32 min listen
The clumsy journey to antiracism
FromDemocracy Works
ratings:
Length:
35 minutes
Released:
Jun 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
This week, we are bringing you another interview that we hope will give some context to the discussions about racism and inequality that are happening in the U.S. right now.We’re joined by Tehama Lopez Bunyasi, assistant professor at the School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University and Candis Watts Smith, associate professor African American Studies and political science at Penn State. She was recently named the Brown-McCourtney Early Career Professor in the McCourtney Institute for Democracy.Bunyasi and Smith are coauthors of a book called Stay Woke: A People’s Guide to Making all Black Lives Matter, which looks at the history of structural racism in the U.S. and gives people information and tools to become antiracists.We talk about the clumsiness associated with changing patterns of thinking and behavior and how that’s playing out across our online and offline lives and among both individuals and companies. We also discuss the inherent messiness of the Black Lives Matter movement and why that’s not necessarily a bad thing.Additional InformationStay Woke: A People’s Guide to Making all Black Lives MatterThree Myths about Racism – Candis’s TEDxPSU talk from February 202024 podcasts that confront racism in America – list from the Bello CollectiveRelated EpisodesBreaking down black politicsCivil rights, civil unrestA roadmap to a more equitable democracyThe ongoing struggle for civil rightsEpisode CreditsThis episode was recorded on June 9, 2020. It was engineered by Jenna Spinelle, edited by Jen Bortz, and reviewed by WPSU News Director Emily Reddy.
Released:
Jun 15, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
How Democracies Die author Daniel Ziblatt on the ‘grinding work’ of democracy: Daniel Ziblatt has done a lot of interviews since the release of How Democracies Die, the bestselling book he co-wrote with Steven Levitsky. But we asked him a question he’d never gotten before — about a line toward the end of the book when he refers to democracy as “grinding work.” by Democracy Works