Making Contact

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 407:16:58
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

Media that helps build a movement

Episodes

  • The Struggle Inside: The Murder of George Jackson

    16/08/2018 Duration: 29min

    On this edition of Making Contact we present, The Struggle Inside: The Murder of George Jackson, a program about the modern anti-prison movement.

  • Parenting From Prison, Inside Out

    09/08/2018 Duration: 29min

    When one or both parents are incarcerated the family is also incarcerated and are adversely affected in profound ways that exacerbate existing structural inequalities and struggles. Programs for inmates and families like FamilyWorks and the Storybook Program, encourage rebuilding and maintaining relationships despite being separated by prison.

  • Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice

    01/08/2018 Duration: 29min

    On this edition of Making Contact, we speak with author Paul Kivel about his book, Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice. This book offers a framework for understanding institutional racism. It provides practical suggestions, tools, examples, and advice on how white people can intervene in interpersonal and organizational situations to work as allies for racial justice.

  • Caring Relationships: Negotiating Meaning and Maintaining Dignity (Encore)

    25/07/2018 Duration: 28min

    Whether you’re a paid home care provider, or rely on personal assistance to meet your daily needs, or a family member caring for a loved one, the nature of the working relationship depends on mutual respect and dignity. During this week’s anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, we’ll revisit the dynamic and complex relationship of care receiving and giving.

  • The Arrival: Trump's Travel and Refugee Ban

    18/07/2018 Duration: 29min

    On this edition of Making Contact, after the  US Supreme Court's ruling on Trump’s travel ban, we’ll discuss how the new order impacts people from affected, Muslim-majority countries. We also talk about what's different about the new ban and how to fight it.  We begin with the story of a woman who was in flight to the US when President Trump signed his first travel ban.

  • Patrisse Khan-Cullors, “When They Call You A Terrorist” (Encore)

    12/07/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week is the five year anniversary of Black lives matter. Patrisse Khan-Cullors, co-founder of Black Lives Matter shares her reflections on humanity, the end of policing and her new book, WHEN THEY CALL YOU A TERRORIST: A Black Lives Matter Memoir.

  • Afrofuturism: 3 Women You Need to Know

    05/07/2018 Duration: 29min

    Afrofuturism is a growing genre-movement that spans literature, art, music, and film. It provides radical alternatives to dominant Western narratives by drawing on traditions from Africa and the diaspora.

  • Beyond Stonewall: The Push for LGBT Civil Rights

    28/06/2018 Duration: 29min

    We go back to the night in June 1969 at the New York City Stonewall Inn that sparked the LGBTQ rights movement. On this episode, we’ll hear about the day that galvanized a generation and the continued fight for LGBTQ civil rights.

  • Your Home, Your Right… or My Business?

    20/06/2018 Duration: 28min

    The stage is set for a battle between two world-views. Is housing a human right, or a commodity? And where on that continuum is California’s common ground? This week, we look at the fight over rent control, and police policies that affect the homeless.

  • Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools

    13/06/2018 Duration: 29min

    Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools is an examination of the experiences of black girls across the country whose intricate lives are misunderstood, highly judged "by teachers, administrators, and the justice system" and degraded by the very institutions charged with helping them flourish.

  • The Cost of Deportations

    06/06/2018 Duration: 29min

    This week, Making Contact looks at The Cost of Deportations through the lens of one Central American nation that sends migrants north— Guatemala. Will Guatemala and the other countries these migrants left be prepared for an influx of returnees?

  • Finding Home: Displacement and Homelessness from Cape Town to California (Encore)

    30/05/2018 Duration: 29min

    On this edition of Making Contact we go from Cape Town, South Africa to Los Angeles and Oakland, California— three cities grappling with evictions, displacement, and homelessness. 

  • Korea: The Ghosts of the Gwangju Uprising (ENCORE)

    23/05/2018 Duration: 29min

    On May 18, 1980, the people of Gwangju, South Korea rose up for reunification and an end to U.S.-backed military dictatorships.Their actions changed the course of Korean history. We hear from survivors of the Gwangju Uprising about how they took on the tasks of history and the lesson they carry.

  • She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry – The Personal Is Political

    16/05/2018 Duration: 29min

    For this edition of Making Contact, we’ll present the documentary, “She’s Beautiful When She’s Angry,” a reflection on the rise of the women’s liberation movement in the United States, between 1966 and 1971. She’s Beautiful explores the emergence of political thought that challenged systems of patriarchy.  

  • SPECIAL FOR MOTHER’S DAY-Mothering: Love on the Front Lines

    09/05/2018 Duration: 29min

    For Mother's Day: we bring you a discussion by women of color writers and poets who contributed to the anthology, Revolutionary Mothering: Love on the Front Lines. You'll also hear about a recent investigation into Black maternal and infant mortality.

  • Protecting People and Water in Mexico City

    02/05/2018 Duration: 28min

    Fresh water is one of our most precious natural resources. This week contributor Maria Doerr looks at what's being done to protect the watersheds of Mexico City-- natural water systems that provide water to one of the largest metropolises in the world.

  • Specters of Attica: Reflections from Inside a Michigan Prison Strike

    25/04/2018 Duration: 29min

    On the 45th anniversary of the Attica prison uprising, hundreds imprisoned inside Michigan’s Kinross Correctional Facility refused to report to work or lock down in their barracks. Instead, they joined the largest prisoner labor strike in U.S. history.

  • Daze of Justice

    18/04/2018 Duration: 29min

    Daze of Justice is the story of trailblazing Cambodian-American women who break decades of silence, abandoning the security of their American homes on a journey back into Cambodia's killing fields, as witnesses determined to resurrect the memory of their loved ones before the UN Special Tribunal prosecuting the Khmer Rouge.

  • The Nakba, the Naksa, and the Future of Palestine (ENCORE)

    11/04/2018 Duration: 29min

    In 1948, Zionist militias expelled over 700,000 Palestinians from their villages and towns. The event, and the ongoing destruction and occupation of Palestine are referred to as the Nakba " the catastrophe. How did the events of 1948 shape Palestine and its diaspora? And generations later, how are Palestinians fighting to return home?

  • A Dream Remembered?: Martin Luther King Jr and the Grassroots Civil Rights Movement (ENCORE)

    04/04/2018 Duration: 29min

    Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated 50 years ago, and is widely remembered for his speech, ‘I Have a Dream.’ Journalist Gary Younge analyzes the King’s speech, highlighting the importance of remembering the entirety of King’s message and evolution as a critical activist.

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