belongs and Who Decides Whose CrazyOn Today’s Show Special Guest: Zahra Abbas, Michael Whitty Ph.D. & Norman S. Miller MD, JD, PLLC from Health Advocates, PLLCTopic 1: Whitmer signs bills into law, one that allows for roadside drug testing Senate Bill -718Topic 2: AG Dana Nessel wants new central agency for police oversight, more transparencyTopic 3: Zahra Abbas Democratic Cannabis CaucasTopic 4: Supreme Court Delivers Major Victory To LGBTQ Employees Topic 5: The War on Drugs Made Police More Violent, Narcotics Policy Experts SayTopic 6: Steve Miller’s C.E.C. Segment – The Nectar Collector Demonstration~ Special Guest Mike Whitty at 9pmThe Planet Green Trees Podcast is hosted by attorney Michael Komorn, co-hosted by Jamie Lowell, Rick Thompson, Jim Powers and Amanda Joslin. The Planet Green Trees Podcast dives deep into the waters ofCannabis Law and Culture with guests that are leading the way in the industry.The opinions and comments expressed on the show by hosts, guest, commentators, posts, articles, etc... may or may not represent the actual opinions or thoughts of the Komorn Law Firm and/or it's associates. The thoughts and conversation that occur during this broadcast are an attempt to bring humor and parody to an otherwise non comical scenario. Although some conversations and guests may state facts, academic impedimenta and scientific theorems one should consult an attorney or expert in the relevant field of query.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 30 - Can social housing provide a solution to a looming mass eviction crisis?

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2020 38:46


In this episode of Who Belongs?, we speak with Carroll Fife, an organizer, mother, and director of the Oakland office of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, also known as ACCE. Earlier this year, she was involved in coordinating the #Moms4Housing campaign in which the five Black women took over a vacant home on Magnolia Street in Oakland. She joins us to speak about the history of speculative housing and its impacts on the Black community, the looming eviction crisis, houselessness, and police violence. For a transcript of this episode visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/eviction-crisis-speculative-housing-carroll-fife

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 28 - Settler colonialism, the insurrections of the 1960s, and today

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 34:06


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Gerald Horne, Professor of History and African American Studies at the University of Houston, and author of more than 30 books. Professor Horne has written on a spectrum of issues and events including the early settler colonial period of the US, the Haitian and Mexican revolutions, labor politics, civil rights, profiles of WEB Du Bois and revolutionary artist Paul Robeson, just to name a few. His most recent book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century. In our interview we focus the discussion on the uprisings of the 1960s, structural racism, and the transformative currents of today.

Berkeley Talks
Imagining a future without police

Berkeley Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2020 39:55


This Berkeley Talks episode features an interview on Who Belongs?, a podcast by UC Berkeley’s Othering and Belonging Institute. Host Marc Abizeid, joined by co-host Erfan Moradi, talk with Erin Kerrison, an assistant professor of social welfare at Berkeley, about why she thinks the U.S. needs to dismantle capitalism and police, and build a new system free of crime and punishment."What is deemed illegal is not necessarily harmful — there's a whole lot of stuff that wreaks havoc in people's lives that is not illegal, that is not criminal," said Kerrison. "So, that sort of construction, that needs to be thrown out immediately ... when I say there's a possibility that we don't have to have crime, it's so true. It's so true because it's a construct. If we didn't have crime as such, because communities were stronger, then yeah, we wouldn't need police because police respond to crime, which is, in large part, a symptom of much, much bigger and deeper social and structural ills."Listen to the episode and read a transcript on Berkeley News. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 27 - Can we have a future without police?

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 38:56


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from Erin Kerrison, an Assistant Professor of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley, to discuss her thoughts on transforming social structures and imagining futures beyond police following the murder of George Floyd. Professor Kerrison’s work investigates the impact of structural disadvantage, concentrated poverty, and state supervision on health outcomes of individuals and communities marked by criminal justice intervention. For more information and a transcript of this interview visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/future-without-police

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 26 - Why are people around the world knocking down old statues? Adam Hochschild explains

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2020 23:54


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from Adam Hochschild, a prominent historian, journalist, and a best selling author who wrote King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa, among many other books. He's also a lecturer in Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism. Professor Hochschild gives us his take on the efforts around the world to topple statues and other monuments that memorialize historical figures known for their brutality and racism, including the campaign in Belgium to remove statues of their former king, King Leopold II, who plundered central Africa, leading to the deaths of millions of people. For a transcript visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/adam-hochschild-toppling-statues

Nuts About Sports
Big Mac, Sammy & The Summer of '98

Nuts About Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 56:08


The Nuts watched Long Gone Summer and...didn't love it! The 1998 season long Home Run Derby is discussed along with a sports talk classic: Who Belongs in the Hall? Email the show at nutsaboutsports1@gmail.com Follow on Facebook @nutsaboutsports Follow on Twitter @2sportsnutspod Like our logo? Contact Audree Rowe at audreeblue@gmail.com

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 25 - "It's not just murder. It's terror." #GeorgeFloyd #Minneapolis

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2020 26:10


In this episode of Who Belongs? we’re bringing back john a. powell, our director at the O&B Institute, and professor of Law and African American studies at UC Berkeley, to talk about the ongoing events in Minneapolis following the police killing of George Floyd, and why he’s remaining optimistic about some of the glimmers of hope he sees in an otherwise very upsetting and traumatic situation. For a transcript visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/george-floyd

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 24 - Prof. john a. powell on the clash over shelter-in-place, and the murder of Ahmaud Arbery

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 44:02


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from john a. powell, a professor of Law and African American studies at UC Berkeley. He’s also the director of the Othering & Belonging Institute. In the interview professor powell offers historical context for the conflict over this question of when to reopen the economy, and the government’s authority to impose shelter-in-place orders. This issue has been framed as one that pits freedom against equality, but as profesor powell points out these two notions haven’t always been seen as in opposition to each other as concepts of freedom have evolved over time. We’ll also talk about the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, the young Black man who was gunned down in February by two white men in Georgia.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 23 - Racism and COVID-19: The historical, political, and social foundations

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2020 40:59


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from a three-guest panel of Berkeley faculty who provide various perspectives on the different forms of racism we’ve been witnessing since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. We hear about the experiences of Asian Americans who are facing a surge in hate crimes, the disparate impacts on black and brown communities in terms of the rates of death, and about how politicians are using the crisis to engage in racial fear mongering. But the panelists don’t focus so much on the incidents themselves as on the structures that have created the conditions for these forms of racism to emerge with such force. The panelists examine these issues by placing them in historical, social, and political contexts so we can think about how to respond to the crisis in ways that doesn’t reinforce the structures that set the stage for what we’re currently experiencing. The guests are Catherine Ceniza Choy, who is a Professor of Asian American and Asian Diaspora Studies, and Comparative Ethnic Studies; Ian Haney López, who is a Professor of Law and Director of the Racial Politics Project, and the author of Dog-Whistle Politics, and the more recent book Merge Left; and Osagie K. Obasogie, who is a Professor of Bioethics and chair of our Institute’s Health Disparities research cluster. For a transcript of this episode visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/covid19-racism

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 22 - How this Bay Area food bank is responding to a surge in demand

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2020 30:16


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Alex Boskovich, who is the Government Relations Officer at the Alameda County Community Food Bank based in Oakland, which collects and distributes food and other resources to about 300 partner organizations throughout Alameda county, including food pantries, churches, senior centers, schools, and other organizations. Just prior to the outbreak of COVID-19 the food bank had partnered with the Othering & Belonging Institute’s Civic Engagement Narrative Change project for some trainings on cultivating inclusive messaging and developing an identity that can bridge across community to build voice and power. The focus of the interview is on the sudden and very powerful impact that pandemic has had on the demand for the services provided by the Alameda County Community Food Bank, and Alex’s observations on how the crisis has magnified the gross inequities in society in how different populations are experiencing the pandemic when it comes to access to food. For more information and to access a transcript visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/food-bank

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 21 - ICE raids, farmworkers, & the COVID-19 crisis

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2020 36:29


In this episode of Who Belongs? we’re looking at the reality facing undocumented immigrants and migrant farmworkers in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. We hear from three researchers who discuss some of their recent and upcoming articles that look at ICE raids targeting immigrant communities despite shelter-in-place orders, as well as the conditions of farmworkers who are putting themselves at risk in order to keep the country fed. For articles mentioned in this episode visit: 1. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/mar/31/ice-raids-coronavirus-n95-masks 2. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/apr/14/will-we-have-food-coronavirus-pandemic 3. https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/pdfplus/10.2105/AJPH.2020.305704 The guests are: Seth M. Holmes, PhD, MD, is on faculty in the Division of Society and Environment and the Joint Program in Medical Anthropology. A cultural and medical anthropologist and physician, he has worked on social hierarchies, health inequities, and the ways in which such asymmetries are naturalized, normalized, and resisted in the context of transnational im/migration, agro-food systems, and health care. He has received national and international awards from the fields of anthropology, sociology, and geography, including the Margaret Mead Award. In addition to scholarly publications, he has written for popular media such as The Huffington Post and Salon.com and spoken on multiple NPR, PRI, Pacifica Radio and Radio Bilingüe radio programs. Miriam Magaña López is a first-generation immigrant from Jalisco, Mexico. Miriam has a BA in Anthropology from Macalester College and an MPH from the University of California, Berkeley School of Public Health. Currently she works as a Research and Policy Analyst at the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues, primarily focused on understanding how economic, political and social structures impact the health of immigrant farm workers. Recently, she conducted ethnographic fieldwork among vineyard workers to understand how employment regimes influence vineyard workers’ integration in Sonoma Valley. Miriam is also a volunteer organizer with Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee (MIRAC) focused on passing a Driver’s License for all bill and stopping the Hennepin County Sheriff Department from cooperating with ICE. Vera L. Chang is a UC Berkeley Environmental Science, Policy, and Management Doctoral Student; National Science Foundation Fellow; Clif Bar Family Foundation Fellow; and Berkeley Food Institute Researcher. Vera’s doctoral research focuses on agro-food systems, human rights, and social change. She is currently studying how worker-led movements can create shifts in power within U.S.-based corporate food chains. Vera recently completed a Solutions Journalism Network Fellowship to conduct an investigative reporting project on solutions to rampant sexual violence in U.S. agricultural fields. Her research and journalism have been highlighted by the Aspen Institute, Worldwatch Institute, and Center for Science in the Public Interest.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 20 - Ian Haney López on Bernie Sanders and the Race-Class Message

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 37:28


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Ian Haney Lopez, a professor of law here at UC Berkeley, about his new book: “Merge Left: Fusing Race and Class, Winning Elections, and Saving America.” The book puts forward the argument that the left can re-frame racism as a weapon of the rich by crafting messages that fuse race and class and build a cross-racial movement needed to beat powerful fear-based messaging and racial dog whistles. He gives us his take on the messages he hears coming out of the 2020 Democratic primary contest between Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden, and what he thinks Bernie needs to do to strengthen his appeal for a multi-racial movement. For a transcript of this interview visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/merge-left

Berkeley Talks
Denise Herd and Waldo Martin on Berkeley's '400 Years' initiative

Berkeley Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2020 42:16


In this episode of Who Belongs?, a podcast by UC Berkeley's Othering and Belonging Institute, Berkeley professors Denise Herd and Waldo Martin discuss 400 Years of Resistance to Slavery and Injustice, a yearlong initiative that marks the 400th anniversary of the forced arrival of enslaved Africans in the English colonies."The commemoration of the 400th anniversary of slavery — it's part of a national initiative to recognize this long and really, really important time in our history," says Herd, a professor in the School of Public Health and associate director of the Othering and Belonging Institute who is leading the campus initiative. "... I think a strong impetus for bringing it here was that it resonates with the goals of really understanding social inequality and addressing social inequality."Listen to the talk and read the transcript on Berkeley News. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 19 - Surveying Black Women in Nevada

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020 45:01


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from two guests, Erika Washington and Quintin Savwoir from a civic engagement group in Nevada called Make it Work - Nevada. In the interview they discuss a recent survey they conducted of black women in their state to learn about the issues that are most pressing to them and how they feel about the candidates running in the 2020 presidential election. Erika is the executive director of Make it Work - Nevada, and Quentin is the group's political director. The organization does year-round civic engagement and policy change work to build the power, health and vitality of black families and communities in Nevada. For a transcript of this interview visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/makeitworknevada

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 18 - 400 Years of Resistance to Slavery Initiative at UC Berkeley

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2019 41:19


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from two guests about a year-long initiative at UC Berkeley marking the 400th anniversary of the start to slavery in North America. The initiative includes weekly events with scholars, activists, and artists from around the country reflecting on the enduring legacies of slavery and Jim Crow, looking at the Civil Rights era, our current era, and also trying to imagine a future based on justice, reconciliation, and belonging. The two guests are Denise Herd, and Waldo Martin. Denise is a professor in the School of Public Health at UC Berkeley who is leading this campus initiative. She is also our Associate Director at the Othering and Belonging Institute. And Waldo Martin is a professor of US History at Berkeley who is also involved in the organizing around this initiative. To learn more about the initiative visit 400years.berkeley.edu For a transcript of this episode visit: belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/400years And for more episodes of Who Belongs? visit belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 17 - Alicia Garza on Identity Politics and the 2020 US Presidential Election

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2019 48:48


In this episode of Who Belongs? we hear from Alicia Garza, one of the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement and the principal of the Black Futures Lab, which is an organization that engages Black voters year round and works to stop corporate influence in progressive politics. Alicia recently authored a paper for the Othering and Belonging Institute, titled, “Identity Politics: Friend or Foe?” which this episode draws from. Alicia also gives her take on some of the candidates running in the 2020 US presidential election and how they approach identity politics. This episode is part of our Civic Engagement narrative change project series, and is guest hosted by Gerald Lenoir, who is the Institute’s Identity and Politics Strategy Analyst, and the former executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration as well as a former executive director of the San Francisco Black Coalition on AIDS. To learn more about Black Futures Lab visit their website at https://blackfutureslab.org/ For a copy of Alicia's paper "Identity Politics: Friend or Foe?", visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/identity-politics-friend-or-foe For more episodes of Who Belongs? visit our website here: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 16 - Mobilizing Hard-to-Count Populations for Census 2020

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2019 30:18


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Michael Gomez Daly, the director of the Inland Empowerment coalition, and Sky Allen, who is the coalition's census coordinator, about their efforts to mobilize people in southern California's Inland Empire ahead of the 2020 Census. This episode is another installment of the Civic Engagement Narrative Change project series, with the interview conducted by project researcher Josh Clark. For a transcript visit: https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/inlandempowerment

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 15 - Journalist Lawrence Lanahan on Crossing Baltimore's Racial Divide

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2019 44:08


In this episode of Who Belongs?, we hear from journalist and author Lawrence Lanahan about his new book called The Lines Between Us: Two Families and a Quest to Cross Baltimore’s Racial Divide. The book weaves together three storylines about people trying to overcome a host of barriers to opportunity and integration in hyper-segregated Baltimore and its suburbs. The book is the culmination of years of research and reporting on segregation in Baltimore, and draws from Lawrence’s 50-episode radio series, also called “The Lines Between Us,” produced for the city’s WYPR station. For a transcript visit https://belonging.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/linesbetweenus

RAM Radio
Suzannah Schreckhise: Who Belongs on Our Money?

RAM Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019 22:14


RAM Radio – Episode 7: In this episode we speak with Fayetteville-based artist Suzannah Schreckhise and her recent work, “Who Belongs on Our Money?”

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 14 - Voter Suppression, with Robert Greenwald and Carol Anderson

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2019 34:14


This episode of Who Belongs? is another installment of our Civic Engagement Narrative Change project series, with project researcher Josh Clark interviewing two guests: The first is Robert Greenwald, an award-winning producer and director who has a new film coming out on September 25 called “Suppressed: The fight to vote”, about voter suppression in the 2018 gubernatorial election in Georgia, and Carol Anderson, Professor of African American Studies at Emory University and author of the book One Person No Vote: How Voter Suppression is Destroying our Democracy. To access a transcript of this interview, and for more episodes of Who Belongs visit haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs.

First Baptist Church (Jackson, MI) Sermons

In a world where so many struggle to fit in, what does it mean to belong? Listen to Pastor Dallas Flippin's message "Who Belongs?" from 1 Corinthians 12:12-27. This is the second in the series "Being the Church in the 21st Century."

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 13 - Artist Christine Wong Yap on her Places of Belonging Project

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2019 27:35


In this episode of Who Belongs? host Sara Grossman interviews Christine Wong Yap, who became the Haas Institute's first Artist in Residence in the fall of 2018, about her "Places of Belonging" project, which was recently featured in a KQED report here: https://www.kqed.org/arts/13850669/christine-wong-yap-asks-where-do-you-feel-a-sense-of-belonging Learn more about the Haas Institute's Artist in Residence program here: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/air You can also find an earlier interview with Christine Wong Yap in our Spring 2019 magazine here: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/discussion-christine-wong-yap For a transcript of this interview, visit: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/cwy

Kiltarlity Free Church
Who Belongs in Church?

Kiltarlity Free Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 28:44


Who Belongs in Church? by Kiltarlity Free Church

Berkeley Talks
john powell on targeted universalism

Berkeley Talks

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2019 34:28


In this episode of Who Belongs, a podcast produced by the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society, we hear from john powell, director of the Haas Institute and a professor of law and African American studies at UC Berkeley.In this interview, powell discusses a brand new primer the Haas Institute just published on the targeted universalism policy approach, a model conceptualized by professor powell. The primer was co-written by professor powell, along with assistant director Stephen Menendian and Wendy Ake, the director of the Just Public Finance program.Targeted universalism is a platform to put into practice social programs that move all groups toward a universal policy goal. It supports the needs of the most marginalized groups, as well as those who are more politically powerful, while reminding everyone that we are all part of the same social fabric.Download a copy of "Targeted Universalism: Policy & Practice."Read a transcript and listen on Berkeley Talks. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 11 - Engaging Asian Pacific Islanders, with Luisa Blue of the SEIU

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2019 34:41


In this episode of Who Belongs, we talk to Luisa Blue, who is the Executive Vice President of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), and an expert on Asian Pacific Islander civic engagement issues. She is also the highest ranking leader of Asian Pacific Islander background in the labor movement in the United States. This episode is also the fourth installment of our Civic Engagement Narrative Change project series. For a transcript of this interview visit: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/API

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 9 - Family Role in Prisoner Reentry, with Prof. David Harding

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2019 30:25


In this episode of Who Belongs? we talk with Professor David Harding, who is a UC Berkeley Sociologist and member of the Haas Institute's Economic Disparities faculty research cluster, about a new book he co-authored called On the Outside: Prisoner Reentry and Reintegration. Find a transcript of this interview here: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs/prisoner-reentry

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 8 - The Stakes for the 2020 Census with Michael Omi and Stephen Menendian

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2019 34:33


In this episode of Who Belongs? we discuss the topic of the US Census with Professor Michael Omi, who is an affiliated faculty member of our Institute, author of Racial Formation in the United States, and one of only a handful of experts on the US Census. Stephen Menendian, who is the assistant director and director of research at the Haas Institute, served as guest host for this episode.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 7 - Abandonment in Detroit with Peter Hammer and Amina Kirk

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 33:47


In this episode of Who Belongs? we speak with Peter Hammer and Amina Kirk, who have been working in a variety of capacities for equitable development and racial justice in Detroit for many years. Peter is a Professor of Law and the Director of the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State University Law School. The Keith Center runs the Detroit Equity Action Lab, whose purpose is to address structural racism in Detroit. Amina Kirk is the Senior Legal and Policy Advocate & Organizer with Detroit People's Platform, a racial and economic justice organization. She’s an affordable housing activist, and earned her JD and Master’s in Urban Planning from the University of Michigan. This episode was produced in collaboration with the Haas Institute's Civic Engagement Narrative Change Project.

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 5 - Hilary Hoynes on the Benefits and Limitations of Food Stamps (SNAP)

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 38:50


In this episode of Who Belongs? Marc Abizeid talks to economist Hilary Hoynes about government assistance programs, including nutrition programs like SNAP, which is also known as food stamps, in addressing poverty and hunger in the United States. Hilary Hoynes teaches economics and public policy at UC Berkeley's Goldman School of Public Policy, and is the Chair of the Haas Institute's Economic Disparities Research Cluster. Professor Hoynes specializes in the study of poverty, inequality, and the impacts of government assistance programs like SNAP, and others, including the Earned Income Tax Credit, which is a cash assistance program for low-wage earners. Find a transcript of this interview here: For more episodes of Who Belongs? visit:

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 3 - Monitoring Corporate Agribusiness with Elsadig Elsheikh and Nadia Barhoum

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2018 45:32


In this episode of Who Belongs?, hosts Marc Abizeid and Sara Grossman interview two guests: Elsadig Elsheikh, who is the Director of the Global Justice Program at the Haas Institute, and Nadia Barhoum, who is a former researcher with the Global Justice Program. They discussed their new project that was released earlier in October by the Haas Institute called, "Shahidi: Corporations Decoded." The project serves as a monitor to examine the power, influence and reach of agri-business corporations and their role in the global food crisis. Read more about the Shahidi project here: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/new-monitor-probes-corporate-control-global-food-system And check out the Shahidi project website here: https://shahidi.berkeley.edu/

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 2 - Nicole Montojo and Stephen Barton on Rent Control

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 36:16


In this episode of Who Belongs? we interview Nicole Montojo and Steve Barton, who recently co-authored a new research brief on the housing affordability crisis in California, called "Opening the Door for Rent Control: Toward a Comprehensive Approach to Protecting California’s Renters." Nicole is a housing research analyst at the Haas Institute. She holds a Master's degree in city planning from UC Berkeley. Steve is a former housing director for the city of Berkeley who holds a PhD in city and regional planning from UC Berkeley. Find the report, along with a summary, press release, presentation video, and other resources, here: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/opening-door-rent-control For more episodes of Who Belongs? visit this page: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging
EP 1 - Gordon Whitman Breaks Down Community Organizing

Who Belongs? A Podcast on Othering & Belonging

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2018 33:17


In this first episode of Who Belongs?, we talk to Gordon Whitman, who is the deputy director of Faith In Action, formerly known as PICO, which is a national network of faith-based organizations working to build civic leaders to uplift communities through work on a broad set of issues. Gordon recently published a book on organizing, called ‘Stand Up!: How to Get Involved, Speak Out, and Win in a World on Fire’. The book, which is available in both English and Spanish, draws from his 25 years of experience as a community organizer in different parts of the country, as well as from a year abroad in Chile during Pinochet dictatorship, where Gordon says he learned the most important things about organizing. Learn more about Gordon's book here: https://standupbook.org/ To watch a video of a book talk Gordon gave at UC Berkeley visit this page: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/gordon-whitman-pico-conversation-john-powell Listen to more episodes of Who Belongs? on this page: https://haasinstitute.berkeley.edu/whobelongs

New Books in Law
Mikaela M. Adams, “Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South” (Oxford University Press, 2016)

New Books in Law

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 46:23


“Native American” is unique among American racial categories in defining not just social status or historical lineage, but also an individual’s relationship to state and federal governments. In Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), Mikaela M. Adams, an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi, tracks the histories of six Indian societies in the American South from the seventeenth to the twenty first centuries. In doing so, she argues that the question of belonging was often difficult to answer, particularly in a region where whites insisted on dividing the individuals along a strict, binary, color line. In Who Belongs?, Pamunkey, Catawba, Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, and Miccosukee communities all grapple with the fundamental question of tribal membership. After colonization and conquest, the answer to the question posed by Adams could have critical and concrete consequences. Often, whether someone belonged to a given tribe determined fundamental questions of identity, financial restitution, and land ownership. Who Belongs? is a critical retelling of the Native south which emphasizes the fungible nature of group identity and the adaptations Native communities made to survive within a settler colonial system of state power. Stephen Hausmann is a doctoral candidate at Temple University and Visiting Instructor of history at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently writing his dissertation, a history of race and the environment in the Black Hills and surrounding northern plains region of South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Mikaela M. Adams, “Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South” (Oxford University Press, 2016)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 46:23


“Native American” is unique among American racial categories in defining not just social status or historical lineage, but also an individual’s relationship to state and federal governments. In Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), Mikaela M. Adams, an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi, tracks the histories of six Indian societies in the American South from the seventeenth to the twenty first centuries. In doing so, she argues that the question of belonging was often difficult to answer, particularly in a region where whites insisted on dividing the individuals along a strict, binary, color line. In Who Belongs?, Pamunkey, Catawba, Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, and Miccosukee communities all grapple with the fundamental question of tribal membership. After colonization and conquest, the answer to the question posed by Adams could have critical and concrete consequences. Often, whether someone belonged to a given tribe determined fundamental questions of identity, financial restitution, and land ownership. Who Belongs? is a critical retelling of the Native south which emphasizes the fungible nature of group identity and the adaptations Native communities made to survive within a settler colonial system of state power. Stephen Hausmann is a doctoral candidate at Temple University and Visiting Instructor of history at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently writing his dissertation, a history of race and the environment in the Black Hills and surrounding northern plains region of South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Native American Studies
Mikaela M. Adams, “Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South” (Oxford University Press, 2016)

New Books in Native American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 46:23


“Native American” is unique among American racial categories in defining not just social status or historical lineage, but also an individual’s relationship to state and federal governments. In Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), Mikaela M. Adams, an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi, tracks the histories of six Indian societies in the American South from the seventeenth to the twenty first centuries. In doing so, she argues that the question of belonging was often difficult to answer, particularly in a region where whites insisted on dividing the individuals along a strict, binary, color line. In Who Belongs?, Pamunkey, Catawba, Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, and Miccosukee communities all grapple with the fundamental question of tribal membership. After colonization and conquest, the answer to the question posed by Adams could have critical and concrete consequences. Often, whether someone belonged to a given tribe determined fundamental questions of identity, financial restitution, and land ownership. Who Belongs? is a critical retelling of the Native south which emphasizes the fungible nature of group identity and the adaptations Native communities made to survive within a settler colonial system of state power. Stephen Hausmann is a doctoral candidate at Temple University and Visiting Instructor of history at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently writing his dissertation, a history of race and the environment in the Black Hills and surrounding northern plains region of South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Mikaela M. Adams, “Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South” (Oxford University Press, 2016)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 46:23


“Native American” is unique among American racial categories in defining not just social status or historical lineage, but also an individual’s relationship to state and federal governments. In Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), Mikaela M. Adams, an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi, tracks the histories of six Indian societies in the American South from the seventeenth to the twenty first centuries. In doing so, she argues that the question of belonging was often difficult to answer, particularly in a region where whites insisted on dividing the individuals along a strict, binary, color line. In Who Belongs?, Pamunkey, Catawba, Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, and Miccosukee communities all grapple with the fundamental question of tribal membership. After colonization and conquest, the answer to the question posed by Adams could have critical and concrete consequences. Often, whether someone belonged to a given tribe determined fundamental questions of identity, financial restitution, and land ownership. Who Belongs? is a critical retelling of the Native south which emphasizes the fungible nature of group identity and the adaptations Native communities made to survive within a settler colonial system of state power. Stephen Hausmann is a doctoral candidate at Temple University and Visiting Instructor of history at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently writing his dissertation, a history of race and the environment in the Black Hills and surrounding northern plains region of South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in History
Mikaela M. Adams, “Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South” (Oxford University Press, 2016)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 46:35


“Native American” is unique among American racial categories in defining not just social status or historical lineage, but also an individual’s relationship to state and federal governments. In Who Belongs?: Race, Resources, and Tribal Citizenship in the Native South (Oxford University Press, 2016), Mikaela M. Adams, an assistant professor of history at the University of Mississippi, tracks the histories of six Indian societies in the American South from the seventeenth to the twenty first centuries. In doing so, she argues that the question of belonging was often difficult to answer, particularly in a region where whites insisted on dividing the individuals along a strict, binary, color line. In Who Belongs?, Pamunkey, Catawba, Choctaw, Cherokee, Seminole, and Miccosukee communities all grapple with the fundamental question of tribal membership. After colonization and conquest, the answer to the question posed by Adams could have critical and concrete consequences. Often, whether someone belonged to a given tribe determined fundamental questions of identity, financial restitution, and land ownership. Who Belongs? is a critical retelling of the Native south which emphasizes the fungible nature of group identity and the adaptations Native communities made to survive within a settler colonial system of state power. Stephen Hausmann is a doctoral candidate at Temple University and Visiting Instructor of history at the University of Pittsburgh. He is currently writing his dissertation, a history of race and the environment in the Black Hills and surrounding northern plains region of South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

NextGen Native
Gabe Galanda | Turning the Tide Against Disenrollment

NextGen Native

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2017 53:17


“Look for those opportunities that may not be obvious to you.” Gabe Galanda is a member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes. Galanda is also a partner at the law firm Galanda Broadman. He joined NextGen Native previously to share his personal journey. If you haven’t heard his story, I recommend listening to his personal journey. It’s a perfect example of how one can overcome challenges to succeed in your own personal way, at a high level. His personal journey is prologue to his work for clients facing disenrollment. Through his law practice, Galanda emerged as one of the most vocal critics of disenrollment. For several years, he has represented clients fighting disenrollment. During that time he experienced many trying moments and challenges in his fight for his clients. At the time, not many people in Indian Country were openly discussing disenrollment, let alone fighting against the movement. But the tide may be turning. We spoke not too long after a #stopdisenrollment day of action and also following the decision by the tribal council for the Robinson Rancheria of Pomo Indians to re-enroll members that were previously disenrolled. Now, you’re seeing people speaking out against disenrollment, and taking action against it, in larger numbers. Much of that can be attributed to the work of Galanda and others who took on the fight several years ago. We discussed the fight against disenrollment, how Gabe managed the challenging battles on a personal and professional front, and what’s next in the fight. This includes an upcoming symposium called “Who Belongs” at the University of Arizona Rogers College of Law. The event includes a list of heavy hitters that will attend including tribal leaders and leading legal minds. This is a huge topic of the moment for Indian Country, and it’s one of the most heavy and intense topics, too. But this podcast creates space to discuss these issues in an in-depth, nuanced fashion, even if the fire still burns hot. This is one of those conversations, and I hope it sparks more across Indian Country.  

university law turning tide indian country who belongs pomo indians disenrollment gabe galanda
Anthony George Radio
Zute's Sports Talk

Anthony George Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2010 60:00


Tonight we will discuss baseball's hall of fame. Who should be in? Who is in that should not be? How does it compare to other hall of famers? What current players are no-brainers, and is Mark Buherle one of them?